“Ode to Billy Joe” (1967) – King Curtis and the King Pins

“Ode to Billie Joe” (1967) – King Curtis and King Pins * Written by Bobbie Gentry * Produced by Tom Cogbill and Tom Dowd * 45: “Ode to Billie Joe” / “In the Pocket” * Label: Atco * Charts: Billboard Hot 100 #28; R&B #6

Bobbie Gentry’s breakthrough single, in the summer of ’67, made for one of those pop music moments where every ear seemed bent toward a specific song. Gentry sang gently about an apparent suicide and some undisclosed item being thrown over the Tallahatchie Bridge. She gave more info about events surrounding the telling of the tale (multiple servings of apple pie and biscuits) than she did about the tale itself. More notably, the music churned irresolutelya lone nylon string guitar went back and forth between 9th and 7th chords while four violins and two cellos swirled into the ether and then back around.

The record made an impression on country music, proposing a Gothic approach that, on one hand, went against its audience’s culture of certainty, but on the other, paid tribute to the abiding darkness in Appalachian folk song. Soon Dolly Parton was singing about jumping from “The Bridge” with an unwanted child and Charlie Rich was reporting on the mysterious events of “July 12, 1939,” and all of Tanya Tucker’s first singles bumped Gentry on the shoulder while reaching for William Faulkner.

The best responses came from (runner up) Bob Dylan, whose “Clothesine Saga” on the Basement Tapes is his funniest song, carrying on about laundry en route to the primary revelation that the “Vice President’s gone mad,” and (winner) sax legend King Curtis, who rounded up all the spookiness, scrapped the lyrics altogether, and left us with an even more enticing mystery.

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