"Christmas in Dixie" is a song by American country band Alabama. It was released as a single in December 1982 from the RCA Nashville compilation album A Country Christmas. The Christmas song celebrates the holiday in the southern United States. This song was included on Alabama's first Christmas album released in 1985 (titled Alabama Christmas), and has since been included on many Christmas compilations in both the country and all-genre music fields. In 2017, Alabama updated the song by re-recording the unplugged version of it for their third Christmas album titled American Christmas which celebrated its 35th anniversary when they first released the song in 1982. It is the only song credited solely to the four band members, and the one of only two songs to feature a songwriting credit for drummer Mark Herndon.
The version released originally on A Country Christmas, as well as the version most often played on radio in the U.S., features a spoken-word Christmas greeting by each member of Alabama, after the line "And from Fort Payne, Alabama", and prior to the song's conclusion ("Merry Christmas tonight"). The original single release was part of a double A-sided holiday release issued by RCA Nashville, paired with "Christmas Is Just a Song For Us This Year" by Louise Mandrell and R.C. Bannon. A 1997 rerelease had "Thistlehair the Christmas Bear" as its b-side.[1]
Lawsuit
In 2010, Allan Caswell initiated a lawsuit against ATV/Sony, who published both his song, "On The Inside" and the Alabama song "Christmas In Dixie", because he thought that it plagiarized the theme song he wrote for Prisoner, On the Inside.[2] This action was based on ATV Sony commissioning a copyright expert to provide advice as to whether a plagiarism had taken place.
Chart performance
The original version spent seven weeks on the charts between late 1982 and early 1983, peaking at number 35. It re-entered the chart three times between 1997 and 2000.[1]
Chart (1982-1983)
Peak position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles
35
Chart (1997-1998)
Peak position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks
47
Chart (1998-1999)
Peak position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks
40
Chart (1999-2000)
Peak position
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks
37
Covers
The song was covered by Kenny Chesney on his 2003 album All I Want for Christmas Is a Real Good Tan and featured Alabama's lead singer Randy Owen joining him on the track. Country a cappella band Home Free covered it on their 2020 album Warmest Winter, with Owen singing lead and Alabama credited as a featured artist. Jason Aldean covered the song which was released in 2022.[3]
References
^ abcWhitburn, Joel (2008). Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008. Record Research, Inc. p. 20. ISBN978-0-89820-177-2.