This happened when DJ's (Disc-Jockeys) decided to play "Side B" of Bobbie Gentry's 45rpm single...instead of "Mississippi Delta". Seems like nuthin' ever comes to no good up on Choctaw Ridge,
on 3/28/2023, 1:32 am
Like The Kingston Trio's "Tom Dooley", Bobbie's song to "Billie Joe" had to do with death...and became a "major hit" accidentally.
Bobbie Gentry initially recorded "Mississippi Delta" as a 45rpm "Side A" single to be played on radio stations.
Producer Kelly Gordon decided to go with Bobbie Gentry's "Demo" for Capitol Records entitled "Ode To Billie Joe".... as the 45rpm single's "Side B".
To add some musical depth to the "Demo" (which featured Bobbie Gentry singing while strumming on her guitar)....
producer Kelly Gordon hired Jimmie Haskell to include some orchestra arrangements.
Remember Jimmie Haskell? Capitol Records hired him to overdub The Kingston Trio's "Something Special" album (1962)....
with orchestral arrangements and backup female vocals.
Anyhow, as stated previously, "Ode To Billie Joe" became a #1 hit accidentally and by extraordinary good luck.
<> Ode To Billie Joe
The song begins on June 3rd and comes across in the form of a first-person narrative, sung by the young daughter of a Mississippi Delta family.
It offers fragments of a dinnertime conversation on the day a local boy, Billie Joe McAllister, jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge.
Reporters asked Bobbie Gentry what the song is about? Suicide; the reason? OR....
what the young girl and Billie Joe was throwing off the Bridge....earlier that day?
Bobbie Gentry snapped back.....
"The song is about apathy. Sure, there's a suicide of a young boy. And it's got nothing to do with what Billie Joe or that girl he's with is throwing off the Bridge.
I don't even know what it was. Some folks tell me it could've been a stillborn baby or perhaps a ring, but when I wrote the song, it wasn't all that important.
The song is a study of unconscious cruelty. Listen to the dinnertime conversation."
>> Dinnertime Conversation at Billie Joe's Girlfriend's House <<
Her Father's comments:
"Billie Joe never had a lick of sense, pass the biscuits please."
Her Brother acts surprised but he keeps on eating his meal as usual.
Her Mother's comments:
"Did you remember to clean your feet? Here, have some more peas."
ps: The movie "Ode To Billy Joe" (notice the different spelling for "Billie") was released in 1976, and was directed by Max Baer;
the same person who played "Jethro" in the infamous TV sitcom: "The Beverly Hillbillies"
As a point of interest, director Max Baer decided to go with a "rag doll" they were throwing off the Tallahatchie Bridge...
and the reason for "Billy" Joe's suicide had to do with his being a homosexual.
Bobbie Gentry told Max this was never part of her song but she gave him free rein. Max Baer told reporters:
"I love Bobbie. Not only is she a beautiful lady and one hell of a songwriter...she is just as mysterious as those songs she sings about."
Brucester
AND...AND...AND...
And now Billie Joe McAllister jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge.
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