Answering the question, “Does Country Music Really Need Saving?”

Editors Note: This article is Part Two in a two-part series. Part One answers what the purpose of Saving Country Music is.
– – – – – – – – – –
As strange as it may sound, the term “saving country music” or “save country music” has been said and written more in the last few months than at any other time in history. As the trademark holder of “Saving Country Music” and the proprietor of a website titled SavingCountryMusic.com, this hasn’t escaped my attention.
No, this phenomenon is not due to the soaring popularity of this particular web property, but ironically, the adoption of this term by elements of the Beyoncé Stan army and others who believe that the release of her recent album Cowboy Carter would “save country music.”
What is Beyoncé saving country music from? Depending on who you talk to, perhaps it’s the racism that’s allegedly pervasive throughout the industry—or as some even more misguided souls believe, she’s saving the genre from a commercial malaise, or the lack of cultural relevancy. For the record, country music has never been more popular so country’s relevancy isn’t a real concern. Country has also never been more inclusive, though lingering concerns about racism certainly remain.
If anything, the term “saving country music” and SavingCountryMusic.com have never been more polarizing or unpopular, at least in social media chatter, due in part to SCM taking strong viewpoints on certain subjects, adopting heterodox positions, while also trying to to instill nuance into in-depth conversations at a time when delivering soundbite takes that seek the safety of one side or the other in the cultural and political binary rule the day.
Add on top of that the outright ludicrous and verifiably false ad hominem attacks on Saving Country Music often from rivals looking to gain advantage by tearing others down—and often in the vacuum of actually debating or engaging with the assertions made here—it’s also cool to say that country music doesn’t need saving as sort of a shorthand castoff of the misunderstood efforts here.
It is in this environment that journalist Alli Patton writing for Holler asked recently, “Does Country Music Really Need Saving?”
As you can imagine, I have some opinions on this matter.
Please understand that this is not meant to be a take down of Alli Patton or Holler. Overall the article is articulate, well-researched, informed, and broaches an important conversation. But before we get to the crux of the issue, there are a few misconceptions forwarded in the article that deserve to be clarified.
In the Holler article, Patton asserts that during the Outlaw era of country music in the ’70s, artists like Willie and Waylon weren’t really interested in “saving” the genre, just earning their creative freedom. The article states,
Songs were meeting the airwaves fresh off the RCA Victor conveyer belt, all glossy and unblemished with that same weepy ‘Stand By Your Man’ perfection. Did that mean the genre needed rescuing, then? The Outlaws seemingly didn’t believe so. They didn’t come to save country music; they came to make it on their own terms. The Outlaws and their music merely acted as the great equalizer, reminding us that country was allowed to be imperfect and unpolished and could still be just as favorable.
This is untrue, and for a host of reasons. Yes, creative freedom over their music was the primary goal of Willie and Waylon’s fight with RCA Records in the ’70s. But the greater Outlaw movement went much deeper than that.
Remember, Willie Nelson didn’t break out as a star performer until his 40s. He wrote songs for Patsy Cline and Faron Young. On his magum opus Red Headed Stranger (1975), he covered classic country singer Eddy Arnold, and had a #1 hit with Fred Rose’s “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain” originally popularized by Roy Acuff in 1947. Willie used his creative freedom to make a starkly traditional country record.
Willie Nelson performed with Bob Wills when growing up, and at his Dripping Springs Reunion in 1972—a.k.a. the Hillbilly Woodstock—Willie included Bill Monroe, Hank Snow, Tex Ritter, Loretta Lynn, and Buck Owens in the lineup. All of these artists at the time were considered the old guard. Even though everyone considered the Dripping Springs Reunion as a big “Outlaw” moment with Waylon and Kris Kristofferson also involved, in reality, Willie wanted to bridge the new with the old through the event.
In 1982, Willie Nelson released the track “Write Your Own Songs.” In the song, he calls out both “Mr. Music Executive” for being too uptight about the lyrical content of songs, as well as “Mr. Purified Country” for being too stodgy and not wanting the music to evolve. This was one of many instances where Willie was attempting to “save country music.” The song was subsequently featured in the film Songwriter (1984) that also delved into these topics.
During the Outlaw era, many chided Waylon Jennings for being more rock than country. And in some respects, he was. It was his drummer and close friend Richie Albright who famously said to Waylon, “There’s another way of doing things, and that’s rock ‘n roll.” This is what inspired Waylon to fight for creative control from RCA, similar to the freedoms rock artists enjoyed. With the two-tone back beat to his music, Waylon also adopted a more rock sound. But that doesn’t mean that Waylon also didn’t see the importance of country music keeping a firm grasp on its roots, or fighting for that cause.
Waylon had a #1 hit with his protest song “Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way?” in 1975. The B-Side to the song was “Bob Wills Is Still The King.” The idea that Waylon was just agitating for his own creative freedom and not for more respect for the forefathers of country music just isn’t true. Waylon also hired steel guitar player Ralph Mooney for his live band, who was already considered a legend when he joined. Any time a purist would chide Waylon for not being country enough, he only had to point to Mooney.
As for Tompall Glaser, he made it his life’s purpose to save country music with his renegade studio, Hillbilly Central. As he once said in the book Outlaws: Revolution in Country Music by Michael Bane, copyright 1978: “Damn it, the fight isn’t in Austin and it isn’t in Los Angeles. It’s right here in Nashville, right here two blocks from Music Row, and if we win–and if our winning is ever going to amount to anything in the long run–we’ve got to beat them on their own turf.”
The Holler article goes on to state,
Over the next several years, country music continued to enjoy a fair amount of commercial appeal. By the 1990s, it had exploded, with the genre beginning to witness stadium-sized success. Acts like George Strait, Garth Brooks and Shania Twain headed the generation in which country officially crossed over, invading the pop charts and possibly forever blurring the line between what qualified as country and what didn’t. As their music became increasingly appreciated the world over, these artists began selling out bigger and better venues. Perhaps to purists, that meant the genre had sold out too. “Save country music”, purists bellowed, this time against a barely recognizable sound, one now buried under all the pomp of pop.
Again, this is an incorrect notion of the era. George Strait and Randy Travis were staunch neotraditionalists. There is a story of the first time Randy Travis crossed over into pop, he got angry and told his label to “Get it off there!” not knowing it was a sign of success. Strait and Travis also struggled to get signed for many years because they were “too country.” They ultimately set the table for the “Class of ’89” led by Garth Brooks and Alan Jackson, who despite their wild commercial success, both were traditionalists as well.
In 2000, George Strait and Alan Jackson would record the song “Murder on Music Row” written by Larry Cordle and Larry Shell. The song laments the incursion of pop into country. Despite not being released as a single, the song became so revered, it won the 2000 CMA Vocal Event of the Year, and in 2001, the CMA Song of the Year. Not only were George Strait and Alan Jackson trying to save country music by taking a stand, the industry as a whole embraced the message, making it an award-winning song.
Sure, as the era elongated, Shania Twain came along and did push the music more towards pop. But eventually she pushed herself so far out, she became a pop star and virtually abandoned country. Incidentally, this is a scenario we have seen throughout the years in country, from Linda Ronstadt, to Taylor Swift, to Maren Morris. This transition to pop is one of the reasons country continues to struggle to keep top tier women within the genre.
But aside from these specific quibbles, the Holler article rightly points out that purists clutched their pearls when Bob Wills brought drums onto the Grand Ole Opry stage, or when the “longhairs” of Willie and Waylon adopted a bit more rock to the sound, or Shania went pop. This has been a part of the country music legacy from the very beginning.
The Holler article also rightly pokes holes in the idea of a country music “savior.” Though there is certainly a host of characters who deserve accolades for helping to right the country music ship in their era—Willie and Waylon, George Strait and Alan Jackson, Sturgill Simpson and Cody Jinks, and perhaps today Sierra Ferrell and Zach Top—“savior” is too much responsibility to lump on any one artist’s shoulders, and perhaps even a little creepy or idolatrous to claim of any performer.
Saving Country Music has explored this “savior” theme previously and come to the conclusion that it’s probably not the best way to portray an artist. Incidentally, Eric Church once read one of these articles, and it inspired him to write the song “Country Music Jesus” in sort of a tongue-in-cheek manner that appeared on his 2011 album Chief.
But there is also a straw man that is often constructed of the country “purist” who never wants the music to change or evolve at all, and only wants the music to sound like Hank Williams or Johnny Cash forevermore. This is what Ali Patton does in the Holler piece.
“This conversation of needing to save country music is often sparked, usually becoming an urgent talking point among pearl-clutching purists and traditionalists, the genre’s self-appointed gatekeepers,” Ali Patton states. “And why? Because something, be it an artist or some new noise, comes out of the left field to threaten the one thing the genre and its devotees pride above all. Authenticity.”
It’s not that if you start overturning rocks or hunting through online comments sections you can’t find these kinds of purists. Certainly they are out there. But they populate such a small minority of country fans that it almost isn’t even worth discussing them.
Of course country music must evolve, and it’s been the eras of country music that have created a strength through this evolution, allowing music that is nostalgic and hearkening back at its heart to stay relevant to modern-day listeners. The battle lines are drawn around just how far country music should evolve, how much it should incorporate the influence of other genres, and when and how it reverts back to the original heart of the music in times of return to the genre’s roots, like the one country music is experiencing at this moment.
“…something must first be in danger for it to truly need saving. So what is country music in danger of, exactly? Evolving? In truth, the genre doesn’t need rescuing. It never has,” says Alli Patton for Holler.
This statement begs the question, can a genre of music actually die? The answer is, absolutely. That’s exactly what happened to the mainstream rock format in the early ’00s, and specifically because the genre ceased its ability to be able to define its borders.
Rap rock acts like Limp Bizkit, Linkin Park, and Kid Rock pushed the boundaries of rock music like never before until rock music couldn’t distinguish itself from hip-hop or the rest of popular music. This was also around the same time the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame started letting in acts from other genres, and the overall quality of rock music started to deteriorate thanks to the popularity of bands like Nickelback.
There is no more mainstream rock format anymore. There are legacy acts like The Foo Fighters, and acts that get labeled rock like Imagine Dragons and Machine Gun Kelly. But really, you have indie rock, which is almost entirely grassroots-oriented, as well as heavy metal, which also exists in its own nearly isolated environment from whatever else is happening in the “rock” world. It’s even hard to find any truly new punk bands, while Green Day is considered a legacy act right beside The Rolling Stones.
In fact when you look at many country acts, they’re basically rock bands that exist in the country space. This is certainly the case for Eric Church, and to an extent, Jason Aldean aside from lyrical content. Koe Wetzel and Kolby Cooper are almost entirely ’90s rock-inspired artists that you see being pushed through country channels because there’s no place for them anywhere in the rock world, because the rock world basically doesn’t exist.
Meanwhile, if you look at the top of the Billboard Rock Albums chart, you see Noah Kahan, who many would consider more of a country or folk artist compared to rock. Zach Bryan also has two albums in the Top 5 of the rock charts. These are country-oriented artists dominating the rock format because there are so few artists native to the genre.
Could this happen to country? Of course it could, and arguably it almost did during the Bro-Country era. Who was the godfather of Bro-Country? It was producer Joey Moi who was the mastermind behind Nickelback, and who later latched onto Bro-Country pioneers Florida Georgia Line, and later founded Big Loud Records and is now the producer behind Morgan Wallen and Hardy.
Bro-Country was country music’s rap rock phase, and though it was commercially successful to an extent, it was also short-lived, very polarizing in its time, and eventually became a punch line and a point of ridicule for the entire country music genre. Even the term “Bro-Country” was adopted euphemistically. It got to the point where even sports writers and mainstream comedians were lambasting the music and asking, “What happened to country?”
Luckily though, Bro-Country was a phase. And even though the lingering effects and influence of Bro-Country can still be heard on mainstream country radio, as Ali Patton rightly points out, it was actually the backlash to Bro-Country that allowed artists like Sturgill Simpson, Chris Stapleton, and later Tyler Childers, and now Zach Bryan to rise out of the independent ranks, and act like a counterbalance to help push country music back to its center of gravity.
This is all part of the regular rhythms that have persisted in country music since its inception. It’s part of the genre’s mythology, symbolized by the phrase “Will The Circle Be Unbroken” that rings the Country Music Hall of Fame rotunda in Nashville (see above). But just because these natural rhythms often help country music come back into proper alignment whenever it goes too far afield, that doesn’t mean a vigilance to make sure that country music doesn’t get too far from its roots is completely unimportant. In fact, that is part of this natural process.
Jazz used to be the most popular genre of music in America. Now it’s a niche and an afterthought in the popular music diet. Same goes with the blues, which is now seen more as a building block to other genres as opposed to a popular musical expression itself. This fate most certainly could have befallen country at any point in its history. But it has remained a popular American genre over time due to the efforts to make sure it never becomes indistinguishable from the rest of popular music.
“Saving country music” is about caring about something bigger than yourself. It’s about wanting to give back to the music that has given so much joy and amelioration to you. It’s about wanting to leave the genre in as good or better condition than you found it for future generations to enjoy. We’re all looking to be saved or to save something. It gives us a sense of purpose and belief. Some are trying to save the planet, preserve important cultural artifacts or traditions, unearth truth from the annals of history, or to right previous injustices. We’re trying to save country music.
But it’s also important to understand that country music will never be “saved.” If there was ever a moment when all the problems with the genre were resolved, it will immediately start reverting back to problematic behaviors, because that’s part of the “circle.” Saving country music is alchemy. It’s simply an idea. It’s an ongoing purpose. Or in the case of SavingCountryMusic.com, it’s just the name of a website.
How Saving Country Music got its name is another story.
April 28, 2024 @ 9:48 am
I love reading your articles. They are spot on, and I like that I get to see a new perspective. The backlash of Bro- Country brought about some fine artists that became accessible. So being pissed off about that drivel actually had a silver lining.
Every era of Country Music has something to offer someone. You have to really love something to get so passionate about it. That is something I can respect.
April 28, 2024 @ 9:49 am
Yes and no. Good country music will always be around no matter its commercial viability. The idea of country music needs saving tho. County music is and always has been the soundtrack to working class Americans who reside in mostly rural areas and forgotten corners of the county that get labeled “flyover states”. Activists are trying to infiltrate and co-op country music for one reason and one reason only. To make the average country music consumer less culturally relevant. Why? Because the average country music consumer leans more to the right in their politics and social values. How do you destroy America? You destroy it’s most powerful cultural institutions. So yes, it needs saving. Because if you save country music you save America.
April 28, 2024 @ 11:37 am
A lot of activist types are genuine fans of country music, though. Sarah Shook & the Disarmers and Roselit Bone are LGBT acts, but I don’t think they’re insincere, unlike Little Nas X, for instance.
April 29, 2024 @ 7:18 pm
Came here to make a joke post saying that country music is being ruined by “woke”, but it seems you’ve already done it.
May 1, 2024 @ 7:07 am
Jerry Seinfeld is addiment that good comedy is being killed by wokeness. Logic dictates the same thing could happen to Country Music. I’m pretty sure he wasn’t “joking” when he said it.
April 28, 2024 @ 9:53 am
“Saving Country Music” is the name. Easily could be the slogan to a more generic name. To me it draws attention and readers to the CM subject and offers something not seen in other similar offerings. Reporting and discussing subjects in any industry by knowledgeable writers that explore and write on the current situation, relevant history and summarized with all context is important. The part of country music that needs to be saved is the disconnect between executives and people that just want to hear music they like. I’m thankful for SCM all the artist I enjoy that I would not have heard of otherwise. Didn’t realized Stagecoach was live streamed on Prime. Enjoyed seeing Willie, Asleep at the Wheel Miranda and being introduced to Drayton Farley and Tennile Townes! Keep the good work.
April 28, 2024 @ 11:56 am
I live in a mall, remote Midwestern town. The nearest city, a small one by ordinary standards, is 110 miles from here. I see zero evidence of a conspiracy of allegedly sinister political activists — whoever they are, though your correspondent hints at the usual suspects: as always persons who don’t share his politics — to get people to listen to music that will make them “less culturally relevant.” Frankly, that’s craziness of the huh, what? variety.
People out here in the hinterlands listen to whatever they want, and they’re as likely (actually, more likely) to listen to hiphop, pop, rock, and whatever as they are to country music, which often gets ridiculed as backwards and uncool. Rural people have access to the same popular art and culture as people anywhere else in America. That’s why traditional music (apparently what your confused correspondence is referring to) survives in so few places. People have all kinds of choices now, not just the stuff their ancestors were listening to on fiddles, banjos, and accordions. If they’re not edifying choices and the music is frequently depthless, well, that’s the way it goes. Lamentable perhaps, but no conspiracy theories need apply.
By the way, a truly smart essay on your part. Thanks for giving me a bunch of stuff to chew over in coming days.
April 28, 2024 @ 10:07 am
Well articulated, per usual. Regardless of how we define “saving country music” your efforts in spotlighting artists that don’t equate to mainstream or resonate in popular culture is needed and appreciated. Just yesterday there was a reddit thread asking, “how do you guys find new artists?” (not verbatim). I rarely comment on anything but I felt the need to promote SCM to people who haven’t stumbled across this website yet. Thankfully, about 4 people had already beat me to the promotion. Your iteration of “saving” the music that we all love is appreciated in the way that most everyone who reads this site is eager to tell anyone who might care about SCM.
My only concern is that your last few articles regarding the state of SCM or country music, as a whole, read like an author who is ending a novel. I hope there are many more chapters to the saving country music book.
April 28, 2024 @ 12:02 pm
It was the confluence of the Beyonce album release and some of the backlash I was receiving for covering the story, the strange adoption of Beyonce Stans of the “saving country music” phrase, and “Holler” posting a story asking if country music needed to be saved that had me saying, “Okay, I probably should address this.” It happened to be two articles delving into the two primary aspects of this were better than one.
But rest assured, Saving Country Music isn’t going anywhere. I’m too stubborn to ever shut it down.
April 28, 2024 @ 12:32 pm
“You need a stubborn belief in an idea in order to see it realized” – James Dyson
I’m partial to Hoover vacuums but Dysons are vastly more quotable.
April 28, 2024 @ 10:53 am
I think ‘evolution’ is a bs term that confuses the issue.
T-Rex ‘evolved’ and now it’s a laughingstock and a punch line for long windedness, cowardice and deliciousness
But really things just don’t randomly change from one thing to another dissimilar thing
Mexican food will never become Greek food
Things adapt to certain trends.
I’m gonna throw my date book over the fence, buy me a new one for five or ten cents
That’s a dated line
But if you placed Hank, then Owens, then Skaggs in his country phase, then king George, then Charley Crockett…
It’s very obvious these are all the same style of music adapting over decades.
But never NOT being the thing they started as
We now understand t-rex probably had feathers, wings on those stubby arms, and was fatter. It’s more believable now that it looked like a giant proto chicken than when Jurassic park came out
The part of country music that needs saving it’s it’s community, not itself as an art form
THATS what evolved. How people consume art evolved. Changed entirely
People just don’t watch country starts perform one after the other on a weekend tv show anymore. THATS a change the genre had failed to tackle adequately. We don’t have a modern grand ole opry show. A modern hee haw.
Rock never had THAT
jazz never had THAT
And country needs it BACK
But When I think of the term saving country music, I don’t think that an art form or an institution is in danger of going extinct. I think the legacy of artists, songs, and recordings is at risk of being lost to some dust bin of history, because people only listen to songs that are recorded within the last few years
When I think of saving country music, I think of making sure that everybody in the modern world has the awareness and exposure to George Jones, Buck Owens, Roy acuff
THAT is a part of country music we can and should save. From being forgotten
April 28, 2024 @ 10:57 am
“Now, in the 2020s, we may very well be witnessing the coming of country music’s latest generation. It is an exciting, anything-goes moment, as already established global stars like Beyoncé”
Alli Patton’s entire motivation for writing the article right there. Also, rock music died because the major labels stopped developing and promoting rock artists in the 1990s. They went all-in on alternative music, and then when alternative music turned out to be a fad it was all over. As for why they chose alternative over rock and more important didn’t immediately pivot back to rock when alternative music failed and instead went hard into boy bands (another fad) that is another story for another story (or more accurately, not suitable for a country music blog).
April 28, 2024 @ 5:18 pm
I honestly think that the impact of Beyonce is going to be very marginal. It did stimulate some important discussions about race and country music, some that were useful, some that were ludicrous. But ultimately, it wasn’t a country album, and it’s not really going to affect the country genre.
Last week, Zach Bryan and Kacey Musgraves retook the top streaming song in country with “I Remember Everything” from Beyonce’s “Texas Hold ‘Em,” even though the Zach Bryan song is six months older. The new Taylor Swift album is burying any remaining conversation about the Beyonce album. I participated in a documentary about the Beyonce release that debuted on Max, and I’m not sure anybody is even watching it. It all feels like it’s quickly moving to an afterthought in the zeitgeist.
April 29, 2024 @ 7:19 am
Agreed. A flash in the pan.
April 29, 2024 @ 11:04 am
What important discussions about race and country music? There is the false narratives pushed by Beyonce’s label and publicists that are advanced hook line and sinker by the media (entertainment, news and social) because it fits their pre-existing agenda and there is the truth.
1. Country music is no more segregated than any other genre. Even 99% of the black pop artists crossed over from R&B, soul, rap/hip-hop and jazz. And these include BEYONCE, whose Destiny’s Child changed its sound from neo-soul R&B (which was exclusively played on black radio and BET in the mid-90s) to pop R&B/hip-hop in the late 90s/00s to sell more records.
2. Speaking of black radio and BET … yeah they didn’t support black country either. You had black run record companies dedicated to jazz and blues (Black Swan), soul/R&B (Motown, Stax), rap/hip-hop (Def Jam) plus others that did “whatever was popular” (Vee Jay, T-Neck, Sugar Hill) going back to the 1920s. NONE OF THEM did anything with country. The black record labels owned by black producers and artists? Nope, and this includes Beyonce’s own label, which solely signs, develops and promotes pop R&B and hip-hop acts, and her husband’s Roc-Nation label and streaming company.
3. To be fair, it isn’t as if these black entertainment businesses were keeping black country musicians and fans down. The reason is … there weren’t any to speak of. Generalizing of course: there are “plenty” of devoted black country fans and hardworking, talented singers and musicians. But in a black American community that is 42 million? We are talking about a drop in the bucket here.
4. Put those together and you arrive at this: for every black musician who wants to make it in country music there are 1000 white ones that are just as dedicated, talented and deserving. (So Beyonce’s team put out the “black people invented the banjo” thing. Fine … how many black banjo players are there today? Go on YouTube or TikTok and you’ll get your answer.) So what is Nashville supposed to do? Prioritize the black country acts over the white ones? Doing so despite knowing that these acts aren’t going to get a bit of support from black radio and black streamers? Why? You can’t even say that it is to make up for past discrimination because – as I just mentioned – if the door was ever barred to black country performers it was like 100 years ago before the modern music industry even existed.
I want to mention a couple of movies in the 1990s. One of them was “The Five Heartbeats”, which viewed black popular music history through the rise and fall of a group based on The Dells. Country music was only referenced a single time in the entire movie … in the form of a joke that mocked it right before the closing credits. Another: “Posse” aimed to tell the story of black cowboys (which indeed was erased from Hollywood and history books along with black farmers). Its soundtrack would have been a great opportunity to showcase black country, western, bluegrass, Americana, roots etc. artists … but it had a hip-hop/R&B soundtrack instead. It didn’t even include Charlie Pride or Ray Charles songs.
Even Beyonce’s highlighting Linda Martell should be questioned. Why should white country fans know or care any more about her than the black community ever did? Is Martell now going to be included in black history books alongside the jazz, blues, rock and soul/R&B acts? Why wasn’t she before? Answer: the black community never cared about country music then and still doesn’t now. Are those black country artists that Beyonce featured on her album climbing the charts? Are the black-owned record labels and other entertainment companies looking to sign any of the black independent artists that you have been featuring on your blog for years? Are any of them going to tour with even established acts like Kane Brown, Jimmie Allen and Darius Rucker? Nope. And Darius Rucker is a fascinating fellow. He spent the 1990s as the biggest black star in lily white rock music. And then he pivoted to being the biggest black star in country music in the 2000s, something that no WHITE rock singer has been able to pull off, especially not for the 20 years that Rucker has maintained it. Has the mainstream media ever said squat about his remarkable career? Nope, because a black singer succeeding in his rock to country transition where white males have failed ruins the narrative, plus it is impossible to talk about his overcoming racism in country without discussing how he had to overcome the same in rock, which they regard as a foundational building block modern left-liberal culture. Funny that nobody talks about how it took a literal industry boycott threat to force MTV to play videos from black artists at the very same time that Linda Martell received a less-than-enthusiastic embrace from country. Herbie Hancock barely appeared in the video for his biggest hit, Rockit, just to get MTV to play it: https://www.vice.com/en/article/9av5ky/time-travel-spazzed-out-animatronics
This happened in 1983. Linda Martell performed at the Grand Ole Opry a dozen times starting in 1969!!
I am sorry but this is just the race card being played. Beyonce’s people just want her to win album of the year at the Grammy’s – are they blaming the country voters for that not happening? – and as this is her last shot because she has been in decline for 15 years (Renaissance sold under 350,000 units and her concert film only sold about 4 million tickets, many of whom were purchased by Beyhivers who attended multiple screenings) they are pulling out all the stops. As for media, they are just hopping onto the bandwagon because of their pre-existing bias against country music, plus it fits into their “America was never great and we have to let everyone know this by telling the truth about how it was founded on racism” thing. And you know what? That is totally fine! Talk about slavery, segregation and what was done to the native Americans and immigrants! So long as you mention that A. every single other country on this planet has a similar history, including the progressive ones that you want this country to emulate and B. you do so truthfully and honestly, which this Beyonce nonsense and the entire narrative about country music is.
You might be hesitant to call it that because your politics lean a little bit to the left and it is tough to call out your own side. I get it. Conservatives have the same problem. But it is time to stop treating these people as if they are honest brokers. They aren’t. They are scammers and exploiters who deserve to be exposed and treated as such.
April 29, 2024 @ 2:10 pm
Rano just dropped one of the best posts in SCM history.
April 30, 2024 @ 12:04 pm
Dang that’s one of the best comments I’ve read in awhile. Nuanced and persuasive.
May 4, 2024 @ 10:09 am
Thank you for your thoughtful and insightful post. I don’t believe Beyonce has the least bit of interest in country music and just used this moment in time to rebuild interest in her career as Taylor swift currently dominates the headlines and charts. I wonder when country artists will begin being featured on hip hop and R & B stations.
April 29, 2024 @ 7:39 pm
Long time reader, very seldom commenter. Thank you for mentioning the documentary. I didn’t know it existed but watched it today. I liked that it highlighted country artists no one talks about. I really hope and (what I want to believe is true) is that Beyonce’s album will give them the spotlight, as you mentioned data might show
April 28, 2024 @ 11:26 am
Country music needs saved from the influence of zillionaire urbanites like Beyonce that took time off from chillin on one of jay z’s yachts to make an awful “country” song. Just go away and let us get back to real country music by real country folks that dont care if it checks every woke box like having gay coal miners in the video or whatever else leftists in Austin deem to be hip this month.
April 28, 2024 @ 6:06 pm
100%. Country is music by and for the working class. No room for sweatshop owning billionaires who only flirted with the genre because they’re a flagrant narcissist who got butthurt that the one marginally, tangentially, barely, sort of kind of country-ish song they did wasn’t universally fawned over by an audience who knew better. Guarantee you Beyonce had no fucking clue who Linda Martell even was before a year or so ago.
April 28, 2024 @ 1:06 pm
Great article. Probably a few things I would quibble with but don’t wanna dilute complimenting the article by doing that.
Your point about the outlaws is especially good because I think I would have thought about them the way the article you are reacting to characterized it. But the best point is the point about rock music. I definitely had thought about how it’s weird there’s no band whose debut album was this century that’s as culturally relevant as say nirvana. But your description of why it’s like this is very insightful
April 28, 2024 @ 1:51 pm
“ Editors Note: This article is Part One in a two-part series. Part One answers what the purpose of Saving Country Music is.”
I think this is part two.
April 28, 2024 @ 2:17 pm
Everyone here needs to watch this. This answers all questions about music over the last 20 years.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reesdiAbvk4&t=186s
April 28, 2024 @ 2:21 pm
Everyone needs to watch Rick Beato’s video How Corruption and Greed Led to the Downfall of Rock Music. It explains why music has generally been terrible for the masses over the last 20+ years.
April 28, 2024 @ 2:55 pm
Genres made more sense prior to the internet. When small groups of artists were isolated. Creating New Orleans’s jazz, Mississippi’s blues, Kentucky’s bluegrass, Seattle’s grunge, etc…
Now everything is everywhere, and genre is just a tool for marketing and plagiarism. Once the novelty wears off, it becomes a caricature of itself. In example, Kenny G to jazz, cold beers and tailgates to country.
As a writer and player, you play to your ability. When I was young and couldn’t play guitar worth a shit, I played punk rock. All you needed to know was one chord shape. Then I got better and started playing country, western swing, and jazz. Now I’m in no man’s land when it comes to genre. I just play acoustic. The roots of where this all starts.
Country music doesn’t need saving, but it’s history does need to be preserved and the artists who genuinely create it need to be supported.
April 28, 2024 @ 4:10 pm
Agree with much of what you said, however when it comes to country music I think genre is still about more than just marketing. The business side plays a large part in how the music (or, sometimes, sausage) gets made in ways that can to large extents be traced back decades.
Back in the day country music labels tended to have a house style similar almost to classic Hollywood (both things that I miss). The business side and creative side are fundamentally intertwined. And I’d certainly rather Nashville music executives having as much control of the wheel as possible if the alternative is New York/LA.
April 28, 2024 @ 4:38 pm
I’m from Oklahoma, but I was raised in Nashville. On and off, I spent the better part of 30 years there. Big money music executives from New York and La are already there and have been for decades.
Business and art are two different things completely. And work for hire has been in place since before Fred Rose was controlling things back in the 1950’s.
You have to rely on artists to make the art, or the Mona Lisa will have a Coke logo on it. Executives are in it for money, and they know if they call (insert pop star name here) a country artist, there is a base to sell music to.
The best things in country now that are coming out aren’t being created in a board room. It’s in a bedroom in Tulsa, or Kentucky.
April 28, 2024 @ 4:45 pm
I’m sure I agree that most of the best country music created now and going forward will be as untouched by business as possible. Still, I have a soft spot for the Nashville (and LA, in the case of Capitol especially) machine that had a large hand in so much country music.
And yes, that will almost certainly lead to less uniformity in musical style. So yes I agree. But I’m biased.
April 28, 2024 @ 5:11 pm
Up until the internet, big labels were about the only way to get music. So there is a lot of great country music that came out. However they were more willing to take chances on artists back then. Now they find something they like and chop it into pieces and regurgitate it.
I also loathe rewriting Merle Haggard songs and calling it something “new”.
April 28, 2024 @ 4:48 pm
“genre is just a tool for marketing and plagiarism.”
This is a pretty irresponsible statement. Genre is the Dewey Decimal system of music to try and help guide listeners to the music the may enjoy or be looking for. If you want to hear classic quartet, you don’t want to hear a gangster rapper telling you to go fuck your mother. Notice that the same people who months ago were telling us that genres were an act of violence are the same people now demanding that Beyonce be called country or you’re racist … while Beyonce is out there projecting on the side of landmarks in New York City, “This ain’t a country album.”
Not sure how anyone would ever consider genre “plagiarism.” Is it marketing? It can be. But marketing is how people find music, just like genre. Like anything, genre can be exploited for commercial purposes. That doesn’t mean it’s pointless. With 100,000 songs being uploaded to Spotify every day, finding ways to get music to the people that want to hear it has never been more important. Labeling music by genres is one of the ways to do that. And no, genres aren’t rigid, or restrictive, only people’s perceptions. Rap rock and country rap are genres. I may not like them, but some people do. And they use those terms to find what they want to hear.
April 28, 2024 @ 4:58 pm
Trig,
I just want to add that the expectations of genre, being musical or film or any other creative work, also can lead to more creativity by artists using those expectations and boundaries to either subvert them or use them as a framework (“three chords and the truth” bad surely been a fruitful framework for country artists to express themselves).
I guess my point is that genre creates expectations from listeners but also allows artists to respond with those expectations in mind, creating conversation between artist and listener.
April 28, 2024 @ 5:28 pm
You do disservice to yourself and mission by even covering/mentioning Beyonce or Jelly Roll.
If I start writing a 1-4-5 blues song right now, it is absolutely plagiarism. Like you’ve said… “music isn’t made in a vacuum”. It is a culmination of everyone’s work before in said genre.
Genre should be an afterthought. “Oh this sounds like..” , Not a let me pick my favorite singer and steal his ideas.
The greats of music blazed their own trail, not follow a paved road.
(Disclaimer, I like your work and am not intending on arguing)
April 29, 2024 @ 12:40 pm
Daniel,
I understand what you’re saying from the perspective as a songwriter. But from the perspective of someone trying to get ears onto the music songwriters make, as well as a fan of music looking for what might be appealing to me, genre plays an important role.
April 28, 2024 @ 3:37 pm
Good article.
Beyonce’s fans are delusional if they think she’s saving country music, but we’ve beaten this dead horse enough, I suppose.
April 28, 2024 @ 3:47 pm
I do think that country music does need, if not saving, then defending as something of its own that exists and is worthy of appreciation/respect. As opposed to just a genre that simply borrows from other musical styles or just “country music is whatever you want it to be” or just as a as cultural signifier, a “bumper sticker” that tells people how you want to be perceived. That country music has its gatekeeping mechanisms, by and large, for legitimate reasons (see: above).
April 28, 2024 @ 5:25 pm
Trigger, this is the best article I believe I have ever read about Country Music and the so called SAVING that you have put together. An article that needs preserving itself. Pete
April 28, 2024 @ 10:52 pm
The problem with outlaw country was that most of it sounded like shit.
April 29, 2024 @ 12:11 am
I do not care much about what you look like or what your backround is. For me, Country music is first and foremost about authenticity. If you got that, those two things are pretty much irrelevant. But IF you lack authenticity, those two things are going to weigh in HARD. Country is about three chords and the truth, and if you ain’t got no truth to tell nor the chords to accompany it with, it ain’t Country music.
April 29, 2024 @ 2:04 am
Metal music is interesting because much like country music metal fans are constantly keeping tabs on what gets labeled metal. And in those circles “gatekeeping” is also thrown around way to much but people so desperate to have their favorite act considered metal. But- I do think it’s why Metal music has a healthy culture and strong network of supporters both on and off-line and several pretty great websites similar to this one ensuring things don’t get to far astray.
The only difference is Metal doesn’t have a strong tradition of writing songs about metal music losing it way and not being metal at all. LOL!
April 29, 2024 @ 5:16 am
…what ever happened to the good ol’ “don’t fix it, if it ain’t broken”?
by the way, perhaps the bro country era wasn’t all that bad and useless after all. it has brought us morgan wallen and is triggering probably the biggest investments into new talents since the booming 90s. god and country music sometimes walk in mysterious ways. bless ’em and emily nenni
April 29, 2024 @ 6:47 am
The answer is simple. Yes.
Country music is worth saving because country music is worth something.
April 29, 2024 @ 7:36 am
This site is so important. Saving, defending, call it what you will. There will always be haters and detractors, those who will follow a trend, and people who are only in it for the money. Never mind them, you’re here for us! We need you to investigate, to tell the truth, to call out those who are all hat and no cattle. Yours is one of the few remaining sources of honest music journalism, so keep fighting the good fight!
April 29, 2024 @ 7:38 am
One place where I think the genre needs saving is to be saved from bean counters who, when they spot artists they think they can somehow “exploit”, try to make them what Vince Gill once called “The Next Big Thing”, instead of letting them find their own niche and not getting them to fall in line with any trend or fad (e.g.: Bro-Country). And even more importantly, they shouldn’t fall into this trap of being seen as, for example, “this era’s Johnny Cash” or “this era’s George Jones”. You will NEVER be able to replace those folks. Don’t even bother trying.
In terms of country-versus-pop, while I can’t speak for the way either Shana Twain or Taylor Swift made their individual transitions out of the country genre, when it comes to Linda Ronstadt, I can vouch for the fact that Linda never publicly considered herself a country artist in the first place, at least not by the standards that still existed in Nashville in 1969, when she first performed on Johnny Cash’s TV show. The fact that she was a West Coast hippie, whose ideas of country music were fashioned from what she heard growing up in Arizona, primarily what was on the radio between 1948 and 1961, and mixed in with folk, rock, and R&B, probably caused many of Nashville’s female legends of the time to come a bit unglued (except perhaps for Dolly Parton, whom Linda met and befriended in 1971). The country music world did eventually accept Linda, as did everyone else, in 1974-75, when HEART LIKE A WHEEL became such a huge success, but it was on HER terms, and not Nashville’s. And though she has been exceptionally critical of what the genre has become in this era, she is still hugely admired by many of today’s biggest female singers.
April 29, 2024 @ 8:06 am
Waylon was ribbing Willie with “Bob Wills is Still the King.” Waylon himself admitted he was never much of a Bob Wills fan. It was not a traditional music rallying cry.
Of course, Merle said anyone who doesn’t like Wilis is suspect in his eyes. Merle continued the Western Swing tradition of using horns and vocal shoutouts in his music. Waylon didn’t.
April 29, 2024 @ 8:25 am
I saw an interview once wit Charley Pride where he said Country Music stopped at George Strait. I might add two more – Alan Jackson & Randy Travis. I agree. They have the Country station on at my barbershop, I thought it was a rock station. I don’t listen to the Opry anymore. Sorry, it’s not country. To me, there is no more Country Music. Sad.
April 29, 2024 @ 9:44 am
Johnny Bond,
Regarding your take on The Opry: I used to talk down the Opry as well. However, the current ownership is doing very well with it. Here’s folks you typically find performing and hosting on any given night: Larry Gatlin, John Conlee, Marty Stuart, Vince Gill, Mandy Barnett, Riders in The Sky, Rhonda Vincent, Old Crow Medicine Show, Del McCoury Band, Dailey and Vincent, Ricky Skaggs, Steve Wariner, Tony Jackson, Jon Pardi, and so many more. If anything, they have doubled down to showcase traditional acts.
April 29, 2024 @ 9:46 am
That’s a pretty ridiculous take. Go listen to the new albums from Zach Top, Jake Worthington, and Kimmi Bitter just to name a few. There is perhaps never been more great country music out there to consume. You just won’t find it on the radio.
April 29, 2024 @ 2:12 pm
But Trigger, it did stop for those who listen exclusively to the radio.
April 29, 2024 @ 2:06 pm
Country radio stopped after those names you mentioned. Lots of good guys still coming to the fight
April 29, 2024 @ 10:31 am
2 really good articles. I agree and disagree with some of both but both well worth reading as they are thought provoking. Do charts really matter anymore with streaming? Does it really matter what genre something is put in? It has always been an issue. One knows country music when one hears it and there is some great country music being released. What I really like about SCM is bringing those acts to wider attention than they might otherwise get. By talking about country music, and keep it in the debate arena, it does help save it.
April 29, 2024 @ 6:20 pm
Saving means preserving, protecting, and if necessary, redeeming.
A lot of talk gets hung up on defining country music as a “genre.” In the abstract, that’s a tough job, but if you go out of the country and ask people in like Sweden what country music is, they’ll have no trouble pointing to examples and saying “music like that.”
Italy doesn’t have music like that. Neither does Serbia, Russia, China, or Burkina Faso. To the rest of the world, country music is American music, like blues, jazz, gospel, and rock and roll. So “saving” it mostly means protecting it from being watered down and less distinctive.
We like our country, like we like our people, straight up.
Naturally, that’s offensive to some people.
April 30, 2024 @ 6:06 am
Good article. I think a misconception is that country music fans are extreme purists, and that saving country music to them means that to be a country artist you have to sound exactly like Hank Williams or have some authentic 40s-50s country sound. It’s only natural for the genre to evolve, and for the most part I believe fans are receptive to it as long as it’s organic and a true expansion of the traditional sounds of country music.
I think what has brought country music out of the Bro-Country era was a desire from fans to return to the roots of those traditions more than wanting artists to sound like they recorded an album 50 years ago. Artists mentioned here like Sturgil, Tyler, Cody, and newer artists like Ferrell have distinguished themselves by taking those roots and adding their own interpretations to form modern, but traditional country music. It is this type of artist that will keep country music relevant more than the traditional country bands cloning long gone sounds, or the melding of the genre into the pop/hip-hop homiginiztion that has overtaken other genres.
Country music is at a crossroads after of the popularity of Bro-Country/Hip Hop Country. Does the genre retain it’s roots and current momentum, or does it conform to outside calls for assimilation into the generic pop realm?
April 30, 2024 @ 9:39 am
One measure of weather Country music has been saved for me is whether Country music becomes eligible for popular critical acclaim again.
National multi-genre music critics music have all but dismissed Country music for a long time (while taking seriously genres like sludge metal). That was somewhat deserved as what Nashville was pumping out for so long barely warrented attention.
Now with massively popular, legitimate artists like Tyler Childers and Sturgill Simpson I would like to see Country receiving the same treatment as indie rock, hip hop and pop (and all their sub-genres). I’d like to see the likes of Pitchfork, The Needle drop the National newspapers and magazines reviewing and covering the best country music the way they do the other genres. The tide does seem to be turning but its not there yet.
A cursary look at the website AOTY which does a great job of compiling reviews across the internet – St Vincent’s release last week has garnered 28 reviews, Charley Crockett only 3. If you click on “genre” Country doesn’t even show up on the landing page (Rock, Pop, Metal, Indie Rock, Singer-Songwriter, Hip Hop, Psychedelia, Indie Pop, Alt-Rock, Electronic, Pop Rock, Folk, R&B, Post-Punk, Contempary folk).
There is enough quality being produced now to warrent that coverage, hopefully the tide continues to shift. Until it does – keep up the good work.
April 30, 2024 @ 12:32 pm
I’ve been saying for years that major publications like The New York Times, The Washington Post, NPR, etc. need to have a dedicated country and roots music reporter as opposed to putting the pop or hip-hop reporters on the beat whenever something like the Beyonce album comes up, because they’re going to be inherently uninformed and bias about it from the beginning. There is definitely enough economic activity, especially when you consider Americana and American roots music to justify these positions, but it’s always dealt with as an afterthought.
April 30, 2024 @ 2:18 pm
100% they need to do that. But also the music journalists in general need to check their bias against anything with the “C” word associated with it. I know this, because I used to be that person (not a journalist, but someone who didn’t like to admit to liking “country”).
Just to hammer this point further. A few weeks ago. Waxahatchee, Adrienne Lenker and Sierra Ferrell all released albums. What a wonderful day for female Americana music (I loved all 3 albums). Stylisitcally these three artists are very very similar within the whole pantheon of popular music.
Lenker and Ferrell get 2.6m listeners on Spotify, Waxahatchee has 1m. On the AOTY website Lenker and Waxahatchee have 29 and 26 reviews respectively.
Sierra Ferrell – 2.
Sierra Ferrell has come up and largely operates in the country ecosphere whereas the other two operate in the indie ecosphere. Being associated with “country” seems to be a scarlett letter for music journalists.
May 4, 2024 @ 11:41 am
This was a great article Trigger and got thinking a couple things.
1. What is country music? To me it’s music with I relate to. It’s emotion in song form. It’s a feeling as Waylon would say. I was born in the south and have lived here all my life, but that’s not why I like country music. It’s because it has a soul and I can relate to it.
2. We spend too much time with labels, what’s rock?, what’s country?, what’s the blues? During the 70s that line was pretty much based on what record label you were on and what station played your music, but it was good music with a soul. The reach of music is so much today different with streaming and YouTube vs only hearing new music on the radio.
3. Adding to my first thought, Waylon and Willie were (unhappy) successful country musicians who wanted to record the music they wanted to. They didn’t fight for their artistic freedom because they wanted to be rock stars played on rock stations. They just wanted to be themselves. The music still had the same message, it was just presented in a different way. I’m ok with crossover hits IF there is feeling and true emotion in the song and it gains popularity.
4. Race should not matter in any of this. Music is music. I don’t care to know what the artist looks like…If I like a song, I like the song. Music with a racist message is something totally different and unacceptable and should not be in this discussion. The race issue I’m referring to was caused by the record labels controlling what was being produced and labeled. White music is this, black music is this. The record labels and radio stations are the ones being racist today to keep “tradition”. It’s the same bs Waylon and Willie fought against. In the 70s, music crossed boundaries and it was the best music made. Those boundaries have been put in place again by the labels to have the sound and image they want associated with them.
5. The best music is made when money and fame are not what is the motivation behind it. So many artists first albums are their most creative and best, then they become a star and fame takes over. The record labels will do anything to influence what’s being recorded next just to sell records. Luckenbach, Texas was this for Waylon, so it happens to everyone, even artists with the best intentions. Fame changes emotions and Waylon recorded some beautiful songs based on the emotions he had due to his increased fame. They weren’t hits, but they were some of his best work. A lot of great songs are like this, but it’s not what is on the radio. You have listen deep in albums to find them.
So, music to me is music. If it tells a good story, has feeling and emotion and has a good sound, I don’t care what it’s called or who wrote it, sang it or played it I’m going to listen to it. Country music is my favorite because it has feelings and brings me emotion, but if any singer or group makes a song I relate to, I’m going to listen to it regardless of what it’s labeled as.
Does country music need saving? I’ll say music with a soul needs saving and if that’s going to be called country music I agree. If it’s just someone with a southern accent singing pop music called country music to sell records, then no let that die. The country music I grew up with needs to be resurrected in order for it be saved. Until then, I’ll listen to the timeless music that was made when country music had a soul. There is probably music like this made today, but you won’t hear it on the radio.