"Alberta #1" | ||||
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Song by Bob Dylan | ||||
from the album Self Portrait | ||||
Released | June 8, 1970 | |||
Genre | Rock, Folk rock | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Songwriter(s) | Bob Dylan | |||
Producer(s) | Bob Johnston | |||
Self Portrait track listing | ||||
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Alberta is the name of more than one traditional blues song.
Lead Belly recorded a song "Alberta" in four versions. One of these was recorded in New York on January 23, 1935 (for ARC Records, which did not issue it), and a similar version was recorded in New York on June 15, 1940 (included on Leadbelly: Complete Recorded Works, vol. 1, 1 April 1939 to 15 June 1940). Another version, recorded in Wilton, Connecticut, on January 20, 1935, included the lyrics "Take me, Alberta, take me down in your rocking chair" and is included on Gwine Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In (Rounder Records, Library of Congress Recordings, vol. 2). Lead Belly's fourth recorded version survives on recording disc BC-122 of the Mary Elizabeth Barnicle–Tillman Cadle Collection at East Tennessee State University, recorded near the date of June 15, 1948, with which several related discs are labeled.
Mary Wheeler, in her Steamboatin' Days: Folk Songs of the River Packet Era (Baton Rouge, La.: Louisiana State University Press, 1944), records a song she collected from Gabriel "Uncle Gabe" Hester, with the lyrics:
Wheeler also reports Hester's reminiscences of the steamboat work songs he had sung as a roustabout in his younger days. However, Wheeler's account does not explicitly give any evidence for Roger McGuinn's statement that, "This is a song sung by the stevedores who worked on the Ohio River."
The song became popular in the American folk music revival. Bob Gibson recorded it for his Carnegie Concert (1957), and it was published in Sing Out!, vol. 8, no. 3 (1959). Subsequent recordings include:
Eric Clapton's "Alberta" is a cover of the Snooks Eaglin variant of "Alberta." Clapton performed the song on his Unplugged album.
There are other traditional songs in which the singer implores the beloved to let her hair down, for example, "I Wish I Was a Mole In the Ground."