

In Birmingham, police attacked civil rights demonstrators with dogs and fire hoses, and Ku Klux Klansmen blew up a black church, killing four little girls attending Sunday School inside. Martin Luther King led protest marchers on a long walk from Selma to Montgomery. It was in Alabama that Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the bus. 07 1976 Authorized Bootleg: Live at the Cardiff Capitol Theater - Cardiff, Wales Nov.In the 1950s and '60s, Alabama was ground zero for the Civil Rights Movement.
SWEET HOME ALABAMA LYRICS PLUS
1 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection Live Baby Goes Southern Rock Collector's Edition Playlist Plus Playlist Plus One More from the Road All Time Greatest Hits Playlist Your Way Favorites The Complete Collection Christmas & Hits Duos Another One from the Road Best of Lynyrd Skynyrd: Green Series The Definitive Collection Authorized Bootleg: Live at Winterland - San Francisco Mar.
SWEET HOME ALABAMA LYRICS MOVIE
Doesn't that say something about the citizens of Alabama?įreebird: The Movie Second Helping Gold & Platinum Sweet Home Alabama Lyve Chart Toppers: Rock Hits of the 70s Extended Versions The Essential Lynyrd Skynyrd Skynyrd's Innyrds: Their Greatest Hits 20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of Lynyrd Skynyrd Old Time Greats One More from the Road One More from the Road What's Your Name All Time Greatest Hits Complete Lynyrd Skynyrd Live Then and Now Endangered Species Skynyrd Collectybles Spank That Hip/Old Times Winning Combinations: The Allman Brothers & Lynyrd Skynyrd One More from the Road The Collection Freebird: The Movie Lyve: The Vicious Cycle Tour Greatest Collection Pronounced Leh-Nerd Skin-Nerd/Second Helping Chronicles Greatest Hits Essential Nuthin' Fancy/Second Helping/Street Survivors Second Helping Family Gold The Best of Lynyrd Skynyrd Ultimate Collection The Lynyrd Skynyrd Story Solitudes: Songs for Open Road Karaoke: Classic Rock, Vol. He was elected democratically, reflecting the values of his constituents. But the reality is that Wallace was changing with the times. There was certainly some revisionism going on, there. In 1972, he ran on a platform that included a renouncement of formal segregation.

Why?īy 1974 (year this song was released) Wallace had moderated his views about segregation. After distancing themselves from Wallace, they embrace him again. Then I noticed that line "And the governor's true". At this point, the controversy was dead in my mind. Skynyrd's stand for Wallace is more fatalist than enthusiastic. This is not a ringing endorsement of Wallace. The lesson is that politicians are jerks, whether it's the Californian Nixon or the Alabaman Wallace. By the time of this song, Nixon was a discredited liar & an embarrassment to all Americans. In the line about Watergate, they're comparing Wallace to former President Nixon. I don't know.īut the next line "we all did what we could do" suggests Wallace left them wanting. Or it could be them mocking Wallace's detractors, like Neil Young. Those boos could be interpreted as Skynyrd booing Wallace. Missing from the above lyrics is the line "Boo, boo, boo!" Not so cool to rally around a well-known segregationist. Then I noticed the lyrics about the people loving Governor Wallace. Initially I heard it as the Alabama answer to California Dreamin'. General CommentThe message of the song is, like the South, complicated. Where the skies are so blue and the governor's true They pick me up when I'm feeling blue, now how 'bout you? Lord, I'm coming home to you, here I come AlabamaĪnd they've been known to pick a song or two (yes they do) In Birmingham they love the Governor, boo, boo, booĭoes your conscience bother you? Tell the truth Well, I heard Mister Young sing about her (southern man)Ī southern man don't need him around, anyhow I miss Alabamy once again and I think it's a sin, yes
