Billy Joe Royal And Joe South
Posted by: Fusion 45 in News, Views, Props and Missives, tags: billy joe royal, joe south, lynn anderson, osmonds
Michael’s comment the other day about Down In The Boondocks got me thinking about the guy who made it famous, Billy Joe Royal.
Royal, who was born in Marietta, GA in 1942, was a local sensation at a very young age, known throughout Georgia well before Joe South convinced him to record Down In The Boondocks, his first and best-known hit. After Boondocks went to #9 in 1965, he released I Knew You When (which peaked at #14) and I’ve Got To Be Somebody (which cracked the Top 40 in early 1966).
After a trio of singles that languished in the cellar of the Top 100 (including a version of Hush, later a hit for Deep Purple), he bounced back in 1969 with Cherry Hill Park. After a quiet time of it in the 1970’s, Royal returned to popularity as a country singer, scoring a number of hits through the 1980’s.
He’s still a regular on the bar and club circuit, doing a couple of shows a month (including one in late November in Franklin, TN).
Three out of four of Royal’s hits were written by the Joe South. Fellow Georgian and 2 years the senior of Royal, South started his career in Atlanta as a staff guitarist for the National Recording Company (along with Ray Stevens and Jerry Reed).
Along with writing Royal’s first three hits, he also wrote Rose Garden (made famous by Lynn Anderson) and the Osmond’s hit, Yo-Yo. He two big hits of his own, Walk A Mile In My Shoes and his biggest smash, Games People Play.
South was also a highly respected session player, whose distinct sound can be heard on Aretha Franklin’s Chain of Fools and Bob Dylan’s Blonde On Blonde album.
Billy Joe Royal – Down In The Boondocks
Billy Joe Royal – I Knew Your When
Billy Joe Royal – Cherry Hill Park
Joe South – Walk A Mile In My Shoes
Artwork: Mrs. Hovey’s Old Shed (Photograph) by Alan Adams on Art Exchange






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Thanks man !
When we were kids My sister & myself use to sing “Down in the Boondocks”in the back of our family
Nova station-wagon on one of our family trips from Los Angeles to San Francisco to visit our Uncle,
back in The Sixties..
Also,The We Five”You Were On My Mind”..Another great old song..
They don’t write them & sing them like they use to..That’s for sure..
Thanks again for sending me down memory lane ! Too Cool..
Oh..My sisters name is Patti..Forgot to mention her..She’s cool..
She would want me to Thank you,too..
Re-Hello, Sorry I think billy Joe ant I write James Royal, but the link is good… Bye
Ps: If you have “take me like I am” from James Royal, I take it…
Billy Joe Royal’s version of Hush, also written by South, is the original recording. I think Royal’s is also the first (issued) recording of Boondocks (which, I learned yesterday, has its etymology in Filipino. I always thought it was an Irish word).