"Down in the Valley", also known as "Birmingham Jail", is a traditional American folk song. It has been recorded by many artists and is included in the Songs of Expanding America recordings in Burl Ives' six-album set "Historical America in Song''. The verses mentioning "Birmingham Jail" refer to the Birmingham, Alabama, City Jail which was well-known in the mid-1920s, although the reference was often omitted in later versions. Guitarist Jimmie Tarlton claimed to have written the lyrics in 1925 while he was jailed in Birmingham for moonshining. It was first recorded by Tarlton and his partner Tom Darby on November 10, 1927 in Atlanta, Georgia for Columbia Records.According to one biographer of the folk musicianLead Belly, he performed it for Texas GovernorPat Neff at the Sugarland Penitentiary in 1924. The ballad is played in the 3/4 time signature. Lyrics vary, as with most folk songs. For example, sometimes the line "Hang your head over, hear the wind blow" is replaced by "Late in the evening, hear the train blow". In 1927, Darby and Tarlton sang "down in the levee" in place of "down in the valley"; the version sung by Lead Belly in 1934 substitutes "Shreveport jail" for "Birmingham jail".
Selected recordings
Darby and Tarlton – sold over 200,000 copies, one of Columbia's best-sellers at the time
The Andrews Sisters recorded it in 1944 and their version briefly reached the Billboard charts. They had featured the song in the film Moonlight and Cactus.
This song is the basis of the 1945 Kurt Weill and Arnold Sundgaard opera Down in the Valley. It was performed by Anne Baxter in the Wagon Train episode, The Kitty Angel Story. It was performed on The Alvin Show and The Andy Griffith Show in 1962. The author/songwriter David M. Pierce used selected lyrics from the song as titles for a series of detective novels written between 1989 and 1996: Down in the Valley, Hear the Wind Blow, Dear, Roses Love Sunshine, Angels in Heaven, Write Me a Letter and As She Rides By. The first four verses are featured in Catherine Marshall's novel, Christy, before the prologue. It is sung in the movie Stir Crazy by the character Grossberger portrayed by Erland Van Lidth. The actual recorded artist is Dorian Holley; as credited in the movie's soundtrack. Jim and Anna sing the song in Tillie Olsen's novel as they arrive in the Dakotas. The 3/4 time and melancholy of the song contrast with the hope they are feeling as they arrive there. The song is performed by Ronny Cox and David Carradine in the Academy Award winning film Bound for Glory in the scene that takes place in a migrant fruit pickers camp. http://www.halashby.co.uk/page18.html It is also used in the movie Along the Great Divide starring Kirk Douglas, Walter Brennan, Virginia Mayo, and John Agar although it was written long after the time period set of the movie. In the episode Dark Page, a mental projection of Deanna Troi's father sings the song, stating she could never fall asleep as a baby unless she heard it.