Boondocks

Album: The Road to Here (2005)
Charted: 46
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • If you grew up in the Boondocks (or "The Boonies"), you can relate to this song about rural life. When Songfacts spoke with Phillip Sweet of Little Big Town, he explained: "Me and Jimi (Westbrook) and Kimberly (Schlapman) grew up in really small towns, population below 2,000. But Karen (Fairchild), she had Southern parents but grew up in Atlanta. But it's not like she was that far removed from our whole thing. She grew up in the South, too, and she just happened to grow up in a little bit bigger metropolitan area as a kid. So we tease her about being a city girl, but she wasn't a city girl. She was born in Griffith, Indiana. She's like, 'That's the armpit of America.'"
  • Little Big Town's business affairs were in disarray when they wrote this song, which was part of their second album, The Road To Here, and released on Clint Black's record label, Equity Music Group. Phillip Sweet told Songfacts how the song came together: "We were towards the end of getting dropped from Sony at that time. And we started making this music in that void. And there was a song that Wayne had, this little rolling, picking thing. It was like 'Bones.' The song 'Bones' and 'Boondocks' lived in the same world there for a minute. 'Boondocks,' the original title for that was 'Waiting For the Sun to Go Down.' But that line was actually used in 'Bones.' And you get that rolling/picking thing.

    So you had that little piece that eventually became a line in 'Bones.' But 'Boondocks,' that melody, we weren't really jiving on 'waiting for the sun to go down' - that just wasn't strong enough for the end of that melody that 'Boondocks' was. So we lived with it for a little bit, we all tried to work on the lyric. But then one day Wayne came in and he said, 'What if it was: 'I feel no shame, I'm proud of where I came from, I was born and raised in the boondocks.'' And we were like 'Yeah.' It was just instant. And that song took off and it became what it was.

    And when we started working on 'Bones,' just (singing) 'what goes around comes around, feel it breathing down heavy on you.' All that stuff, real moody, it just seemed to fit that lyric, that context seemed to fit better into that kind of music. So it worked its way into 'Bones,' which turned out to be another thing.

    But really 'Boondocks' was inspired by us just wanting to speak about who we are and what we're about. Because there seemed to be a little bit of confusion there at Sony when we were signed there that we were a put-together band, or we weren't country, we're too slick. And nowadays you wouldn't even get those kind of questions, but at that time it just seemed really strange. And I don't think radio really understood who we were yet. So we just wanted to write this, and it was therapy for us and it was a chance for us to really make a statement about our roots. And that's really what it was."
  • There are lot of locals in the video, along with the daughter of Wayne Kirkpatrick, who helped write and produce the song. Said Sweet: "They directed it like a little bit of a casting call in the local town and people showed up and we picked 'em out and found some cool ones. Now, they did do that kind of stuff; they came out of the woods and got together and had cookouts and field parties and that kind of stuff. That's what we wanted, that authenticity, so you believe that they actually did that stuff. It was cool. I like that element of real and gritty."
  • "Boondocks" was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals, but lost to "Not Ready To Make Nice" by the Dixie Chicks. The Road To Here was also nominated as Best Country Album, and again lost to the Dixie Chicks for Taking The Long Way.
  • "Boondocks" is the song that put Little Big Town on the map. Signed to Sony Music, they released their self-titled debut album in 2002, which performed so poorly the label dropped them. They spent the next few years building a following through constant touring. When they put out their album The Road To Here on Equity Music Group, "Boondocks" was the first single. They found themselves playing shows where new fans would sing along, a shocking development for the group and proof that they had something special with their music. The group went on to build a huge following and land a raft (actually, a pontoon) of hits, most famously "Girl Crush," but "Boondocks" always stayed in their setlist, a reminder of their humble beginnings and deep roots.

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