One could reasonably assume a Tennessee state song should talk about the natural beauty and cultural significance of the state that houses Music City and the Home of the Blues (Nashville and Memphis, respectively). Songs about growing and selling drugs that are illegal in the Volunteer State never exactly screamed โstate anthemโ until the spring of 2023.
The 113th General Assembly of Tennessee voted in a new state song to join the ranks of โTennessee Waltzโ and โRocky Topโ on April 20, 2023. The smokers in the room are already seeing the next hazy layer of irony here.
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The Criminal Irony Of The Tennessee State Song
We donโt often think about state songs including lyrics about activities that are illegal within that state. But in the spring of 2023, Tennessee changed what constitutes an appropriate state anthem forever when they elected Steve Earleโs โCopperhead Roadโ as another one of its official songs. Yes, that โCopperhead Road,โ the one recounting John Lee Pettimoreโs transition from the Vietnam War to growing marijuana up a holler down Copperhead Road (a continuation of the Pettimore family business of moonshining).
The title track off Steve Earleโs 1988 album is undoubtedly a banger and the country rock starโs most commercially successful hit. But as a Tennessee state song, we canโt help but chuckle at the irony of the legislatureโs decision. With the rare and confusing exception of low-THC products, marijuana is still illegal in Tennessee at the time of this writing. And while moonshine production is legal in the Volunteer State, that doesnโt apply to the individual level. John Lee Pettimoreโs granddaddy was breaking the law too, basically.
In an even stranger twist of fate that most stoners will appreciate, the 113th General Assembly honored Steve Earleโs addition to the Tennessee state song catalog on April 20, or 4/20, the unofficial pot-smoking holiday. Indeed, the calendar date and songโs lyrical content certainly makes it hard to imagine at least some of the Tennessee lawmakers werenโt in on the joke. Earle, however, didn’t think they even listened to the song.
โItโs one of those things,โ Earle told Guitar Player. โI figure that Iโll retain the honor until somebody actually goes onto a website and reads the lyrics.โ
Steve Earle Capitalized On His Opportunity At The Capitol
The decision to dub Steve Earleโs 1988 track โCopperhead Roadโ as an official Tennessee state song is an interesting one even to the man who wrote it. But that didnโt mean he was going to turn down the chance to make his voice heard at the Tennessee Capitol building. โI went to the legislature and played โCopperhead Roadโ on the legislature floor,โ Earle recalled to Guitar Player. โThere had been a really bad school shooting in Nashville right before that. It had become a big political issue.โ
โAnd because the guys that sort of sponsored that bill were guys that think more like me, they were really outspoken when all that was going on.โ (The guys Earle referred to Democratic representative Bo Mitchell and State Senator Heidi Campbell.) โSo, at the end of my performance, I reminded them all that they ought to give a listen to my other song from that same record about gun violence: โDevilโs Right Hand.โโ
If Steve Earle is going to do one thing while heโs there, itโs make you pay attention to the words of his songs.
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