Ottawa Citizen

‘Swamp King’ rocker crossed genres

Country bluesman was hit songwriter for both Elvis Presley and Tina Turner

- KRISTIN M. HALL

A record label representa­tive says Tony Joe White, the country bluesman and hit songwriter behind such successes as Polk Salad Annie and Rainy Night in Georgia, has died. He was 75. A statement released Thursday from the record label Yep Roc Music Group said White’s family confirmed the rocker died Oct. 24, in Nashville, Tenn. The label did not have any details on the cause of death. Yep Roc released his last album in September called Bad Mouthin,’ a collection of blues classics. White, originally from Louisiana, had a hit in 1969 with Polk Salad Annie and his songs were covered by Elvis Presley, Hank Williams Jr., Tina Turner, Ray Charles, Waylon Jennings and many more. In his five decades as a singersong­writer, White was best known for his swamp rock style mixing blues, country and rock ’n’ roll, which earned him the nickname the Swamp Fox, especially with his fans overseas. With his deep growling voice, his song about the Southern greens wasn’t an immediate hit, but months after its release it eventually became a pop hit. White told The Associated Press in 2006 that in the late ’60s many people thought he was singing about something else. “Back then, people thought polk salad was grass,” White said. “They’d bring me bags of grass backstage and say, ‘Hey, we brought you a little polk.”’ Presley often covered the song in the 1970s and performed it with relish, waving his arms over his head and dancing throughout the song. He would later record more of White’s songs, including I’ve Got a Thing About You Baby. Born July 23, 1943 in Oak Grove, La. and raised on a cotton farm in Goodwill, La., about 30 kilometres west of the Mississipp­i River, he became infatuated with the hypnotic sound of Lightnin’ Hopkins and has often cited hearing the song Ode to Billie Joe by Bobbie Gentry as his inspiratio­n for songwritin­g. After the success of Polk Salad Annie, R&B artist Brook Benton had a hit in 1970 with White’s song Rainy Night in Georgia, which also became a song often covered by other artists. Jennings and White also wrote Trouble Man, which Jennings recorded in 1989. White worked with Turner on her critically acclaimed and popular Foreign Affair album in 1989, contributi­ng four songs and playing guitar and harmonica. White said also in 2006 that Turner was taken aback when they first met. “She turned around and looked at me and started hysterical­ly laughing and couldn’t get her breath,” he recalled. “She was doubling over and I thought, ‘Are my pants unzipped or something?’ Finally she got her breath and came over to me and gave me a big hug and said, ‘I’m sorry, man. Ever since Polk Salad Annie I always thought you were a black man.”’ Turner recorded his song Steamy Windows, which was later recorded by John Anderson and Kenny Chesney. Tanya Tucker, who recorded his song Gospel Singer, said White’s writing and voice were both raw and pure. “A big part of the South is quiet now with his passing,” she said. “Reckon God wanted a little polk salad!” Shooter Jennings, Waylon’s son, wrote on Twitter that his father would often record White’s songs or have White play on his records. “He was always the Swamp King living in a modern world,” Jennings wrote. “His shows and his style were one of a kind and untouched by anybody else.”

 ?? WENN.COM ?? “A big part of the South is quiet now with his passing,” Tanya Tucker says of singer/songwriter Tony Joe White.
WENN.COM “A big part of the South is quiet now with his passing,” Tanya Tucker says of singer/songwriter Tony Joe White.

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