Peak
8
Weeks
12
Score
1,818
Chart Year
1969
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The Louisiana singer/songwriter Tony Joe White acquainted America with the Southern cuisine polk salad on this track from his first album, which became a hit single in the summer of 1969. Polk salad is made from the leaves of the polkweed plant, but is not something you'll find in grocery stores since it's toxic - you have to boil it a few times before you can eat it. White explains in the song's folksy introduction that polk is "a plant that grows out in the woods and the fields, and it looks something like a turnip green." He then introduces Annie, a hardscrabble woman who made polk salad for her family, since that's all they could afford to eat. White grew up in Oak Grove, Louisiana near the Mississippi River, and wrote what he called "swamp songs" about the folks from the area. "Annie, she could have been one of maybe three or four girls along that river there because all the girls were kinda tomboys," he said in our 2013 interview. "They loved to fish, climb trees shoot rifles. That kind of stuff. So Annie could have been anybody. It's just like 'Old Man Willis,' 'Roosevelt and Ira Lee.' All those were real people that I grew up with." White does enjoy a good polk salad. "I ate a bunch of it growing up on the cotton farm," he told us. "It grows wild, and you pick it a certain time during the year, and you boil it and cook it like greens. My mother said it had a lot of iron in it and stuff for us kids, so it was something that tasted real good to me back then. I still eat some every spring." This being the late '60s, many listeners thought that "polk salad" was code for marijuana. White explained: "The early days on the tour we was out and it was a big hit, a lot of the hippie festivals, flower children and everybody, they would bring deep bags of grass back to the dressing room or back in my tent. And they said, 'We brought you a little polk.' They all thought polk salad was marijuana. And I was, like, 'That's not the kind I'm talking about.' Anyway, everybody got it after a while." Elvis Presley played this at many of his concerts, including a performance on February 18, 1970 at the International Hotel in Las Vegas that was included on his live album On Stage. For Tony Joe White, this was a thrill, since he performed a lot of Elvis songs when he first started out. Elvis arranged for White, who was living in Memphis at the time, to fly to Vegas so he could be in the audience for the concerts that were compiled into On Stage. "They recorded it, like, six, seven nights in a row, so every night after the show, we would sit back in the dressing room and talk and hang out," White told us. "He had an old acoustic guitar back there and he would always get me to play him an old blues lick or something. And then he would try and learn it. He loved guitar but he really didn't play it a lot. He treated me really good, though, every time I was around him." This live version of the song was released it as a single, issued in America in 1973. Recorded at RCA Victor Studios in Nashville, the Black and White album was produced by Billy Swan, who had a #1 hit as a solo artist in 1974 with "I Can Help." Musicians on this track were David Briggs (organ), Norbert Putnam (bass) and Jerry Carrigan (drums). White played the guitar and harmonica.
If some of ya'll never been down south too much I'm gonna tell you a little bit about this So that you'll understand what I'm talkin' about Down there we have a plant that grows out in the woods And in the fields looks somethin' like a turnip green And everybody calls it polk salad, polk salad Used to know a girl lived down there And she'd go out in the evenings and pick her a mess of it Carry it home and cook it for supper 'Cause that's about all they had to eat, but they did all right Down in Louisiana, where the alligators grow so mean There lived a girl that I swear to the world Made the alligators look tame Polk salad Annie, polk salad Annie Everybody said it was a shame 'Cause her momma was a workin' on the chain gang (A mean vicious woman) Everyday for supper time, she'd go down by the truck patch And pick her a mess of polk salad, and carry it home in a tow sack Polk salad Annie, the gators got your granny Everybody says it was a shame 'Cause her momma was a workin' on the chain gang (A wretched, spiteful, straight-razor totin' woman Lord have Mercy, take a mess of it) Her daddy was lazy and no count, claimed he had a bad back All her brothers were fit for was stealin' watermelons out of my truck patch Polk salad Annie, the gators got your granny Everybody said it was a shame 'Cause her momma was a workin' on the chain gang (Sock a little polk salad to me, you know I need me a mess of it)
| Week | Chart Date | Position | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jul 5, 1969 | 86 | 40 |
| 2 | Jul 12, 1969 | 57 | 69 |
| 3 | Jul 19, 1969 | 43 | 83 |
| 4 | Jul 26, 1969 | 22 | 104 |
| 5 | Aug 2, 1969 | 18 | 108 |
| 6 | Aug 9, 1969 | 14 | 112 |
| 7 | Aug 16, 1969 | 13 | 113 |
| 8 | Aug 23, 1969 | 8 | 118 |
| 9 | Aug 30, 1969 | 11 | 115 |
| 10 | Sep 6, 1969 | 13 | 113 |
| 11 | Sep 13, 1969 | 28 | 98 |
| 12 | Sep 20, 1969 | 44 | 82 |