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Favorite songs mentioning Baton Rouge?

Posted on 5/11/23 at 3:09 pm
Posted by VandelayIndustries
Member since May 2020
7 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 3:09 pm
I’ve been noticing more and more songs recently (mostly older songs) that mention Baton Rouge in the lyrics and wondering what y’all’s favorites are.

My favorites are probably
Me and Bobby McGee - Janis Joplin
Runnin’ Blue - Boz Scaggs
Posted by Pelican fan99
Lafayette, Louisiana
Member since Jun 2013
38941 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 3:47 pm to
Down at the Twist and Shout
Posted by monsterballads
Gulf of America
Member since Jun 2013
31184 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 3:50 pm to
quote:

Chuck Berry
“Back in the U.S.A.”
The legendary musician was happy to touch down on U.S. soil again in this swinging track with a nod to the Red Stick.

Huey Lewis and the News
“Heart of Rock & Roll”
Blink and you’ll miss it, but we get name-checked in the second half’s roster of cities where rock ‘n’ roll’s heart is still beating.

Johnny Cash
“Wanted Man”
He’s basically wanted everywhere–here, too.

“Roll On, Mississippi, Roll On”
That lazy steamer sure slows it down between New Orleans and Baton Rouge in this old-timey classic made famous by the Boswell Sisters and others.

Touring takes a toll on musicians, and Baton Rouge often factors in.

Rolling Stones
“Memory Motel”
One of their few songs to feature both Mick Jagger and Keith Richards on vocals, this track from 1976’s Black and Blue mentions the next stop is Baton Rouge, likely a reference to a set of shows performed at LSU during their Tour of the Americas ’75.

Boz Scaggs
“Runnin’ Blue”
The touring life has left Scaggs’ unsure if he’s leaving Detroit or comin’ into Baton Rouge. “I get so tired, so tired of changin’ views,” he sings.

John Mayer
“Who Says”
Mayer’s had a long night in New York City, in Austin, and also in the Red Stick. He doesn’t remember you looking any better, but then again, he doesn’t remember you at all. Typical, Mayer.

Drive-By Truckers
“Greenville to Baton Rouge”
The alt-country band has some flight troubles, but the tour seems to be going OK.

It isn’t a mantra or manifesto of Southern life without a Baton Rouge mention.

Lucinda Williams
“Bus to Baton Rouge”
In this song, Williams waxes nostalgic about a house on Belmont Avenue. She’s mentioned the Red Stick in several other tunes, too, like “Jackson,” a song that finds her slowly getting over an old love via each stop on the road.

Mary Chapin Carpenter
“Down at the Twist and Shout”
She won a Grammy for this tune with help from members of BeauSoleil‚Äîwho obviously didn’t correct her when she pronounced “Baton Rouge” incorrectly.

Kenny Chesney
“What I Need to Do”
There’s a buddy of Kenny’s in Baton Rouge who can help him find work, if this country star thing doesn’t work out.

Cross Canadian Ragweed
“Headed South”
The singer wants to get back to Baton Rouge before winter and “walk down by that river and cross that muddy river now and then.” That’s ill-advised, dude.

For some reason, wanderlust sends that girl you love to the Red Stick a lot.

Carrie Underwood
“The Night Before (Life Goes On)”
A story about a teenage couple hanging on to summer before the female protagonist leaves for Baton Rouge to start her college years at LSU. It can either tug at your heartstrings or result in a jaded eye roll.

Carpenters
“One More Time”
On this airy ballad, Karen Carpenter gets more specific in the second verse, saying not just that she’s running away down south to “Loozy-anna,” but that she’s going all the way to Baton Rouge.

Grateful Dead
“Operator”
She skipped town and headed to Baton Rouge. If only the Grateful Dead knew the area code.

“Back to Louisiana”
Written by Bobby Osborne and performed by the likes of Delbert McClinton and Bruce Channel, this tune is about a girl who used to live in Shreveport, but odds are she moved to Baton Rouge.

And some of the ones you thought we forgot about.

Bob Dylan
“Tangled Up in Blue (Real Live version)”
In what some Dylan fans consider the greatest live cut of this Blood on the Tracks classic, Bob changes up nearly every line. New Orleans and Delacroix get a mention on the album version, and Dylan throws in a Red Stick reference in this version.

Iron & Wine
“Baby Center Stage”
Samuel Beam has developed a fuller sound through multiple albums. On the closer of his newest, released this April, he offers up some twangy, soft classic rock and cryptic lyrics about Louisiana and a little angel.

The Oak Ridge Boys
“Callin’ Baton Rouge”
The original version (by the same guys who sang “Elvira”) is a little more bluegrassy than Garth Brooks’ stadium rouser, with enough claps and “heys!” to make you think these squares were nu-folk before it was cool.

Lou Reed
“Baton Rouge”
The late great musician thinks of a lot of things when he thinks of Baton Rouge, but it starts with a mariachi band. We don’t know why, either.

Counting Crows
“Goodnight Elisabeth”
Adam Duritz will wait for you in Baton Rouge and also miss you down in New Orleans, Elisabeth.

Guy Clark
“Baton Rouge”
In which Clark rhymes “Baton Rouge” with “alligator shoes.”

Lil Boosie
“Nothin’ like Baton Rouge”
Recently incarcerated rapper Lil Boosie calls out the Red Stick on the regular, and on this track, he lets us know he does it all for his city.

Common
“It’s Your World”
Who knew Common spent his college years in our fair city? Unfortunately, it didn’t go so well, as explained in this smooth hip hop number.

“Me and Bobby McGee”
Apparently, people waited for trains in Baton Rouge? Probably the first song many people think of, its most famous version is by Janis Joplin. But Bobby was a woman in the original, written by Kris Kristofferson and Fred Foster and first sung by Roger Miller.

Johnny Cash
“Big River”
The Man in Black makes an appearance again with a rambling track that finds him in a love/hate relationship with a woman, following the Mighty Mississippi in search of her. “Now, won’t you batten down by Baton Rouge, River Queen, roll it on. Take that woman on down to New Orleans,” he sings in his famous deep rumble.

Tom Waits
“Whistlin’ Past the Graveyard”
Missed opportunity: Waits voicing the villain in Disney’s The Princess and the Frog. Here he conjures up voodoo images in a bluesy romp, growling, “I only come to Baton Rouge to find myself a witch.”

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
“Louisiana Rain”
“Shoes” rhymes with “Rouge” again. Petty experiences a Louisiana rain shower, or what we like to call Tuesday. It affects him so much, he’s worried he won’t be the same once he reaches the Capital City.

Randy Newman
“Rednecks”
LSU gets a shout out in a pretty negative way, in a song that holds nothing back about racism in the South


LINK
Posted by rutiger
purgatory
Member since Jun 2007
21767 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 3:53 pm to
Big river- johnny cash

And

Operator- grateful dead

Those are my 2 favorites.
Posted by SpyBoy
New Orleans
Member since May 2007
983 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 4:27 pm to
I've got one upcoming on my record called "Brusly" that mentions it. Maybe I'll give yall a little sneak peek soon.

How many songs mention Brusly?! Addis gets a shoutout too
Posted by midlothianlsu
Midlothian, Texas
Member since Oct 2009
1781 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 7:32 pm to
quote:

“The Night Before (Life Goes On)”


I always took it to mean she was leaving Baton Rouge.
“Baton Rouge, LSU, 18 years in her rear view”
Posted by FightinTigersDammit
Louisiana North
Member since Mar 2006
46425 posts
Posted on 5/11/23 at 9:45 pm to
I've never heard the Oak Ridge Boys version of Callin Baton Rouge, but I was playing the New Grass Revival's version at the Jena radio station in 1985.
Posted by Tchefuncte Tiger
Bat'n Rudge
Member since Oct 2004
62817 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 6:38 am to
Memory Motel - The Rolling Stones
Louisiana Rain - Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
Me and Bobby McGee - Janis Joplin (Kris Kristofferson)
Baton Rouge - Lou Reed
Baton Rouge - Guy Clark

I just recently discovered the last two.
Posted by mdomingue
Lafayette, LA
Member since Nov 2010
43119 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 10:18 am to
quote:

“Me and Bobby McGee”
Apparently, people waited for trains in Baton Rouge? Probably the first song many people think of, its most famous version is by Janis Joplin. But Bobby was a woman in the original, written by Kris Kristofferson and Fred Foster and first sung by Roger Miller.


The name came from a studio secretary at Monument Records named Barbara "Bobbie" McKee, but Kristofferson apparently misheard her surname.

Also, Kristofferson wrote the song but listed Fred Foster as a co-writer for giving him the idea based on a conversation they had.
Posted by BogeyTX
Member since Apr 2018
985 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 10:27 am to
Louisiana Rain - Tom Petty
Posted by The Boat
Member since Oct 2008
175989 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 1:29 pm to
Not a favorite song but since it wasn’t mentioned in that long arse copy and pasted post the woman in “What Mattered Most” sung by Ty Herndon was born in Baton Rouge.
Posted by stratman
NOLA
Member since Apr 2013
977 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 1:46 pm to
Back in the US, Back in the US, Back in the USSBR...no? that doesn't count?
Posted by deernaes
Member since Dec 2019
724 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 4:01 pm to
Posted by auggie
Opelika, Alabama
Member since Aug 2013
30975 posts
Posted on 5/12/23 at 4:11 pm to
quote:

Johnny Cash
“Wanted Man”
He’s basically wanted everywhere–here, too.


That's another Bob Dylan song though.
Posted by Mr. Misanthrope
Cloud 8
Member since Nov 2012
6346 posts
Posted on 5/13/23 at 10:22 pm to
quote:

Randy Newman “Rednecks” LSU gets a shout out in a pretty negative way, in a song that holds nothing back about racism in the South
You’ve drastically misstated Newman’s central theme, that being its condemnation of northern racism and hypocrisy while calling Southerners “Rednecks” for their racism.
quote:

Now your northern n*****'s a negro
You see he's got his dignity
Down here we're too ignorant to realize
That the North has set the n***** free
Yes he's free to be put in a cage In
Harlem ‘n New York City
And he's free to be put in a cage On
the South Side of Chicago
And the West Side
And he's free to be put in a cage In
Hough in Cleveland
And he's free to be put in a cage In
East St. Louis
And he's free to be put in a cage In
Fillmore ‘n San Francisco
And he's free to be put in a cage In
Roxbury in Boston—

—They're gatherin' 'em up from miles around Keepin' the n*****s down

A better example for the OP’s question would be Randy Newman’s Kingfish from Good Old Boys the same album that Rednecks is on.
quote:


Who built the highway to Baton Rouge?
Who put up the hospital
and built your schools?
Who looks after shite-kickers like you?
The Kingfish do
This post was edited on 5/20/23 at 8:48 am
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