Album: Here in the Real World
Utgitt: 1990
Låtskrivere: Elliott Hammond / Alexander Ledlie Markwell / Simon Peter Mcconnell / Michael Charles Tramonte / Aaron Leslie Jackson
Label: Arista
Personnel
Eddie Bayers – drums
Harold Bradley – six-string bass guitar
Jimmy Capps – acoustic guitar
Paul Franklin – steel guitar
Steve Gibson – electric guitar
Rob Hajacos – fiddle
Dennis Henson – background vocals
Roy Huskey Jr. – upright bass
Alan Jackson – lead vocals, background vocals
Brent Mason – electric guitar
Weldon Myrick – steel guitar
Larry Paxton – bass guitar
Dave Pomeroy – bass guitar
Hargus \"Pig\" Robbins – piano
Keith Stegall – background vocals
Bruce Watkins – acoustic guitar
\"Home\" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Alan Jackson. The song was originally recorded by him on his 1990 debut album Here in the Real World. The original 1989 recording served as the B-side to three of Jackson's singles: his debut single \"Blue Blooded Woman\", as well as his first two Number One hits \"I'd Love You All Over Again\" and \"Don't Rock the Jukebox.\"[1]
Jackson included \"Home\" in 1995 for his first Greatest Hits package, The Greatest Hits Collection. The song served as the B-side to that album's first two singles, \"Tall, Tall Trees\" and \"I'll Try\" before it was issued in 1996 as the album's third single. In mid-1996, \"Home\" reached a peak of number 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) charts.
Content
It is a moderate up-tempo song in which Jackson recalls his and his parents' upbringing as a child in the state of Georgia. Jackson said it was written the first month he moved to Nashville because he was homesick.
Here in the Real World is the debut studio album by American country music artist Alan Jackson. It was released on February 27, 1990, and produced five singles: \"Blue Blooded Woman\", \"Here in the Real World\", \"Wanted\", \"Chasin' That Neon Rainbow\", and \"I'd Love You All Over Again\", Jackson's first Number One hit.
The track \"Home\" served as the B-side for several of Jackson's later singles, before he re-released the song in 1995 for his The Greatest Hits Collection album, and finally issued it as a single in 1996. #AlanJackson #CountryMusic #CountryClassic #RonjasCountryMusic