American
country music artist
Alan Jackson recorded the song for his 1994 album,
Who I Am. It was released in June 1994 as the lead single from the album and the song reached Number One on the U.S.
Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart and number 4 on the
Bubbling Under Hot 100 (equivalent to number 104 on the
Billboard Hot 100). Jackson said that he was inspired by
Buck Owens' version. Kevin John Coyne of Country Universe reviewed the song unfavorably, saying that Jackson blatantly attempted to recreate the "Chattahoochee" phenomenon. He goes on to say that the "charm of the Eddie Cochran original is lost by forcing those country line-dance beats into the backing track".
Music video The video was directed by
Michael Salomon and was released in June 1994. Considered by Jackson as the "sequel" to his "
Chattahoochee" video a year earlier, it was also the only video of his that Salomon directed. It begins with a shot of him water-skiing (which ends the "Chattahoochee" video) before transitioning to him and a band performing the song while seated in the bed of a pickup. Many 4-wheelers, ATVs and a limo full of middle-aged farmers are seen riding through the mud and getting stuck. Jackson, in a plain white t-shirt, is seen riding around in the mud in his pickup before getting out and walking in between many people fighting in the mud. However, he stays stainless until the very end, where he only gets one small spot of mud on the left side of his shirt before finally joining in the tussle. It ends with Jackson posing as a scarecrow.
Chart positions "Summertime Blues" debuted at number 53 on the US
Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks for the week of June 18, 1994.
Year-end charts ==Rush version==