"It
was the third of June, another sleepy, dusty Delta day”: the
opening lyrics to the Bobby Gentry
hit,
Ode to Billie Joe. 10 things you
might not know about the song.

The
B side was Mississippi Delta,
which in the beginning was going to be the A side, until Capitol
Records producer Kelly Gordon asked
Gentry for a B side. She sent in a demo of Ode to Billie
Joe and
it was decided that was the hit.
The
original song was much longer than the single version. It had 11
verses and was over 7 minutes long, which it was decided was too
much, so it was edited down to five verses.
The
verses which were cut included a mention of the anonymous narrator’s
name: "People don’t see Sally Jane in town anymore …
There’s a lot of speculatin’, she’s not actin’ like she did
before … Some say she knows more than she’s willin’ to tell …
But she stays quiet and a few think it’s just as well…”.
In
the film based on the song, however, she’s called Bobbie Lee
Hartley. The movie, released in 1976, was an attempt to explain why
Billie Joe killed himself and the relationship between him and the
narrator. In the film, they are dating, against her family’s
wishes. Billie Joe gets drunk one night and has sex with a man, and
it’s the shame of that (the film is set in 1953) and the fact he
realises he liked it, and then can’t perform when Bobbie Lee
agrees to go all the way with him, that leads him to jump off the
bridge.
The
lyrics include a verse describing how the young preacher says he saw
Billie Joe and a girl who looked a lot like the narrator throwing
something off the Bridge. There has been plenty of speculation as to
what that was. Theories included a baby, a wedding ring, or Flowers,
and that whatever it was it was connected to the later suicide.
Bobby Gentry claimed she didn’t know herself what the object was,
and also said it really didn’t matter. In
the movie, the object was Bobbie
Lee’s rag doll,
symbolising the loss of her innocence.
Gentry’s
take on the song was that it was "a study in unconscious
cruelty", showing people so wrapped up in the minutiae of their
lives (five more acres in the lower forty to plough; pass the black
eyed peas; relating how Billie Joe put a Frog down someone’s back
at a picture show and how he never had a lick of sense) that they
have no empathy for others. The mother complains that the narrator
isn’t eating which upsets her because she was cooking all morning,
but doesn’t ask if anything is wrong. It’s clear the only person
even remotely bothered that a young man killed himself is the
narrator.
The
song ends with a post script from a year later with an update about
the family. The brother is married and lives in Tupelo, Mississippi;
the father caught a virus and died, leaving the mother distraught
and grieving. The narrator goes to the bridge, picks some flowers
and throws them off.
The
Tallahatchie Bridge is real. It crosses the Tallahatchie River in a
tiny community called Money, Mississippi, ten miles north of
Greenwood, Mississippi. There is a famous photo of Bobby Gentry
walking across it. After the song was released, any number of would
be suicides flocked to the bridge, causing a nuisance to the locals.
The local authorities there had to pass a by-law forbidding anyone
from jumping off on pain of $100 fine. The bridge is actually only
20 feet high and so anyone who did jump off would probably survive
to get prosecuted. In 1972, vandals set fire to it, causing it to
collapse. It has since been rebuilt.
Bob
Dylan recorded a parody of the song called Clothes Line
Saga, which imitated the
conversational style with an emphasis on household chores. The
shocking event buried in all the mundane details is a revelation
that "The Vice-President's gone mad!."
Ode
to Billie Joe won three Grammy
awards and was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation
in the National Recording Registry in 2023.
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