Hotter than a WHAT?
The legendary Alan Jackson performed the final show of his career over the weekend with his star-studded farewell concert, Last Call: One More For the Road – The Finale, at Nissan Stadium in Nashville.
It was an evening filled with many of his biggest hits and his 35 #1s, but one of the songs that got the crowd most excited was of course “Chattahoochee.”
The song is obviously one of his biggest and most enduring hits from AJ’s storied catalog. Released on his third studio album, A Lot About Livin’ (And A Little ‘Bout Love), “Chattahoochee” not only hit #1 on the country charts, but it also became Alan’s first ever song to enter the all-genre Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at #46.
Along with hits like “Mercury Blues,” “Tonight I Climbed The Wall” and “She’s Got the Rhythm (And I Got The Blues),” “Chattahoochee” propelled the album to the top of the country charts, and it’s since been certified 6x platinum, while also winning Album of the Year at the ACM Awards in 1993.
At this point, it’s safe to say that everybody knows the words to “Chattahoochee.” But does everybody know what they mean?
Back when it was released, Alan’s label had questions about sending the song to radio, worried that nobody would know what “Chattahoochee” meant. And even Waylon Jennings had questions about the song:
“I think Waylon said one time, Waylon Jennings, ‘what the hell is a Chattahoochee?'”
To be fair, unless you grew up near the Alabama/Georgia line, you’d probably have no idea either. (For those of you that don’t know, it’s actually a river that runs across northern Georgia, along the Georgia/Alabama border, and down into Florida).
And the song actually came about because Alan is from Georgia, while songwriter Jim McBride is from Alabama – so he knew Jackson would know the Chattahoochee when he pitched him the idea:
“Alan’s hometown of Newnan is relatively close to the Chattahoochee River, so I knew he would be familiar with it. So I started just fooling with the guitar and I got the first two lines and a little melody…
He spit out the next two lines almost immediately. They just came right out.”
But there’s one line in particular that McBride says fans always ask about:
“We got so many phone calls that Alan got tired of them, and he said, ‘Call Jim.’ So I’m getting phone calls from all over the country wanting to know what a hoochie coochie is.”
I mean, I could take a wild guess, but surely Alan isn’t singing about what I think he’s singing about, right?
Well McBride actually cleared it up for all of us who have been singing the song for 30 years with no idea what it actually meant:
“A county fair strip show.”
That’s a new one for me.
As it turns out, Alan was actually hesitant to release “Chattahoochee” as a single because he didn’t think anybody would know what the song was about:
“It was surprising to me when they decided to put ‘Chattahoochee’ out, I was reluctant because I said, ‘nobody is gonna know what that is.'”
But according to AJ, Chattahoochee isn’t just a river, it’s a state of mind.
“The regular working people, the professional people, just trying to do the same things… make a living, raise a family, enjoy life…
I learned that there’s a Chattahoochee everywhere.”
Chattahoochee isn’t just a river or a song… it’s a lifestyle. A lifestyle that’s hotter than a hoochie coochie, even more than three decades after the song was released.
TURN IT UP.





