
For the latest “Song of the Day,” Southern Man is one of those Neil Young songs that lands like a blunt, uncomfortable truth-telling moment. It’s not a feel-good Southern rock anthem or a nostalgic postcard; it’s a pointed protest song aimed at racism and the legacy of oppression in the American South. What makes it hit so hard is that Young doesn’t soften the message much. He comes across like a songwriter who’s less interested in being liked and more interested in saying something that needed to be said.
Musically, the song has that raw Neil Young edge that fans love: restrained at first, then emotionally rougher as it builds. His guitar work is a huge part of why the song sticks in your head. The solo kicks in around , and rather than being polished or technically showy, it feels almost off-the-cuff—like a burst of emotion caught in real time. There’s a looseness to it, closer to jazz improvisation than to rock precision, and that gives the solo a spontaneous, restless energy that mirrors the song’s anger and urgency.
The track also became a major flashpoint with Lynyrd Skynyrd. They took issue with how Young seemed to generalize the South, and that tension helped inspire Sweet Home Alabama, which famously pushes back at Young’s criticism. It’s one of rock’s most iconic call-and-response moments: one artist sending out a challenge, another answering with proud defiance. Despite the seemingly heated exchange, both parties had mutual respect—and the dialogue between their songs ended up fueling one of the most fascinating cultural conversations in rock.
What makes Southern Man resonate now is how its spirit of confrontation still feels fresh. Over fifty years later, its themes of racial injustice and accountability hit even harder against the backdrop of today’s social and political climate. The song sounds less like a relic of its time and more like a warning that we’re still living through the same struggles Young was shouting about. In that sense, Southern Man hasn’t just aged well—it’s become more relevant than it’s been in the last quarter-century.
Southern Man
Southern man, better keep your head
Don’t forget what your good book said
Southern change gonna come at last
Now your crosses are burning fast
Southern man
I saw cotton and I saw black
Tall white mansions and little shacks
Southern man, when will you pay them back?
I heard screaming and bullwhips cracking
How long? How long?
[guitar solo @2:56]
Southern man, better keep your head
Don’t forget what your good book said
Southern change gonna come at last
Now your crosses are burning fast
Southern man
Lily Belle, your hair is golden brown
I’ve seen your black man coming ’round
Swear by God, I’m gonna cut him down!
I heard screaming and bullwhips cracking
How long? How long?
Great Guitar Solos Series
- Master of Puppets (by Metallica)
- Free Bird (by Lynyrd Skynyrd)
- Hotel California (by The Eagles)
- Stairway to Heaven (by Led Zeppelin)
- Texas Flood (by Stevie Ray Vaughan)
- Comfortably Numb (by Pink Floyd)
- Powerslave (by Iron Maiden)
- Fade to Black (by Metallica)
- Bohemian Rhapsody (by Queen)
- Sweet Child o’ Mine (Guns N’ Roses)
- Mr. Crowley (by Ozzy Osbourne)
- Rainbow in the Dark (by Dio)
- Róisín Dubh (by Thin Lizzy)
- Rock You Like A Hurricane (by Scorpions)
- Whipping Post (by Allman Brothers Band)
- Carry On Wayward Son (by Kansas)
- War Pigs (by Black Sabbath)
- Since I’ve Been Loving You (by Led Zeppelin)
- Satch Boogie (by Joe Satriani)
- Rambin’ Man (by The Allman Brothers Band)
- Sympathy for the Devil (by The Rolling Stones)
- Little Wing (by Jimi Hendrix)
- While My Guitar Gently Weeps (by the Beatles)
- The Rocker (by Thin Lizzy)
- Bulls on Parade (by Rage Against the Machine)
- Eruption (by Van Halen)
- Killer Queen (by Queen)
- Something (by The Beatles)
- Maggot Brain (by Funkadelic)
- Cliffs of Dover (by Eric Johnson)
- Black Magic Woman (by Carlos Santana)
- Layla (by Derek & The Dominoes)
- Dazed and Confused (by Led Zeppelin)
- Blue Sky (by The Allman Brothers Band)