My Head's in Mississippi

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"My Head's In Mississippi"
Single by ZZ Top
from the album Recycler
B-side"A Fool for Your Stockings"
Released1990
Recorded1989
GenreBlues rock
Length4:17
LabelWarner Bros.
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Bill Ham
ZZ Top singles chronology
"Concrete and Steel"
(1990)
"My Head's In Mississippi"
(1990)
"Give It Up"
(1990)

"My Head's In Mississippi" is a song by ZZ Top from their album Recycler. The song was produced by band manager Bill Ham, and recorded and mixed by Terry Manning. In December 1990, the song reached number one on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart[1] and number 166 in Australia.[2]

Composition[edit]

In 2015, Gibbons said of the song "My buddy Walter Baldwin spoke in the most poetic way. Every sentence was a visual awakening. His dad was the editor of the Houston Post. We grew up in a neighborhood where the last thing you would say is, 'These teenagers know what blues is.' But our appreciation dragged us in. Years later, we were sitting in a tavern in Memphis called Sleep Out Louie's — you could see the Mississippi River. Walter said, 'We didn't grow up pickin' cotton. We weren't field hands in Mississippi. But my head's there.' Our platform, in ZZ Top, was we'd be the Salvador Dalí of the Delta. It was a surrealist take. This song was not a big radio hit. But we still play it live, even if it's just the opening bit."[3]

In 2008, Gibbons stated, "'My Head’s in Mississippi,' which was one of the first completed tracks on the album, is a great example of how we mixed the new with the old. Initially, it was a straight-ahead boogie-woogie. Then Frank stepped in and threw in those highly gated electronic drum fills, which modernized the track."[4]

Track listing[edit]

  1. "My Head's In Mississippi"
  2. "A Fool For Your Stockings"

Album appearances[edit]

In addition to Recycler, "My Head's in Mississippi" appears on the following compilations:

Personnel[edit]

  • Billy Gibbons – guitar, vocals
  • Dusty Hill – bass
  • Frank Beard – drums

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Mainstream Rock: Dec 08, 1990". Billboard. Retrieved September 7, 2013.
  2. ^ "Bubbling Down Under Week Commencing April 15, 1991". Retrieved April 15, 2022.
  3. ^ Fricke, David (November 10, 2015). "Billy Gibbons: My Life in 15 Songs". Rolling Stone.
  4. ^ Steinblatt, Harold; Tolinski, Brad (February 15, 2008). "ZZ Top Interview: Double Back". Guitar World.