Georgia On My Mind

By Dai Bando

In 1976, The Band recorded “Georgia On My Mind” to benefit Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign. Mr. Carter was then governor of Georgia. “We released a single of ‘Georgia’ in Mr. Carter’s honor,” remembered Levon Helm, “Richard (Manuel) sang it with the ‘soul factor’ turned pretty high. We played ‘Georgia’ on Saturday Night Live, and a few days later Jimmy Carter was elected President of the United States.”

So, there you have it: Richard Manuel turned his soul factor to ‘high’ and Georgia’s Jimmy Carter was elected President. It’s science.

I saw The Band perform (with all but Robbie) with my pal Tony in Boston in 1983. I don’t remember Richard singing “Georgia,” that night, but he did sing another Ray Charles classic “You Don’t Know Me.” I’ll never forget Richard singing that song. “Afraid and shy, I let my chance go by…” I remember thinking, “me too, Richard.” (It was 1983 and I was finally getting my shit together. You don’t know me, indeed.)


Jimmy Carter became friends with not only with The Band, but also with Bob Dylan, Willie Nelson (“he’s my buddy,” said President Carter), and the Allman Brothers Band, who were the Kings of Southern Rock at the time.

In the fall of 1975, the Allmans played a fundraiser show for Carter’s campaign right here at the Providence Civic Center. I wasn’t there (Pu Pu platters needed to be bussed at The Great House that night) but my friend MV attended the show. MV later told me he missed Jimmy Carter appearing onstage because he was busy puking in a Civic Center bathroom due to drinking too much ‘Southern Comfort’ How’s that for 100 proof irony? [listen to that complete live show here, via the Internet Archive]


Jimmy Carter was the first “rock and Roll” president. He wore blue jeans and frequently quoted Bob Dylan. Paul Simon and Aretha Franklin, performed at his inauguration. Remember when “The Piano Guys” performed at Trump’s last inauguration? Me neither.

Carter’s achievements include the historic Camp David Peace Accord between Egypt and Israel. He created the Department of Education, bolstered the Social Security system, and appointed record numbers of women, blacks, and Hispanics to Government jobs. He was most proud of never having led his country into a war. “We never dropped a bomb. We never fired a bullet.”


He certainly had his failures; gasoline lines, historic unemployment and generally the worst economy of my lifetime. Mainly though, Carter had the misfortune of being president when Iran took American 70 hostages on November 4, 1979.

The hostage crisis ended with the hostages being released the day Carter left office and was replaced by Ronald Reagan. Before the presidential transition, Reagan’s campaign manager and future CIA director William Casey made a secret trip to meet with Ayatollah Khomeini’s posse to delay the release of the American hostages until after the election, preventing an “October Surprise” that could have resulted in Carter’s reelection. This ‘conspiracy theory’ was later confirmed by Abolhassan Banisadr, the former President of Iran. Reagan kept the hostages in their cells for a few extra months to ensure an election victory. As President George W. Bush would declare years later, “Mission accomplished!”

Of course, most Americans were elated that Reagan won the election regardless of any dirty tricks with the hostages. Reagan ended the Soviet Union (“Mr Gorbacev, tear down this wall”) and got the U.S. economy purring once again with deregulation. Deregulation works every time, until some deregulated train derails and spews cancer-causing fumes for a hundred miles.

Reagan illegally sold weapons and trained Osama bin Laden and the Afghan Mujahideen, whom he called “freedom fighters.” So, there’s that minor mistake in judgment. I can hear a Fox News talking head right now, “Sure Reagan trained Osama bin Laden, but at least he didn’t train Dr. Anthony Fauci!”


Reagan communicated simple ideas: “Government is bad. Our enemies are evil.” Carter was far more complex and often said the things we didn’t want to hear. He was the first president to warn about the dangers of oil dependence and climate change.

I agree with the NY Times editorial that read “Jimmy Carter was probably the most intelligent, hard-working and decent man to have occupied the Oval Office in the 20th century.”


Rest In peaceful dreams, President Jimmy Carter. Hoping the road leads back to you.

Jimmy Carter with his “buddy” Willie Nelson

Today, Georgia really is on our minds

By Dai Bando

Last night, President-elect Joe Biden told Georgia voters they had the power to “chart the course not just for the four years but for the next generation.”

Today’s Georgia Senate runoff election is really that important. The Trump Crime Family and “Moscow” Mitch McConnell can be eliminated in one fell swoop.


Here’s my list of Top 10 Georgia Songs to help us through a long night of news reports from polling stations around The Peach State.

#10. “Midnight Train to Georgia” (Gladys Knight & the Pips)

Such a great vocal performance by Gladys with equally excellent footwork and “woo-woo’s” by the indispensable Pips.


#9 “Love Shack” (The B-52s)

The 1980s music scene in Athens, Georgia produced at least two great new wave bands, REM and the B-52s. Just down the Atlanta highway you can find that place made for “huggin’ and a-kissin’, dancin’ and a-lovin'”

#8. “Watermelon Time In Georgia” (Harlan Howard)

The great Lefty Frizzell had the original hit with this one, and Levon Helm did a great cover a decade-or-so later. The songwriter Harlan Howard wrote dozens of country hits, but also the soul standard “Busted” for Ray Charles, and the wonderful gospel ballad “No Charge” for Shirley Caesar. Howard is said to be the originator of the oft-quoted phrase defining a great country song: “Three chords and the truth.” The truth about “watermelon time” is that it is a sexy metaphor for what goes on in the B-52’s “Love Shack”

#7 “Sweet Georgia Brown”

Anita O’Day memorably performs this song in the awesome 1958 documentary of the Newport Jazz Festival, “Jazz on a Summer’s Day.” Lookup that performance by Ms. O’Day – fabulous! Another great jazz version is by Django Reinhardt and his Quintette du Hot Club de France. But the most famous version though is the one which is played before the start of every Harlem Globetrotters’ basketball game, with the unmistakable whistling and clacking bones performed by Freeman Davis, aka “Brother Bones” or “Whistling Sam.” The only problem with any instrumental version is you don’t get to hear the wonderful lyrics, such as “Fellas that she can’t get | Must be fellas that she ain’t met.”

#6 Georgia Rae (John Hiatt)

Alt-country performer John Hiatt wrote this about his baby daughter, whose name no doubt was influenced by Ray Charles and Hoagy Carmichael. There’s not many songs about dads loving their baby girls. This is one of them.

#5 “Ramblin Man”

Southern rock” classic with a great vocal by Dickie Betts and trademark Allman Brothers’ guitar harmonies.


4. Oh, Atlanta (Mick Ralphs)

This is the “other” Oh, Atlanta, but nearly just as good as Little Feat’s. Oddly enough, the song was written by Mick Ralphs who wasn’t a southern boy, but a limey (one of the original members of Mott the Hoople). Alison Krauss does a such a soulful vocal on this version.

#3 “Oh, Atlanta” (Bill Payne)

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve replayed just Bill Payne’s barrelhouse blues piano intro to this song. “Funky” forever defined here.


#2 “Rainy Night In Georgia” (written by Tony Jo White.)

Brook Benton just might be the most underrated voices in the history of Soul Music. Truly one of the greats who stands with Lou Rawls and Sam Cooke. This beautiful song was written by Tony Jo White.

TIED for #1:
“Moon River” (Johnny Mercer)

Moon River is a real river in Savannah, Georgia, where Tin Pan Alley songwriter Johnny Mercer grew up. There are so many fine versions of this, however the one I love most is with Audrey Hepburn singing at her fire escape in the film Breakfast at Tiffanys.
How brilliant a songwriter was Johnny Mercer? Here ya go:
“We’re after the same rainbow’s end
Waitin’ ’round the bend
My huckleberry friend
Moon River, and me.”


TIED for #1: “Georgia On My Mind” (Hoagy Carmichael)

Willie Nelson did a beautiful job on this Hoagy Carmichael song from 1930, but the very best version belongs to none other than Ray Charles. In 1979, the State of Georgia designated Ray’s version as the official state song. In 1998 I named my dog after Mr. Carmichael.
“Still in peaceful dreams I see the road leads back to you”