Take Me Home, Country Roads Explained

Take Me Home, Country Roads
Type:single
Artist:John Denver
Album:Poems, Prayers & Promises
B-Side:"Poems, Prayers and Promises"
Recorded:January 1971, New York City
Genre:
Length:3:17
Label:RCA
Producer:
Prev Title:Friends With You
Prev Year:1971
Next Title:Everyday
Next Year:1972

"Take Me Home, Country Roads", also known simply as "Country Roads", is a song written by Bill Danoff, Taffy Nivert and John Denver. It was released as a single performed by Denver on April 12, 1971, peaking at number two on Billboards US Hot 100 singles for the week ending August 28, 1971. The song was a success on its initial release and was certified Gold by the RIAA on August 18, 1971, and Platinum on April 10, 2017. The song became one of John Denver's most popular songs. It has continued to sell, with over 1.8 million digital copies sold in the United States.[3]

In 1998, the 1971 recording by John Denver was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.[4]

The song is considered a symbol of West Virginia. In March 2014, it became one of the four official state anthems of West Virginia.[5]

Although considered by the people of West Virginia as a representation of their state, the song much more likely reflects on the writers' time in the western part of Virginia. This is most notable when John Denver references both the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah River. West Virginia has a very small portion of each, whereas western Virginia is home to a notable portion of the Blue Ridge Mountains and Shenandoah river.

In 2023, the song was selected by the Library of Congress for inclusion in the National Recording Registry.[6]

Composition

Inspiration for the title line had come while Taffy Nivert and Bill Danoff, who were married, were driving along Clopper Road in Montgomery County, Maryland to a gathering of Nivert's family in Gaithersburg, with Nivert behind the wheel while Danoff played his guitar. "I just started thinking, country roads, I started thinking of me growing up in western New England and going on all these small roads," Danoff said. "It didn't have anything to do with Maryland or anyplace."[7]

To Danoff, the lyric "[t]he radio reminds me of my home far away" in the bridge is quintessentially West Virginian, an allusion to when he listened to the program Saturday Night Jamboree, broadcast from Wheeling, West Virginia, on WWVA at his home in Springfield, Massachusetts during his childhood in the 1950s.[8]

Danoff was influenced by friend and West Virginian actor Chris Sarandon and members of a West Virginia commune who attended Danoff's performances. Of the commune members, Danoff remarked, "They brought their dogs and were a very colorful group of folks, but that is how West Virginia began creeping into the song." While the song was inspired by Danoff's upbringing in Springfield, Massachusetts, he "didn't want to write about Massachusetts because [he] didn't think the word was musical."

Starting December 22, 1970, Denver was heading the New Year's bill at The Cellar Door, with Fat City opening for him, just as Denver had opened at the same club for then-headliner David Steinberg. After the club's post-Christmas reopening night on Tuesday, December 29 (Cellar Door engagements ran from Tuesday to Sunday, and this booking was for two weeks), the three returned to the couple's apartment for an impromptu jam. On the way, Denver's left thumb was broken in a collision. He was rushed to the emergency room, where the thumb was splinted. When they returned to the apartment, Denver said he was "wired, you know."[9]

When Danoff and Nivert ran through what they had of the song they had been working on for about a month, planning to sell to Johnny Cash, Denver decided he had to have it, which prompted them to abandon plans for the sale.[10] The verses and chorus were still missing a bridge, so the three of them went about finishing.

Nivert got out an encyclopedia to learn more about West Virginia. The first thing she encountered was the rhododendron, the state flower, so she kept trying to work the word Rhododendron into the song. Rhododendron was the title that Nivert had written down on the lyric sheet, which they later sent to ASCAP. The three stayed up until 6:00 a.m., changing words and moving lines around.[11]

When they finished, on the morning of Wednesday, December 30, 1970, Denver announced that the song had to go on his next album. Later that night, during Denver's first set, Denver called his two collaborators back to the spotlight, where the trio changed their career trajectories, reading the lyrics from a single, handheld, unfolded piece of paper. According to Len Jaffe, a Washington, D.C.-based singer-songwriter who attended the show where Denver premiered the song, this resulted in a five-minute standing ovation.[12] The next day was Denver's 28th birthday. They recorded it in New York City in January 1971.

"Take Me Home, Country Roads" is written in the key of A major.[13]

Commercial performance and legacy

"Take Me Home, Country Roads" appeared on the LP Poems, Prayers & Promises and was released as a 45 in the spring of 1971. Original pressings credited the single to "John Denver with Fat City". It broke nationally in mid-April but moved up the charts very slowly. After several weeks, RCA Records called John and told him they were giving up on the single. His response: "No! Keep working on it!" They did, and the single went to number 1 on the Record World Pop Singles Chart and the Cash Box Top 100, and number 2 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, topped only by "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart" by The Bee Gees.

On August 18, 1971, it was certified Gold by the RIAA for a million copies shipped. The song continued to sell in the digital era. As of January 2020, the song has also sold 1,800,000 downloads since it became available digitally.[3]

Denver's recording of "Take Me Home, Country Roads" was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the National Recording Registry in 2023.[14]

The song has since become an anthem of the Brisbane Lions and is sung by the crowd every time Lions player Charlie Cameron kicks a goal. The song was chosen by Cameron to be played in reference to his country roots.[15]

The song was interpolated in "Lonely Road" by MGK & Jelly Roll in 2024. It reached number 33 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated 10 August 2024, giving Denver his first top 40 appearance as a songwriter since the same song's appearance in the medley, "Forever Country" by Artists of Then, Now & Forever peaked at number 21 in 2016.[3]

Reception in West Virginia

Take Me Home, Country Roads
Prefix:Regional
Country:West Virginia
Published:April 12, 1971
Adopted:March 2014
Author:Bill Danoff and Taffy Nivert

"Take Me Home, Country Roads" received an enthusiastic response from West Virginians.[16] On November 1, 2017, the West Virginia Tourism Office announced it had obtained the rights to use "Take Me Home, Country Roads", in its marketing efforts. "'Country Roads' has become synonymous with West Virginia all over the world," said West Virginia Tourism Commissioner Chelsea Ruby. "It highlights everything we love about our state: scenic beauty, majestic mountains, a timeless way of life, and most of all, the warmth of a place that feels like home whether you've lived here forever or are just coming to visit." The opening phrase of the song, "Almost heaven", became a primary tourism office slogan.[17]

The song is the theme song of West Virginia University, and it has been performed during every home football pregame show since 1972. The song is played for other athletic events and university functions, including after football games, for which the fans are encouraged to stay in the stands and sing the song along with the team.[18] On September 6, 1980, at the invitation of West Virginia Governor Jay Rockefeller, songwriters Danoff, Nivert, and Denver performed the song during pregame festivities to a sold-out crowd of Mountaineer fans. This performance marked the dedication of the current West Virginia University Mountaineer Field and the first game for head coach Don Nehlen.[19]

The popularity of the song inspired resolutions in the West Virginia Legislature to adopt "Take Me Home, Country Roads" as an official state song. On March 7, 2014, the West Virginia Legislature approved a resolution to make "Take Me Home, Country Roads" an official state song of West Virginia, alongside three other pieces: "West Virginia Hills", "This Is My West Virginia", and "West Virginia, My Home Sweet Home".[20] Governor Earl Ray Tomblin signed the resolution into law on March 8, 2014.[21]

The song was played at the funeral for West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd at the state capitol in Charleston, West Virginia on July 2, 2010.[22]

The Mountain State Brewing Company based in Thomas, West Virginia, produces an amber ale named "Almost Heaven", which it says is "named after John Denver's ode to West Virginia, 'Country Roads'".[23]

Personnel

Charts

Year-end charts

Cover versions

Hermes House Band version

Country Roads
Cover:HermesHouseBandCountryRoads.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Hermes House Band
Album:The Album
Length:3:22
Label:XPLO Music
Producer:
  • Jim Binapfl
  • John Lehmkuhl
  • Mark Snijders
  • Jack Buck
Prev Title:Disco Samba Part II
Prev Year:2000
Next Title:Que Sera Sera
Next Year:2001

Dutch pop band Hermes House Band covered the song and released it as "Country Roads". This version was first released in Germany on May 21, 2001, and was issued in the United Kingdom on December 3, 2001, where it was a contender for the 2001 Christmas number-one single.[26] This version was a chart success in Europe, reaching number one in Scotland, number two in Germany and Ireland, and the top 10 in Austria, Denmark, and the United Kingdom.

Charts

Chart (2001)!scope="col"
Peak
position
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[27] 21
Ireland Dance (IRMA)[28] 1
Chart (2001)!scope="col"
Position
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[29] 18
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[30] 96
Germany (Official German Charts)[31] 10
Ireland (IRMA)[32] 20
UK Singles (OCC)[33] 121
Chart (2002)!scope="col"
Position
Ireland (IRMA)[34] 81

Certifications

Olivia Newton-John version

Olivia Newton-John released a cover version in January 1973 that reached number 6 in Japan and number 15 in the UK.[35] It was the lead single from her third studio album, Let Me Be There. This version, as well as the song itself, features prominently in the Japanese animated film, Whisper of the Heart.

Fallout 76 version

A cover version of the song, a collaboration between Copilot Music and Sound and the vocal group Spank,[37] was commissioned for and featured in both the teaser and full E3 2018 trailers for the 2018 video game Fallout 76, with its plot events set in West Virginia.[38] Released as an iTunes-only single on July 4, 2018, the song reached No. 1 on the iTunes singles chart.[39] It debuted at No. 41 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart that week and at No. 21 on Billboard's Country Digital Songs the following week. The official YouTube upload of the original John Denver recording, initially uploaded in 2013, would later edit its description in response to the song's use for the game.[40] In Australia, a promotional Fallout 76 vinyl featuring the cover was included with the December 2018 issue of STACK Magazine exclusively from retailer JB Hi-Fi.[41]

Charts
Chart (2018)Peak
position
US Country Digital Songs (Billboard)21
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)41

Forever Country version

The song found further chart success as part of the "Forever Country" medley and video, created in 2016 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Country Music Association Awards.[42]

Toots and the Maytals version

Jamaican reggae group Toots and the Maytals recorded a cover version for their 1975 U.S. re-release of their 1973 album Funky Kingston. Listed on the album as "Country Road," the lyrics are altered slightly to refer to the group's home country of Jamaica with specific references to the island's West end.[43]

Lana Del Rey version

Take Me Home, Country Roads
Type:single
Artist:Lana Del Rey
Genre:
Length:2:46
Label:
Producer:
Prev Title:Candy Necklace
Prev Year:2023
Next Title:Tough
Next Year:2024

American singer-songwriter, Lana Del Rey released a piano cover of the song on December 1, 2023.[44] It is expected to be featured on Del Rey's upcoming album.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kurt Wolff. Orla Duane. Country Music: The Rough Guide. 2000. Rough Guides. 978-1-85828-534-4. 425.
  2. Web site: Tom . Breihan . The Number Ones: The Bee Gees' "How Can You Mend A Broken Heart". . February 5, 2019 . John Denver's folksy, bucolic ramble "Take Me Home, Country Roads" also peaked at #2.... June 16, 2023.
  3. Web site: Trust. Gary. John Denver Back in Hot 100's Top 40 as a Writer Thanks to MGK & Jelly Roll's 'Lonely Road. Billboard. 5 August 2024. 5 August 2024.
  4. Web site: GRAMMY Hall Of Fame | Hall of Fame Artists | GRAMMY.com. grammy.com.
  5. Web site: 2014-05-07 . "Take Me Home Country Roads" . 2023-06-28 . State Symbols USA . en.
  6. Web site: 2023 View Registry by Induction Years Recording Registry National Recording Preservation Board Programs Library of Congress . 2023-06-28 . Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.
  7. Web site: Co-Writer of 'Take Me Home, Country Roads' Dispels Myths Surrounding Song's Origins. Segraves. Mark. December 30, 2020. NBC4 Washington. August 30, 2021.
  8. Web site: Take Me Home, Country Roads. WVUSports.com . January 29, 2014. February 11, 2019.
  9. Web site: "Take Me Home, Country Roads" . superseventies.com . April 5, 2022.
  10. Web site: Footage Shows Johnny Cash Joining John Denver For 'Country Roads' Duet . classiccountrymusic.com . Classic Country Music . April 5, 2022.
  11. Book: Collis, John. John Denver: Mother Nature's Son. September 30, 2011. Mainstream Publishing. 978-1-78057-330-4. 22.
  12. Web site: Augenstein . Neal . Real story behind 'Take Me Home, Country Roads'; debut 50 years ago in DC club . wtop.com . December 21, 2020 . WTOP . April 5, 2022.
  13. Web site: Find the BPM and key for any song Every song, every tempo SongBPM songbpm.com . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230309001328/https://songbpm.com/@john-denver/take-me-home-country-roads . March 9, 2023 . March 8, 2023 . songbpm.com.
  14. Web site: 2023 National Recording Registry selections . Library of Congress . 12 April 2023.
  15. News: Walsh . Courtney . Humility a common thread as Lions rise from rock bottom to AFL grand final. 31 October 2023 . The Guardian . The Guardian Australia . 29 September 2023.
  16. Web site: 'Country Roads:' How John Denver's Hit Became the World's Most Popular Song . Brumfield . Nick . March 5, 2019 . Expatalachians . April 17, 2022.
  17. Web site: November 1, 2017 . WV Tourism obtains rights to use John Denver's 'Take Me Home, Country Roads' . December 1, 2018 . West Virginia Press.
  18. Web site: November 3, 2009 . Welcome To | WVU Traditions | West Virginia University . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110720121918/http://welcometo.wvu.edu/living_here/wvu_traditions . July 20, 2011 . January 29, 2011 . Welcometo.wvu.edu.
  19. Web site: Country Roads-John Denver WVU 1980 Introduction and Full Song (Audio). https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211107/Plndo6Rie7E. November 7, 2021 . live. YouTube. December 1, 2018. July 8, 2013. John Denver, Bill Danoff, and Taffy Nivert performing "Take Me Home, Country Roads" at the opening of West Virginia University's Mountaineer Field September 6, 1980. This audio recording includes the introduction by John Denver followed by the full song as recorded by WVAQ with Jack Fleming announcing..
  20. News: W.Va. Takes home 'Country Roads' . . March 16, 2014 . March 7, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140316212401/http://www.wvgazette.com/News/201403070150 . March 16, 2014.
  21. News: "Country Roads" To Become Fourth Official West Virginia State Song . March 7, 2014 . March 7, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140308010234/http://www.wchstv.com/newsroom/eyewitness/140307_23786.shtml . . March 8, 2014.
  22. News: Garcia . Jon . July 2, 2010 . Eulogizing Sen. Robert Byrd: The Hard Working, if Imperfect, Senator . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100705104518/http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/07/eulogizing-sen-robert-byrd-the-hard-working-if-imperfect-senator.html . July 5, 2010.
  23. Web site: Brews . Mountainstatebrewing.com . February 13, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120104023105/http://www.mountainstatebrewing.com/brews.html . January 4, 2012.
  24. Hot Country Singles. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 32. 83. 36. September 4, 1971. 0006-2510.
  25. Web site: Top 100 Hits of 1971/Top 100 Songs of 1971. Musicoutfitters.com . 1 December 2017.
  26. The Christmas Number One Race. Music Week. 21. December 1, 2001. August 21, 2021.
  27. Eurochart Hot 100 Singles. Music & Media. 18. 38. 9. September 15, 2001. February 10, 2020.
  28. Web site: Top 10 Dance Singles, Week Ending 11 October 2001. GfK Chart-Track. June 2, 2019.
  29. Web site: Jahreshitparade Singles 2001. de. November 9, 2019.
  30. Year in Review – Eurochart Hot 100 Singles 2001. Music & Media. 18. 52. 14. December 22, 2001. February 10, 2020.
  31. Web site: Top 100 Single–Jahrescharts 2001. GfK Entertainment. de. June 12, 2018.
  32. Web site: Best of Singles 2001. IRMA. June 12, 2018.
  33. Web site: The Official UK Singles Chart 2001. UKChartsPlus. June 12, 2018.
  34. Web site: Top 100 Songs of 2002. Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 2002. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20040602113021/http://www.rte.ie/2fm/charts/top100_2002.html. June 2, 2004. March 16, 2022.
  35. Web site: Olivia Newton-John | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company. www.officialcharts.com.
  36. Bubbling UnderThe Hot Ì00. Billboard. 26 May 1973 . 53 . August 5, 2024.
  37. Web site: Hines . Pete . IT'S FINALLY HERE. Download Country Roads cover now. It was recorded by our friends at CoPilot with a group out of New York called Spank. You've never heard of them, but maybe seen them performing on the streets of New York. . Twitter . March 2, 2021 . en . July 4, 2018.
  38. Web site: Fallout 76 has everyone humming John Denver . Kuchera . Ben . June 11, 2018 . July 22, 2018 . . Vox Media, Inc..
  39. News: Hampp . Andrew . Songs for Screens: How a John Denver Classic Resurfaced Thanks to 'Fallout 76' . September 17, 2018 . . July 31, 2018.
  40. Web site: John Denver – Take Me Home, Country Roads (Audio). YouTube. October 11, 2018. April 5, 2013. John Denver's official audio for 'Take Me Home, Country Roads', as featured on Fallout 76..
  41. Web site: Grab a FREE Fallout 76 vinyl with this month's STACK Magazine . stack.com.au . Alesha . Kolbe . December 3, 2018 . December 4, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181205052821/https://stack.com.au/games/games-news/grab-a-free-fallout-76-vinyl-with-this-months-stack-magazine/ . December 5, 2018.
  42. 'Forever Country' Debuts at No. 1 on Hot Country Songs. Gary Trust. Billboard. September 26, 2016. September 27, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160927123746/https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/7519013/forever-country-artists-then-now-forever-charts. September 27, 2016.
  43. Web site: Toots and the Maytals: Funky Kingston . .
  44. Lana Del Rey Puts Her Own Spin on John Denver's 'Take Me Home, Country Roads': Stream It Now . Dailey . Hannah . Billboard . December 1, 2015 . December 3, 2015.