"Rocky Top" | |
---|---|
Single by Osborne Brothers | |
from the album Yesterday, Today, and the Osborne Brothers | |
B-side | "My Favorite Memory" |
Released | December 25, 1967 |
Recorded | November 16, 1967 |
Studio | Bradley's Barn, Mount Juliet, Tennessee |
Genre | Bluegrass, country |
Length | 2:35 |
Label | Decca |
Songwriter(s) | Felice and Boudleaux Bryant |
"Rocky Top" | |
---|---|
Single by Lynn Anderson | |
from the album I'm Alright | |
B-side | "Take Me Home" |
Released | April 1970 |
Recorded | May 1969 |
Studio | RCA Victor (Nashville, Tennessee) |
Genre | Bluegrass |
Length | 2:39 |
Label | Chart |
Songwriter(s) | Felice and Boudleaux Bryant |
Producer(s) | Slim Williamson |
"Rocky Top" is an American country and bluegrass song written by Felice and Boudleaux Bryant in 1967 and first recorded by the Osborne Brothers later that same year. The song, which is a city dweller's lamentation over the loss of a simpler and freer existence in the hills of Tennessee, is one of Tennessee's eleven official state songs[1] and has been recorded by dozens of artists from multiple musical genres worldwide since its publication. In U.S. college athletics, "Rocky Top" is associated with the Tennessee Volunteers of the University of Tennessee (UT), whose Pride of the Southland Band has played a marching band version of the song at the school's sporting events since the early 1970s.[2][3]
The Osborne Brothers' 1967 bluegrass version of the song reached No. 33 on the U.S. Country charts, and Lynn Anderson's 1970 version peaked at No. 17 on the U.S. Country charts and No. 33 in Canada.[4] In 2005, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ranked "Rocky Top" number seven on its list of 100 Songs of the South.[5]