Brushy Mountain Conjugal Trailer

Album: Remedy (2014)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • The song's music video pays tribute to prison life. It was filmed inside the now-decommissioned Tennessee State Prison, which stood in for the real-life Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary in Morgan County, Tennessee. The clip features guest appearances from Marty Stuart, Dom Flemons and JP Harris.
  • The video tells the story of an inmate who hatches a plan to escape, mixed with clips of the band performing the song for a group of prisoners. "Brushy Mountain is one of those epic prisons," bandleader Ketch Secor told CMT Edge. "It's one of the most famous prisons in the south, and it just sounds like an imposing place. It's up there with Sing Sing, Alcatraz, Attica. There's a respect that has to be paid when you're going to make your video actually inside a prison's walls, actually in prison jumpsuits."

    "It's funny, you send out your song to a couple of producers in Nashville, and the video treatments come back basically like Bikini Prison Break," Secor continued. "You know, it was all about the girls that are washing your cell block down or whatever. But we really pride ourselves on the fact that there's not a single woman in this video, except the man who plays one."

    "We wrote this treatment that just felt like it was fun," he added. "And if you were on the inside and you got to see this, hopefully you'd be rooting for Cory [Younts] and his escape, and you'd be rooting for Chance [McCoy] and his lipstick and hacksaw."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Facebook, Bromance and Email - The First Songs To Use New Words

Facebook, Bromance and Email - The First Songs To Use New WordsSong Writing

Where words like "email," "thirsty," "Twitter" and "gangsta" first showed up in songs, and which songs popularized them.

Stand By Me: The Perfect Song-Movie Combination

Stand By Me: The Perfect Song-Movie CombinationSong Writing

In 1986, a Stephen King novella was made into a movie, with a classic song serving as title, soundtrack and tone.

Adele

AdeleFact or Fiction

Despite her reticent personality, Adele's life and music are filled with intrigue. See if you can spot the true tales.

Ian Anderson: "The delight in making music is that you don't have a formula"

Ian Anderson: "The delight in making music is that you don't have a formula"Songwriter Interviews

Ian talks about his 3 or 4 blatant attempts to write a pop song, and also the ones he most connected with, including "Locomotive Breath."

John Lee Hooker

John Lee HookerSongwriter Interviews

Into the vaults for Bruce Pollock's 1984 conversation with the esteemed bluesman. Hooker talks about transforming a Tony Bennett classic and why you don't have to be sad and lonely to write the blues.

Al Jourgensen of Ministry

Al Jourgensen of MinistrySongwriter Interviews

In the name of song explanation, Al talks about scoring heroin for William Burroughs, and that's not even the most shocking story in this one.