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The Dirty South (album)

The Dirty South
Dbt thedirtysouth.jpg
Studio album by Drive-By Truckers
Released August 24, 2004
Genre Southern rock
Length 70:34
Label New West
Producer David Barbe
Drive-By Truckers chronology
Decoration Day
(2003)
The Dirty South
(2004)
A Blessing and a Curse
(2006)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 87/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 4/5 stars
Blender 4/5 stars
Mojo 4/5 stars
Pitchfork Media 8.4/10
Spin A−
Uncut 4/5 stars
The Village Voice A−

The Dirty South is the fifth album by Alabamian alternative country/Southern rock group Drive-By Truckers, released in 2004. The Dirty South is Drive-By Truckers' second concept album. Like its predecessor, Southern Rock Opera, the album examines the state of the South, and unveils the hypocrisy, irony, and tragedy that continues to exist.

"Where The Devil Don't Stay" was inspired by a poem by Mike Cooley's uncle Ed Cooley, and was recorded in one take.

Patterson Hood's "Tornadoes" was originally written in 1988 in reaction to the closing concert for the Adam’s House Cat Nightmare Tour. The Nightmare Tour set list was composed almost exclusively of songs containing metaphors or imagery of trains, but the lack of the tour’s success forced Hood and his band to abandon the concept and start afresh. Hood read an eyewitness account of the tornado in the local paper the next day and wrote "Tornadoes" after reading her statement that "it sounded like a train."

Isbell's "The Day John Henry Died," retells the story of John Henry.

"Puttin’ People on the Moon", written by Hood, tells the story of a town downriver of Huntsville and their "rocket envy" or economic depression due to the negative environmental and economic effects of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center.

Mike Cooley’s "Carl Perkins' Cadillac" recounts the celebrated Sun Records, Sam Phillips, and the music industry in general.

"The Sands of Iwo Jima" recounts Hood's experiences with his great uncle while growing up in North Alabama. Questioning the veracity of the movie, his uncle answers ironically he never saw John Wayne on the sands of Iwo Jima.


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