"Sweet Home Alabama" was a major chart hit for a band whose previous singles had "lazily sauntered out into release with no particular intent." The hit led to two television rock show offers that the band declined. The song was parodied and mocked by
Warren Zevon in "Play It All Night Long," a song from his 1980 album
Bad Luck Streak in Dancing School. It inspired the title and plot of the film
Sweet Home Alabama. In September 2007, Alabama governor
Bob Riley announced that the phrase "Sweet Home Alabama" would be used to promote Alabama state tourism in a multimillion-dollar ad campaign. In 2009, the state of Alabama began using the phrase as an official slogan on motor-vehicle
license plates, and Riley noted that the song is the third most-played that refers to a specific destination.
Kid Rock's 2008 song "
All Summer Long" interpolates "Sweet Home Alabama" on the chorus and uses the guitar solo and piano outro, as well as the "turn it up" shout before the guitar solo; Billy Powell is featured on the track. Since the release of "All Summer Long", the original song has also charted at number 44 on the
UK Singles Chart. American heavy metal band
Metallica also used the intro riff for their 1983 song "The Four Horsemen", which gained controversy as the riff was used without permission from the band. The
Leningrad Cowboys and the
Alexandrov Ensemble did a humorous version of the song in the
Total Balalaika Show.
Controversy Part of "Sweet Home Alabama" was controversial in its reference to
George Wallace, the
governor of Alabama and supporter of
racial segregation: The choice of
Birmingham in connection with the governor (rather than the capital of
Montgomery) is significant because it was the site of civil rights activism and violence in the 1960s, most notably
Martin Luther King's
Birmingham campaign. The lyrics then juxtapose the reference with the
Watergate scandal, which was ongoing when the song was released. Music historians examining the juxtaposition of invoking
Richard Nixon and Watergate after Wallace and Birmingham note that one reading of the lyrics is an "attack against the liberals who were so outraged at Nixon's conduct" while others interpret it regionally: "the band was speaking for the entire South, saying to northerners, we're not judging you as ordinary citizens for the failures of your leaders in Watergate; don't judge all of us as individuals for the racial problems of southern society." In 1975, Van Zant said: "The lyrics about the governor of Alabama were misunderstood. The general public didn't notice the words 'Boo! Boo! Boo!' after that particular line, and the media picked up only on the reference to the people loving the governor." "The line 'We all did what we could do' is sort of ambiguous," Al Kooper notes, We tried to get Wallace out of there' is how I always thought of it."
Skrewdriver, a
neo-Nazi band who interpreted the song as being in support of segregation, covered it on their album
After the Fire. In their version the lyrics are changed to include a line pledging allegiance to the
Ku Klux Klan. ==Personnel==