We’ve been doing this song for a very long time, and it’s always different, depending on who’s in the room.
In this rendition from a rehearsal a few weeks ago, our man Danny Cox makes it special with his signature guitar stylings.
Occasional ramblings of The 1937 Flood, West Virginia's most eclectic string band!
We’ve been doing this song for a very long time, and it’s always different, depending on who’s in the room.
The Flood has been doing versions of this song for decades.
This rendition was the first song of the evening at a Flood rehearsal a few weeks ago. Riding on the infectious rhythm laid down by Randy Hamilton and Jack Nuckols and framing the solos by Danny Cox and Sam St. Clair, the number heralded a particularly fun evening at the Bowen house.
This song took a very long road on its journey to Floodlandia.
The first time it was played in our band room was more than a dozen years ago on a mellow autumn night when our friends Randy Hamilton and Paul Martin dropped in to jam with us. Now, neither was a member of The Flood yet — Randy would join the following year and Paul a few years after that — but their song was the hit of the evening.
However, the tune never worked its way into the repertoire — until just recently. A couple of weeks ago, Danny Cox just happened to start picking the tune between songs on the night’s practice list and the melody really jingled in our memories.
“Sweet Georgia Brown” entered The Flood’s repertoire soon after the band began in the 1970s and in the ensuing decades the tune has come back into the playlist again and again, serving as a sweet showcase for dozens of Flood soloists over the years.