♫ Georgia On My Mind ♫ (Redux)

Last time I played this song, January 5th 2021, our eyes were on the runoff elections for Senate in Georgia.  Little did we know then what the very next day would bring!   Today, Georgia is on our minds for another reason that I’m sure I don’t have to identify for you.  So, this song just seemed like a natural for the moment.  We’ve been in a state of constant stress and it’s only gonna get worse, so listen to some Ray Charles and let him fill your heart with soul!


This song was written by Hoagy Carmichael and Stuart Gorrell in 1930 and although others have recorded it, my favourite, and the one it’s most well-known for, is by Ray Charles.  In 1979, the State of Georgia designated it the official state song.

GorrellIt has been asserted that Hoagy Carmichael wrote the song about his sister, Georgia. But Carmichael wrote in his second autobiography Sometimes I Wonder that saxophonist Frankie Trumbauer told him he should write a song about the state of Georgia. He jokingly volunteered the first two words, “Georgia, Georgia…”, which Carmichael ended up using while working on the song with his roommate, Stuart Gorrell, who wrote the lyrics. Gorrell’s name was absent from the copyright, but Carmichael sent him royalty checks anyway.

Ray Charles, a native of Georgia, recorded a version that went to No. 1 on the Billboard magazine Hot 100. On March 7, 1979, in a symbol of reconciliation in the aftermath of years of activism and national legislation resulting from the Civil Rights Movement, he performed the song before the Georgia General Assembly. After this performance, the Assembly adopted it as the state song on April 24.

In 2003, Rolling Stone magazine named the Ray Charles version of Georgia on My Mind the 44th greatest song of all time.  I also like Willie Nelson’s version, which he sang at Ray Charles’ funeral, but for me … nobody does it quite like Ray — he puts himself into it.

Georgia on My Mind
Ray Charles

Georgia, Georgia
The whole day through
Just an old sweet song
Keeps Georgia on my mind (Georgia on my mind)

I said Georgia
Georgia
A song of you
Comes as sweet and clear
As moonlight through the pines

Other arms reach out to me
Other eyes smile tenderly
Still in peaceful dreams I see
The road leads back to you

I said Georgia
Ooh Georgia, no peace I find
Just an old sweet song
Keeps Georgia on my mind (Georgia on my mind)

Other arms reach out to me
Other eyes smile tenderly
Still in peaceful dreams I see
The road leads back to you

Whoa, Georgia
Georgia
No peace, no peace I find
Just this old, sweet song
Keeps Georgia on my mind

I said just an old sweet song
Keeps Georgia on my mind

Songwriters: Hoagy Carmichael / Stuart Gorell
Georgia on My Mind lyrics © Peermusic Publishing, Campbell Connelly France


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29 thoughts on “♫ Georgia On My Mind ♫ (Redux)

  1. I livd in Georgia, and was born here, not just Georgia, but North Georgia. There is a lot of difference in different parts of our state.

    Bought the album with the album when it came out in the early sixties. Played it a lot and gave sung it a lot. And had it stick in mind mind a lot.

    Also like Midnight train to Georgia.

    And also Hard Hearted Hannah, the Vamp of Savannah, G. A. Believe that is a Johnny Mercer tune.

    Not enjoying all the publicity we are getting these days. But am proud of a lot of things we are doing

    I will just leave it at that

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    • Like any other state, Georgia has its good points and its not-so-good points. I do love “Midnight Train to Georgia” but I don’t think I’ve ever heard “Hard Hearted Hannah” or “Vamp of Savannah”. No, I’m sure the publicity isn’t fun, but in my view it’s for a good cause.

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      • Hard Hearted Hannah and the Vamp of Savannah are the same sing. Hannah was the vamp, meanest woman in town. Written in 1924. Ella Fitzgerald made it popular. Remember hearing it in the forties and fifties on the radio. Meant as humor but sung in a serious way. Peggy Lee also had a hit with it, and Julie Lindon. Also Ray Charles in the sixties.

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  2. Jill, this was a powerful and poignant moment in the movie “Ray” as Ray Charles sang this in the State rotunda. The movie had highlighted earlier how Charles was banned from playing in venues in the state after he decided not to play after tickets were sold an arena in Georgia because Blacks were not permitted in. Keith

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  3. Everyone tends to associate this song with Ray, and with good reason. However, I actually prefer to hear Hoagy sing his own song, and I have it on a vinyl album stowed away in my loft. I like his accent, and the ‘jazzy’ feel of it.

    Best wishes, Pete.

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