I want to thank purplegoatee2684b071ed for bringing this song up in a comment.
I never knew much about this band. I read about them in a Who book. When the Who were having troubles in the mid-sixties, Keith Moon was thinking seriously about joining this band. I’m glad he didn’t do it, but I can see why he liked them. Very tough-sounding band in league with The Animals and Them, at least with this song. The Nashville Teens would later back Jerry Lee Lewis on his live album recorded at the Star-Club in Hamburg, which makes perfect sense; they were built for that kind of controlled chaos.
I think it would have been more powerful without as much harmonizing during the verses, but it’s good. When people talk about the British Invasion, the usual names jump out: The Beatles, The Stones, The Animals, but in there also were The Nashville Teens, a band whose name sounded American but whose sound was pure British R&B.
The Nashville Teens came out of Surrey, not Tennessee, but you wouldn’t know it from the way they attacked this song. The song itself was already a piece of southern gothic storytelling, written by John D. Loudermilk about a poor boy’s dream to rise above his dirt-poor roots. Loudermilk loved their version. He once said he’d “never imagined the song could rock that hard.” After the Nashville Teens’ success, Tobacco Road became a standard, covered by everyone from Jefferson Airplane and David Lee Roth to Rare Earth and Eric Burdon.
What really makes this jump off the record is its slow, building arrangement. It starts with a moody, almost dirge-like verse before exploding into that chorus. This is the sound of the mid-sixties British blues scene before it amped up and got stadium-sized with Cream and The Jimi Hendrix Experience.
This song peaked at #3 in Canada, #6 in the UK, #9 in New Zealand, and #14 on the Billboard 100 in 1964.
Another version of the song by Rare Earth.
Tobacco Road
I was born in a trunk.Mama died and my daddy got drunk.Left me here to die alonein the middle of Tobacco Road.
Grow up in rusty shackall I had was hangin’ on my back.Only you know how I loathethis place called Tobacco Road.
But it’s home, the only life I ever known.Only you know how I loathe Tobacco Road.
InterludeGonna leave, get a jobwith the help and the grace from above.Save some money, get rich and old
bring it back to Tobacco Road.Bring that dynamite and a crane
blow it up, start all over again.Build a town, be proud to show.Gives the name Tobacco Road.But it’s home, the only life I ever knownand it’s lost…But I lost it’s your home
…

I was watching something on The Who and original fan Irish Jack mentions this as one of the Mods’ essential songs. I was just listening to that Rare Earth 2-CD set yesterday, and this isn’t on it. Steve Young does a version too. Good one.
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Irish Jack! I’ve read and seen some of his interviews… yea this was turned into a standard…and yea perfect for the Mods… I like Young alot…I’ll check it out.
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Such a great song. I imagine even today you opened up a few eyes. What? Not from Nashville? They had me fooled for awhile as well. Really didn’t know much about them. Interesting Who connection. John D. authored a few good tunes in his day.
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Yea…the only reason I knew they were not from here is because Moon wanted to join them and I knew they were from there… Loudermilk is interesting…first learned about him in the Gregg Allman book…
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I on the other hand mostly know him for having so many songs covered. Maybe I should read a book!
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No…you know him the right way! He helped Allman and his songwriting…and bought Allman a motorcycle lol….befor they made it.
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That’s pretty cool. Talented family eh. Being cousin to the Louvin Brothers. Love those guys.
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Compare John Ds style on ‘The Great Snowman’ (which for some reason I love!!!??? I know, but the brain likes what the brain likes?! Go figure.) and the lyrics of ‘Tobacco Road,’ it just doesn’t feel like it comes from the same early ’60s slightly pudgy suit-and-tie bespectacled guy.
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You know I don’t know that one. I went and gave it a listen. Not a bad little tune, has a certain lilt to it.
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I didn’t recognize the name Nashville Teens but recognized this rendition from the first notes. Yeah, I’m old.
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I only knew this song by Rare Earth…but this one is pretty intense from a British Invasion band.
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Very cool! 😎
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Something about this song reminds me of the Roger Miller hit King of the Road. The Nashville Teens cover is awesome.
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I can see that…
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I don’t know their name but they do sound British despite the name. The song…it has appealing elements like the guitar but to me, there’s too much going on in it while sounding incomplete at the same time. Kind of a weird one!
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This soon became a standard almost…so many people covered it.
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I wish that I could say that your Dodgers were lucky but…well, they weren’t certainly lucky! Congrats to you my friend as true Dodgers fan!
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Thanks Dude…oh they were lucky in many respects…they were outplayed overall…but won those close games.
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Man, The Nashville Teens’ rendition nicely swings – cool stuff! It’s also good to see between your and my blog are Earth are getting more attention!😎
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Eric Burdon and War do a killer live version. I listen often.
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Yea I’ve heard other versions like Rare Earth but never thisone.
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It’s a jam and Burdon is into it as is the band.
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I’m listening to it now…it builds and builds…love the sax player as well.
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Great video and man to they cook. WhenBurdon was on he was hard to beat.
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I love that video man…how it starts out in black and white…but that was great.
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They did the best version I heard. I’ve heard Loudermilk’s, which is a lot slower and acoustic.
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I should have posted Loudermilk’s version…the only one I knew was Rare Earth
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This version is pretty cool – like the piano alternating between absent and frenetic.
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It’s different with the harmonizing… but it’s good. I never really knew this song much except the Rare Earth version.
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The Blue Magoos version is on Nuggets, that’s the one I know.
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I’m sure I heard it before but don’t remember it…thanks I’ll check it out.
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I only heard the Roth version til now. Dave made it sound like he wrote it! lol
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LOL…thats what he does.
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This is Troggs ‘Wild Thing’ like, in that it just went ‘BOOM’ in your ears when all around there was tepid s- stuff like Val Doonican or Frank Ifield.
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This was new to me…this was awesome obbverse. I never heard their version.
Frank Ifield I’ve listened to….I’m not proud of that fact
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Yep, it is proto-Rock.
Lol. I feeled your pain too.
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This track is smokin’
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Damfine! They do this song just right. By far better than the version (original?) that I remember. Interesting they named themselves Nashville Teens.
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Yea…in the middle of the UK…that was odd but I guess they wanted people to think that. I never paid this much attention but I love it now.
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p.s. Such a different song by Rare Earth. First time hearing this also.
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I don’t know if you will get what I’m saying…if I can express it right…the only thing that threw me off about the Nashville Teens is the harmonies while singing the verses…it was different but I was expecting one singer tearing it up on the verses…so the harmonies caught me by surprise…i was used to Rare Earth.
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I think I know what you are saying. I didn’t think it interfered with the song. You’re probably just used to the version with a solo voice. Did you know there is a novel called Tobacco Road, but Erskine Caldwell iirc. Read it awhile back and remember it as being titillating.
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No I never knew about that. That could be where he got the title.
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Set almost 100 years ago. I got it as a beat up paperback at a yard sale I think.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobacco_Road_(novel)
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Yea it was published in 1932 I believe… I looked it up
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Classic child-hood era chant that still sounds fabulously exciting!
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Yep, always cranked this one back in the day. And, you’re right, Max, it does have an Animals vibe to it. It still rocks!
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I still love the way the guitar just explodes out the theme, then answered by the two note hold. Loved it way back then when it was released (it got air play in Los Angeles) and love it now.
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