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Tennessee River (song)

"Tennessee River"
Single by Alabama
from the album My Home's in Alabama
B-side "Can't Forget About You"
Released May 16, 1980 (U.S.)
Format 7"
Recorded April 16, 1980
Genre Country
Length 3:04
Label RCA 12018
Writer(s) Randy Owen
Producer(s) Harold Shedd, Larry McBride and Alabama
Alabama singles chronology
"My Home's in Alabama"
(1980)
"Tennessee River"
(1980)
"Why Lady Why"
(1980)

"Tennessee River" is a song written by Randy Owen, and recorded by American country music band Alabama. It was released in April 1980 as the third single from the album My Home's in Alabama. The song was the group's first No. 1 song on the Billboard magazine Hot Country Singles chart.

The song was officially Alabama's first single release by RCA Nashville after they had signed with the label in March 1980. The song is part of the band's first RCA album, My Home's in Alabama, which also includes two earlier singles: "I Wanna Come Over" and the title track; the earlier songs had originally been released by the small MDJ Records, even though there were later RCA pressings of "My Home's in Alabama" offered for retail sale.

A fiddle-heavy celebration of growing up near the Tennessee River (which flows fairly close to Alabama's home base of Fort Payne), the song expresses the regrets of having gotten the urge to roam, gratitude of the few times the singer gets to enjoy spending time by the river, and a desire to eventually settle down and raise a family in the river's vicinity.

Country music historian Bill Malone, in his essay included in the liner notes for Classic Country Music: A Smithsonian Collection, noted that "Tennessee River" was among those songs where they "exhibit a deep love for their state and region ... and in the unpretentious sense of place and loyalty to home and family that they display in their personal lives and performances." Other songs in their repertoire - including "My Home's in Alabama," "Song of the South" and "Born Country," plus their Christmas song "Christmas in Dixie" - would exhibit those same sentiments.


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