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"Down in the Valley", also known as "Birmingham Jail", is a traditional
country-blues folk song. It has been recorded by many artists, and is included
in the Burl Ives six-album set Historical America in Song.
The verses mentioning "Birmingham Jail" refer to the Birmingham Alabama City Jail. According to one biographer of Lead Belly he performed it for Texas Governor Pat Neff at the Sugarland Penitentiary in 1924. Guitarist Jimmie Tarlton claimed to have written the lyrics in 1925 while he was jailed in Birmingham for moonshining. It was first recorded by Tarlton and his partner Tom Darby on November 10, 1927 in Atlanta, Georgia for Columbia Records. Lyrics vary, as with most folk songs. Sometimes the line "Hang your head over, hear the wind blow" is replaced by "Late in the evening, hear the train blow". In 1927 Darby and Tarlton sang "down in the levee" in place of "down in the valley"; the version sung by Lead Belly in 1934 substitutes "Shreveport jail" for "Birmingham jail". It has been recorded by Darby and Tarleton, Burl Ives, Jerry Garcia and David Grisman and many others. It was printed in John and Alan Lomax's Best Loved American Folk Songs and Alan Lomax's Folk Songs of North America. It has passed into folk tradition and is widely known to both children and adults. |