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ruffboijuliaburnsides: pepperf: deadmomjokes: zarohk: queensryche: thunderboltsortofapenny: lilacbreastedroller: BIG DISCLAIMER: i was 9 when 9/11 happened, so this might be more about my own crystalizing tastes than anything else. i think it’s a pretty darn good theory tho and other people have validated it. BIGGER DISCLAIMER: i am not saying that country music prior to 9/11 was free from nationalist, racist, misogynist undertones - i just think that these themes became more the norm! MY HOT TAKE: with very few exceptions, including goodbye earl, before he cheats, and daddy Iessons (side note - all women!) 9/11 ruined country music. around 2014 onward we’ve got margo price, sturgill simpson, jason isbell etc., who are making country music great again (wink), but those folks are mostly considered “alternative” country. the mainstream country music for well over a decade now is a glut of trash performative patriotic / working-class-but-not-really lab-crafted budweiser-sponsored nonsense that has managed to sound rebellious (or has convinced its fans that it sounds rebellious) without ever actually questioning any power structure. so much so that artists who ACTUALLY criticized the government were literally blacklisted for nearly a decade (the dixie chicks) pre-9/11 country music, though not perfect or ideologically pure by any stretch, did not have the raging american flag painted truck boner that comes to mind for a lot of people who say “i like everything except rap and country” SPECIFICALLY, toby keith’s “courtesy of the red, white, and blue (the angry american)” (2002) literally destroyed country music. it was a direct answer to the 9/11 attacks and war song in support of the invasion of afghanistan. the lyrics read like a disjointed feverish email chain letter forwarded from your great uncle sprinkled with glittering american flag gifs and heavily saturated pictures of bald eagles. the entire song is lifted from an estimated 248 peeling bumper stickers collected from rusted trucks on cinder blocks in overgrown yards, cut up and arranged to fit a catchy, formulaic tune that is almost certainly the background music playing in george w. bush’s head at all times. “we’ll put a boot in your ass, it’s the american way and uncle sam put your name at the top of his list and the statue of liberty started shakin’ her fist and the eagle will fly, and it’s gonna be hell, when you hear mother freedom start a'ringin’ her bell” country music and the new country musicians that toby keith paved the way for became so pro establishment and so unquestioningly nationalistic that, again, the dixie chicks who went against this grain were blacklisted by the industry and received death threats from country music fans. hell, there are folks who STILL froth at the mouth at the mere mention of the dixie chicks. 9/11 killed outlaw country - how can you sing the praises of law breakers when your main circuit consists of singing to troops? there are some great classic country songs critiquing the police state - especially from johnny cash and merle haggard - now country music artists hold fundraisers for FOPs. new country music is basically in-law country music. you don’t have to write a pro-bush patriotic anthem to be part of this post-9/11 ruination. playing meaningless songs about living in the heart of (read: white) america, eschewing the city (read: not white), and cracking open a cold one with the boys for “authentic” country music is also important to the war effort. there’s a progression of themes here: post 9/11 top tier: war anthem, vocally patriotic, directly used as pro war propaganda; which paved the way for: “things used to be so much better” thinly veiled racist laments, good for campaign ads; which paved the way for meaningless party anthems - attempts to make things “like they used to be” and craft a reality that neither the artist nor listener likely ever experience. that brings us to what most people think of today when they say they hate country music: the country party anthem - “tiny hot gal in tight jean shorts who can drink beer like the guys, she doesn’t like beyoncé Like Other Girls, oh she’s so into me and my truck, i’m gonna take her fishing after i finish sowing my corn - sung by a guy who’s never touched a tractor” - has overtaken the tragic, done me wrong, despairing country ballads of tammy wynette, george jones, and even up into pre-9/11 contemporaries like reba mcentire and george strait. you didn’t necessarily have to be country to relate to their pain. now you have to perform suburban redneckness to enjoy luke bryan. when was the last time you heard a sad country song? after 9/11, cowboys (whether or not they had ever been near a cow) weren’t allowed to be sad anymore (no more done me wrong country), and they certainly weren’t allowed to question authority (no more outlaw country). partying hardy became the most important American Thing and if you don’t sing about that, our Enemies Will Win. so - understanding that country music has always had bad stuff, and that like any genre it suffers from commercialization, 9/11 DESTROYED COUNTRY MUSIC. and toby keith gleefully helped destroy it. for some further evidence of the decline of country music, please listen to the dixie chicks’ “long time gone” which is an indictment of the industry (i believe it was written before 9/11 but my point still stands - the genre was on the decline and 9/11 was the major cultural event that hastened the decline). maybe i am a curmudgeon - almost every generation of country music has had its own “country music is not what it used to be” anthem, but i really think something distinct happened with 9/11. Can confirm. Alan Jackson and Toby Keith, the blacklisting of Dixie Chicks, literally the only singer I can think of that ever spoke out against anything from 2001-2010 was Johnny Cash. I’d also say that the uber-patriotic stance lead to the shiny, vapid County Boy® nonsense that lead to so many of the solo artists all sounding and looking the same. Johnny cash wrote an entire album about the destruction of Indigenous lands and of Indigenous people, Kris Kristofferson has been an activist most of his career working closely with the UFM, Woody Guthrie was a social justice advocate and union activist, Dolly Parton has tackled explicitly feminist issues even in the 60s and has been an avid supporter of her lgbt fans, Willie Nelson made Farm Aid to try and help farmers in danger of losing their farms due to mortgages keep them and is also an avid supporter of LGBT rights as well as marijuana legalization, Lorettea Lynn wrote about birth control in the 70s and had her song banned, i could go on! When in the correct hands, country music is a powerful medium, but post 9/11 it’s been handed off to apathetic white men who have turned it into the most useless genre of music out there. This is excellently spot-on and not actually fringe or a new take. Examples of some Old Country and its subgenres/themes for the consideration of folks who think they hate country, but really hate the above-explained modern-country crisis: Harper Valley PTA by Jeannie C Riley, aka an Epic Roast on suburban soccer mom culture that’s still super relevant El Paso by Marty Robbins, one of the most hauntingly beautiful and classic Story Songs of Old Country Big Bad John by Jimmy Dean (yes that Jimmy Dean), another great Story Song that invokes classic imagery of the coal-mine days, manages to criticize the coal industry, and honor the kind of men (usually men of color) who often lost their lives in those “worthless pit(s).” Also haunting and gorgeous. Mississippi Squirrel Revival by Ray Stevens, a sadly endangered/extinct form of country– Comedy Country, as a subset of Story Songs. Folsom Prison Blues by Johnny Cash, one of the true Classics of country, that exhibits the aforementioned outlaw country content style, and also the propensity of Old Country to use music and effects to evoke certain imagery–in this case, the music mimics a chugging train. Also Johnny Cash had a truly beautiful voice. He also recorded this IN Folsom Prison, for the prisoners, for free because when he went to prison (for all of something like 3 days) he was deeply moved by the inhumane conditions and how most of the men there didn’t really deserve to be there and how cruel the guards were. So yeah, just a cornerstone of classic country you deserve to hear at least once. Crazy by Patsy Cline, once again a true classic, and a prime example of “been done wrong” country (this time by a female singer, with a deeply stunning and mesmerizing voice!) 16 Tons by Tennessee Ernie Ford, aka Capitalism is Killing The Common Man and I’m Salty About It by Deep Voice McSassypants Your Cheatin Heart by Hank Williams Sr, aka the first really big Done Me Wrong song. Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song by BJ Thomas, which is super meta and a good example of the Done Me Wrong subgenre. And a bonus, more modern country, but the response song from the Dixie Chicks after getting banned over being outspoken against Bush and the Iraq war: Not Ready To Back Down. GET IT, DIXIE CHICKS Sorry for the link-dump, I just have a lot of feelings about country music because I was raised on the really old stuff and got super heartbroken and disillusioned once the Big Shift happened. IIRC, country music of the big hair, rhinestones, Nashville variety has always been ultra-conservative and right wing, which is why things like Outlaw Country exist - it’s not just 9/11 (but I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that triggered a resurgence of the worst of it). They made Willie Nelson cut his hair! It’s the weird contradictions about country, it comes from dirt-poor roots but has some of the wealthiest people in the world. Some of the best people in it, e.g. Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash, never forgot their roots. Anyhow, I also recommend: Take This Job And Shove It by Johnny Paycheck, still the best song for walking out on your job. Put The O Back In Country by Shooter Jennings (Waylon Jennings’ son), which is specifically about the country music scene. You’ll Always Be by Oh Susanna, which is not about the country music scene but is about exploitative men getting kicked to the curb, so I feel it’s appropriate. I grew up listening to pre 9/11 country and wanted to be a country singer when I was a kid, like the Dixie Chicks and Leann Rimes and Dolly Parton and Patsy Cline. And then 9/11 happened and there was a hard shift in country music and I wasn’t hearing the sad, rebellious songs I’d always liked anymore, and started saying I didn’t like country. Because I didn’t anymore. It’s a goddamn shame is what it is and I applaud every country singer who’s breaking away from the new racist sexist up-America’s-butt mold. -- source link
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