"Dixieland Delight" Makes Alabama Fans Go Crazy

3 years ago
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In 1982, Ronnie Rogers wrote “Dixieland Delight,” which soared to No. 1 on the Billboard’s Hot Country Songs list after the band Alabama released it on their 1983 album “The Closer You Get..." When the University of Alabama began playing that song during the fourth quarter of Crimson Tide football games, it became an instant Southern classic and crowd favorite.

That is, until Alabama students created some, well, let’s call them “colorful” lyrics to make the song their own. In 2015, Dixieland Delight was removed from the game day experience and hadn’t returned to Bryant-Denny Stadium for several years. In 2018, the wait finally ended, and the hit song is got a second chance.

Alabama Athletic Director Greg Byrne, joined by Terry Saban, the wife of the school’s iconic head coach, preseason All-American running back Damien Harris, and the university’s student body president Price McGiffert, announced that the college football game day tradition would finally be returning.

The song would come back for good as long as Alabama students, already in hot water for Nick Saban for not showing up to blowout games, didn’t sing the old lyrics laced with profanity.

The Alabama student section whipped up some lyrics of their own in the past, which led to the song being banned. Those new lyrics are in all capital letters:

Spend my dollar, (ON BEER) parked in a holler,
‘Neath the mountain moonlight. (ROLL TIDE)
Hold her up tight, (AGAINST THE WALL)
Make a little lovin’, (ALL NIGHT)
A little turtle dovin’ On a Mason-Dixon night. (F*** AUBURN)
Fits my life, (LSU) oh so right, (AND TENNESSEE TOO)
My Dixieland Delight.

While they’re meant in good fun, older fans don't like hearing them during home games in Tuscaloosa like they have at numerous games, including the 2014 Iron Bowl when No. 1 Alabama knocked off No. 15 Auburn, 55-44.

When the Alabama Crimson Tide hosted the Missouri Tigers back in 2018, you better believe all attention turned towards the Alabama fans in anticipation for what they belted out.

Break out your Alabama band shirts because “Dixieland Delight” is here to stay.

See more at fanbuzz.com

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