On Charley Crockett’s Statement About Morgan Wallen, Beyoncé, and Gavin Adcock

Charley Crockett is on a tear right now, and has been on a tear for years really, finally putting him at or near the top tier of independent country performers not supported by radio, and threatening to break into the mainstream now that he’s on a major label. Crockett’s new album Dollar A Day released on August 8th is a killer, cinematic work with both stellar singles like “All Around Cowboy” and “Tennessee Quick Cash,” and a great cover to cover listen as well.
Crockett has also been making more and more public pronouncements that make you want to pump your fists, ranting about the music business, and making David Goggins-like motivational points that get your blood pumping. His recent appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience really gave some great insights and exposed the wisdom behind Charley Crockett’s rise.
But during the Joe Rogan appearance, and as part of a recent social media rant, Crockett also exhibited his propensity sometimes to get slightly ahead of his skis. Some of the things he said in the viral post making reference to Morgan Wallen, Beyoncé, and Gavin Adcock were spot on. Other things he said were just empirically false. And now of course, country music’s Town Drunk in the form of Gavin Adcock has chimed in.
Here is the Charley Crockett post in total. Then we’ll break down some of what he has to say.
Hey country folks. @beyonce ain’t the source of your discontent. It was 25 years of bro country. #1 country artist on earth listen’s to nothing but rap. Openly says he doesn’t really know any country music. Gotta respect his honesty. The machine points to a black woman who’s making a statement about marginalized people being removed from the conversation altogether, and somehow we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music. These “country boys” been *singing* over trap beats for years. So what’s different now? Authenticity. Many of those business folks called me early on. They had whole albums pre written and recorded ready to just plug me in. I have receipts. It’s harder than ever to keep the public’s attention. They said and I quote “we wanna get into country music where you have audience loyalty.” Hot today, forgot tomorrow. I don’t need to put down a black woman to advance my music. That’s just embarrassing to the idea of America and I got no respect for it. Somebody asked me why I listen to @bigxthaplug the other day. Easy. He’s genuine. A true story teller. The best hip hop sound to come out of Texas in this century. The challenges country music faces aren’t unique. It’s an issue in every *genre*. I don’t have a problem with Americana. I have a problem with being compartmentalized by the music business. Outlaw as a *sub genre* of country was artists standing up for their rights against a rigid system. Ain’t no reason to imitate @officialwaylon and @willienelsonofficial if you ain’t about the fight. Texas forever.
Hey country folks. @beyonce ain’t the source of your discontent … These “country boys” been *singing* over trap beats for years.
Charley Crockett is 100% right about this. Though there hasn’t been “25 years of bro country,” being permissive to the Bro-Country era, and allowing artists like Florida Georgia Line, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, and even Blake Shelton to have country rap hits with trap beats is what created the avenue for someone like Beyoncé to release a song like “Texas Hold ‘Em,” and it not be entirely far afield from what country radio already featured, including from appropriating White dudes like Morgan Wallen.
This is the reason it was so important to fight back against Bro-Country in its era, and to continue to criticize Morgan Wallen’s music as being characterized as “country,” especially his current album I’m The Problem, which actually leans into these hip-hop influences even more compared to his previous albums that featured a surprising amount of more traditional country sounds.
Morgan Wallen is “the problem,” and it does create a double standard when you accuse Beyoncé of not being country, but give Morgan Wallen a pass.
“It was 25 years of bro country.”
This is just a unfortunate, false characterization, even if perhaps slightly unimportant to Charley’s overall point. Even in the most liberal interpretations of the Bro-Country era, the subgenre hasn’t been around for 15 years, let alone 25. Even if you put the start of Bro-Country with Jason Aldean’s “Dirt Road Anthem” from 2011, and assume we’re still in the Bro-Country era today, that still only gives you 14 years. The widely-recognized start of Bro-Country is Florida Georgia Line and the song “Cruise” from 2012. This was the moment that had journalist Jody Rosen coining the “Bro-Country” term.
Also, some mark the end of Bro-Country as early as 2015 with Chris Stapleton shocking the country world at the 2015 CMA Awards, and the explosion of “Tennessee Whiskey” with Justin Timberlake. Sure, some consider us still in the Bro-Country era with Morgan Wallen and some others, but that doesn’t take into account the rise of independents like Zach Bryan and Tyler Childers, and now the neotraditional resurgence with Zach Top.
What preceded Bro-Country? It was an unprecedented era of pop, with Taylor Swift winning the CMA Entertainer of the Year in 2009 and 2011. It was Kenny Chesney winning Entertainer of the Year all but one year between 2004-2008. It was the rise of Keith Urban, Rascal Flatts, Carrie Underwood, and Sugarland. There was nothing “Bro” about it, and there was little rap, Black, or electronic beat influence to the music. Some do finger Toby Keith as the godfather of Bro-Country, but he wasn’t dominating or a major force in country after the mid oughts.
“#1 country artist on earth listen’s to nothing but rap. Openly says he doesn’t really know any country music. Gotta respect his honesty.”
This is mostly true, but not 100%. Morgan Wallen is definitely the #1 artist in country. And when Theo Vonn asked him what he thought about Zach Top, Morgan Wallen answered that he “doesn’t listen to country music a whole lot.” Yes, this says a lot about country music and its #1 star, and how he’s just as much influenced by hip-hop as he is country, if not more.
“The machine points to a black woman who’s making a statement about marginalized people being removed from the conversation altogether, and somehow we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music.”
This is where Crockett starts getting a little confused and in the weeds with his statement. First off, “The Machine” of country music in no way pointed to a Black woman as being a problem. A two-bit, third tier up-and-coming mainstream country star did in Gavin Adcock, while outlets like Saving Country Music, NPR, The Washington Post, and others pointed out the empirical fact that Beyoncé said herself, “This ain’t a country album.”
Nonetheless, when serviced to it, country radio played “Texas Hold ‘Em.” When submitted to them, the Grammy Awards accepted Cowboy Carter in country, and gave it a Grammy, and the all genre Album of the Year. Cowboy Carter was placed on Billboard’s country charts. The reason Gavin Adcock ranted against Beyoncé is because she was beating him on the country iTunes charts.
At no point was Beyoncé denied entry into country. Cowboy Carter was in no way gatekept or marginalized. It was given carte blanche in the country arena. Yet still, people love to point back at her as some sort of victim. She was incredibly successful in her country era, at least from a critical standpoint.
Then when Crockett says, “we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music,” he seems to be attempting to marginalize Beyoncé’s major role in this very ambush. In large part, she spearheaded it.
We talked about the eras of country music above, and when Bro-Country might have started and ended. What era are we in now? It’s a double era, existing in two completely separate worlds. The first era is a massive resurgence in the roots of country music, bringing back twangy sounds, strong songwriting, and “authenticity,” which Crockett also talks about in his statement, and which Crockett is very much a part of.
The other half of this era is this “ambush” of roots music symbolized by Beyoncé, Post Malone, and BigXthaPlug, who Crockett also brings up positively later in his statement. While potentially trying to defend diversity in country music which is adminrable and important, Crockett sort of misses the problem people have with Beyoncé and BigXthaPlug being called country that goes beyond race.
There are plenty of Black artists already in country making actual country music. Charley Crockett is one of them. And unfortunately, Beyoncé didn’t really shine a spotlight on them, however much she might of tried (or didn’t). She overshadowed these Black country artists with her celebrity.
“I don’t need to put down a black woman to advance my music. That’s just embarrassing to the idea of America and I got no respect for it.”
This is clearly a call out of Gavin Adcock, though it would have been better if Charley Crockett had named names here. When you don’t name names, you create collateral damage. In this case, it can come across like Crockett is saying the entire country industry was trying to “put down” Beyoncé because she was a Black woman.
That said, as Saving Country Music proclaimed at the time Gavin Adcock called out Beyoncé in late June, this is not the buffoon we want representing country music, or taking up the mantle of attempting to explain the important, but complex and nuanced argument of why Cowboy Carter shouldn’t be considered country. Also, at this point, it really is time to let the Beyoncé issue go. It happened. Cowboy Carter wasn’t even called country by Beyoncé, but it won the Grammy. Present all the facts to the public, and let history hash out what happens from here.
And in fact, perhaps that would have been sage advice for Charley Crockett here too, because now Gavin Adcock has responded, which only keeps this whole issue in the news a little longer, and continues to help make Gavin Adcock an undeserving folk hero among that low information crowd in country that includes a lot of racists. Upon Crockett’s pronouncement, Adcock fired back,
“Somebody needs to tell the ‘act’ that has let out (the cover) of James town ferry 6 times he should just work on letting out quality original music. I got more cowshit under my pinky then you have seen your whole fuc-in life. Hank sr called and asked about the cosplay cowboy”
And so now you have folks tearing apart Charley Crockett—one of the few Black artists in country music actually making country music.
Charley Crockett does make a very important point about the hypocrisy some bring to the table when they criticize Beyoncé being called country, but stay mum when it comes to Morgan Wallen. But Crockett’s statement perhaps wasn’t thought out as well as it could have been. That has created openings for folks to tear it apart entirely, and to attack Charley.
That said, Crockett wasn’t trying to make some grand pronouncement. It was simply a social media post. But as Crockett continues to rise in popularity and prominence due to the strength of his music and his dogged worth ethic, he might be smart to try and choose his words a little more wisely. Because if not, the Gavin Adcock’s of the world will come knocking, trying to bring Crockett down to their level where he doesn’t belong.
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August 20, 2025 @ 12:08 pm
Charley Crockett is fake.
The NY Hip Hop subway rapper was costumed into a country “act” by industry people.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:20 pm
I love how you dorks keep bringing something up Crockett has sung about in multiple songs and talked extensively about Joe Rogan as if you’re exposing something about his life. “Industry people” didn’t make Charley Crockett. Hard work did. I’ve been reporting on him since he was opening for Turnpike Troubadours. The industry didn’t know what the hell to do with him. So he made his own lane.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:42 pm
Well, the “hard work” wasn’t his learning guitar.
He can’t pick.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:32 pm
I am totally going to agree with you on this.
Charley has busted his behind making this work.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:13 pm
“Morgan Wallen is “the problem,” and it does create a double standard when you accuse Beyoncé of not being country, but give Morgan Wallen a pass.”
: D
August 20, 2025 @ 12:15 pm
I can’t wait until Gavin disappears forever
August 20, 2025 @ 12:16 pm
Charley Crockett’s success seems to be from how he’s seperated himself from the industry and the drama and pretty much kept quiet, and appealed directly to purists. I don’t think he is in the position to start calling out the ‘problems’ in Country music without putting a target on his back for online commenters. His success is never going to eclipse the people he’s calling out because he has the vocal range of Ernest Tubb. I’ve started seeing online comments on instagram criticizing his voice in live performances, and I never really saw those before. (No it wasn’t me who made them.) My point is he’s been successful because he’s essentially stayed in his lane. He could very well become a target of ridicule from the normies if he’s not careful.
Come on…Charley Crockett is not black. No one would come to that conclusion by seeing his picture and not without being told first that he claims to be mixed race.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:50 pm
Crockett wears a black power Egyptian Horus hip hop medallion and pretends he thought it was a Southwestern Thunderbird.
He told that lie on Joe Rogan.
Now he is white knighting for Beyonce.
Do the math.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:45 pm
Nobody is claiming Crockett’s Southwestern resale shop trinket is a “black power” symbol. About as dumb as a point of calling a white guy holing up the #3 is making a White power symbol.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:16 pm
“The machine points to a black woman who’s making a statement about marginalized people being removed from the conversation altogether, and somehow we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music.”
I took this portion of the statement as a connection to elements that gave birth to Bro-Country and what came before as pop music’s influence into the country genre. Taylor Swift seemed rather pop driven in her early days IMO without dredging more into the 00s Nashville sound.
Synthesizers were ran into the ground in the 80s. Disco influenced a range outside of acts that were in that genre in the mid/late 70s. Outside of the long term established acts in country there seemed to be a gap from the late 90s until the past 10 years of acts that were more traditionalists instead of blending sounds. Would say the rise of independent music in general in the early ’10s across genres helped turn the tide of the cannibalization we were seeing by the major labels! (of course there are a few bright spots “artists” that break that generalization)
August 20, 2025 @ 1:27 pm
Yeah, but if Charley Crockett is putting the Bro-Country era at 25 years, that completely changes the calculus.
I appreciate what Charley Crockett was trying to say here. But he kind of got three separate though connected points garbled in his explanation, and I acknowledge there can be different interpretations.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:18 pm
Bottom line: Charley is in the wrong and Gavin is in the right.
Beyonce wasn’t accepted into the scene because she didn’t make country music, and mostly because as Luke Bryan said we love when artists immerse themselves in our scene, stay a couple months in Nashville, hire our writers and teams, appear on Bobby bones and do some press here, make a temporary home here. Be seen around the city. Beyonce didn’t do that.
Her problem was that instead of highlighting black
Contributions in country music which is admirable and we’d love that, but rather to erase white contributions to the genre overall and minimize them. That’s dishonest, disgusting and anyone here who loves the genre should be outraged at how she conducted herself in doing so. When you start caring more about black peoples contributions to the genre and ignoring whites (and other races) contributions then you’ve lost me. It’s not good faith at all.
Charley is a woke artist, he’s made that clear. Much like Hayley his statement was unnecessary and borne out of jealously and hatred. Disagree with trigger, Gavin adcock is the rising star, Charley has been on the fringes of the scene for a decade. He releases albums seemingly every 6 months but none are major hits and neither is he. Gavin adcock is on the verge of breaking. There’s a major difference.
Charley sees everything through the lens of race. When the majority of country fans don’t. We care about good songs and stories. Period. If you are purple we’d listen if you wrote well. The vibe shift happened with trumps reelection, woke and race baiting art is out. It doesn’t sell. The most popular country artist in the world is a white straight male who codes republican and is an open Christian who has slighted legacy liberal media to their faces. Charley as an npr favorite isn’t cool. It’s lame.
He’s jealous, not just of Morgan but of all these white artists. Megan, Riley, Bailey, Jordan, Ella, they all are straight and white. None of them got success because of it either. They worked their tails off. Charley has been working hard too. But it’s not hitting. He will probably release another 3 albums in this year alone. But people won’t buy it. It’s stale. It’s not popular.
Morgan has done more for our genre than anyone in our lifetimes. He brings fans by the boatload to a genre they never would have been interested in. He tours with country openers who further expose the fans to our genre. He is the face of our genre and has been for half a decade and isn’t slowing down. No one will outsell him in our genre even if Luke or Zach release. He’s it. Literally. He’s also colorblind in a way a Riley or Megan or Ella, for all their great music and art, will never be. His shows are stadium shows. Full of every race, color and creed. All joined in their love of the songs. We owe him a debt of gratitude that awards will never fill. We will never know the number of fans who listened to Dangerous; then explored George Jones and Dolly and are now diehard genre fans. He’s the only person who could do that at such a mass scale.
He also is in our scene, he writes and cowrites in Nashville. He lives here or nearby. He is friends with similarly country centric artists. He’s country through and through in image too. Beyonce is rap and r&b coded. That ain’t country, son.
Charley is a jealous man, blinded by his rage and hatred and resentment that a white straight male is so successful and does his job way better than Charley ever will. The numbers speak for themselves, Morgan dwarfs Charley in every category conceivable. Album sales, concert sales, merchandise sales, social
Media engagement, audience fervor, industry impact, radio play, impact on culture and genre, numbers of artists he influenced and imitators, Morgan doesn’t just dominates, he wipes the floor with Charley. Charley is a peripheral figure in our genre with some buzz. Morgan is the definitive artist of his generation and our lifetimes, the literal face of our genre and is an entire era of not only country music but popular music too. Charley will never be this, ever. He’s a footnote. That’s it. Not the huge figurehead he seems to
Fancy himself.
I’d rather have a conservative coded artist like
Morgan leading our genre than a whiny woke snowflake like Charley any damn day of the week. He’s done more for our genre just off his most recent album than Charley will do in his entire career which seems to be releasing 15 albums every
Year. Yawn!
August 20, 2025 @ 12:35 pm
You mad, bro?
August 20, 2025 @ 12:46 pm
Bro aint mad, just racist. And confused.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:49 pm
Must be a Nashville Recording Executive:
“Morgan has done more for our genre than anyone in our lifetimes. He brings fans by the boatload to a genre they never would have been interested in.”
Literally spit my drink out at that asshat comment. Wow….not even close bro. I respect MW’s pop success but I prefer Taylor Swift of those who started in country adjacent themes. Plus she’s never dropped N-bombs or assaulted first responders.
Don’t feed the troll folks
August 20, 2025 @ 1:05 pm
Morgan Wallen is objectively not the most popular male artist in the world, nor the most popular country artist in the world. He is an American phenomenon. His last album was briefly No. 1 in some English-speaking countries, yes. But so are the albums of many other artists.
His global streaming numbers and global sales mark him as an upper-middle-range artist, but not a global star. This is an objective, factual and easily verifiable fact.
America has its average mass-compatible pop star. And that’s okay. France, Germany and Türkiye have their own average mass-compatible pop stars. They don’t need an American like Morgan Wallen, who has nothing special to offer musically or lyrically.
He’s just not special or exceptional enough to be hugely successful around the world.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:43 pm
He absolutely is the biggest country artist in the world, male or female. Zach and Luke combs are two and three.
Morgan is the biggest country artist in the world. Period. It’s not even a question. Even trigger acknowledges this. It’s completely self evident.
There’s no one even close.
You are just trolling at this point. I can’t take someone who says Morgan isn’t the biggest in our genre.
Takes 5 seconds to see the data.
Morgan is the biggest in our genre. Without a doubt!
Right trigger?
August 20, 2025 @ 1:16 pm
“Morgan has done more for our genre than anyone in our lifetimes….”
“Morgan is the definitive artist of his generation and our lifetimes…”
Yikes, it’s been awhile since I’ve actually thrown up in my mouth. Seriously tho, the Morgan Wallen stans who constantly bash Beyonce and defend Morgan and the garbage he puts out, is tiring. When it comes to country music, they’ve both proven to be ass…
Also, can’t believe you also name dropped raspy Temu Morgan Wallen (Bailey Zimmerman), as evidence for your point. (btw I’m pretty conservative, before you try to say I’m speaking as a liberal)
August 20, 2025 @ 12:22 pm
I remember when cowboy Troy came on to the country scene and so many People’s heads exploded. “Country and rap don’t mix” so many fans and country music establishments were crying. Now the majority of bro country has rap in it. So what happened? I personally don’t like rap, and if people want to like it fine.
But so many artists are mixing so many types of music together that it’s hard to keep track of,
I like traditional country, country rock, and alternative country, so I guess I got no right to complain. If people want to like that bro country stuff, then more power to them. I will just listen to the music I like .
August 20, 2025 @ 12:34 pm
I think Charley Crockett’s statement is great. I don’t care if certain time periods are mentioned inaccurately. The most important thing for me is that he correctly categorizes this wannabe hip-hop that the industry and labels call “country”. Morgen Wallen and all that other horrible industrial mainstream s***t is just not country, it’s a hip-hop-leaning pop mishmash.
Finally an independent artist opens his mouth and says what’s going on.
By the way, Benjamin Tod explicitly supported Charley Crockett on Instagram today. Charley obviously spoke to many people with this post.
Thank you Charley Crockett.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:12 pm
I think he hurt his point by admitting that he listens to BigXthaPlug and then defending it.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:30 pm
The kids and public have chosen and spoken. They want what Morgan is selling and don’t want what Charley is selling. If you are upset about Morgan making music you feel is beneath the genre make music you feel is better. But the music Charley makes doesn’t sell like Morgan’s. So who’s at fault? Is it the person making music that taps into the public’s consciousness in a way we’ve never really seen, or is it the guy making music that doesn’t connect with the public and never will on that level? I think it’s the latter. Morgan knows our genre better than Charley which is funny given the tone of his comments. If country fans wanted Morgan forced out of the genre and kicked out and Charley to be our figurehead instead why haven’t they done so? What’s also
Humorous is there has been several points where this could have happened . Post controversy in 2021, Charley could have stepped in and could have reined, but we all know why he didn’t, his music isn’t resonating to millions of fans.
Make better music and maybe you too can
Rule our genre. Until then it’s just sour grapes coming from a lesser artist.
While he seems to more than suggest Morgan is a carpetbagger and isn’t interested in our genre, the fans in our genre love Morgan. Clearly so. Like really really love him.
Morgan does what Charley does but better. He’s a better performer, better stage presence. Better song choices. Better singles. Better marketing. More rabid fanbase. And better overall presentation as an artist. Morgan’s walkouts get more press than any review of Charley’s entire albums get. That should tell you something about the public’s love of Morgan.
Charley and some in our genre and even trigger to a degree have tried to say since 2021 that Morgan was one and done. That he was a fading artists or a flavor of the week. Well it’s 2025 and Morgan is more popular than he ever has been, no one in our genre is even close to his popularity. He’s racked up so
Many hit songs it’s obscene and his concerts are the most successful in all our genre. The idea he is some footnote is fucking absurd cope. He isn’t leaving his throne for quite some time, and when he does he will have created such a staggering legacy in our genre that no one will likely be able to attain similar. He isn’t some plant, he is our genre, in total. The figurehead
of his generation and one of the biggest country artists that’s ever lived.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:30 pm
A lot of artists have defended him. Kaitlin Butts, Kristina Murray and others. I don’t think that Gavin Adcock really understands the gravity of a grassroots following.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:39 pm
He may have a lot of support but so does Gavin. Gavin is the bigger artist. People knock Nickelback too, and I’m sure many artists would publicly come at them, but they are Nickelback. I’m sorry but Kaitlin Butts doesn’t have cultural
Cache or industry clout least not when compared to people like Morgan or Gavin. Gavin got more press off this most recent album than Kaitlin has ever gotten.
Gavin probably doesn’t understand grassroots support because he no longer needs it, whereas Kaitlin does. Gavin isn’t a grassroots artists he is a star. Theres a difference.
I get it you all hate pop country, but it’s popular for a reason. People love it. We can champion lesser known artists all we want but sales rules all. And Gavin is a star on the rise. Charley and Kaitlin are not. Simple as.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:34 pm
“25 years of bro country” is obviously hyperbole and envelops the greater pop/rap/bro/non country radio machine play.. No need to pick the pepper out the fly shit on that one. Gotta give Charley a pass, he is not entering a debate competition. 500 foot viewpoint that ruffled some feathers, whether intended or not. Gavin Adcock responding with an attack on who’s more cowboy just shows what a knuckle dragger he is and its designed to rile his knuckle dragging fan base. He’s also defending his tour partner….cuz, you know….dollars. What a pair the two of them must make on the afterparty. One drives drunk while the other throws shit out the window.
This is really just a couple performers trading barbs. I don’t think it will have any farther ranging consequences than that.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:13 pm
It absolutely is a competition and Charley is getting completely destroyed. Not sure what he thought would happen by going after Morgan fucking wallen but if you go for the king you best not miss and you also better be a somebody yourself. Im not giving Charley a pass at all.
If you can’t sell out a local cafe, probably best not to attack the literal king of your genre who if he played a local cafe would cause an international incident with fans lined up for miles to see him. He is the most significant country artist of our lives. You attack that guy, I have no sympathy for those who push back. And they should.
Megan and Morgan have have some issues in the past but if Megan started publicly going at Morgan at least she could claim she has some success. What the fuck has Charley accomplished on that level? Megan is one of the biggest stars and possibly the biggest female in her age cohort making music in our genre. Charley isn’t even a top 50 country artist overall. He’s a literal nobody in terms of dealing with Morgan and Megan.
Resume matters in all this. You’ve got to be able to put some wins on the board to be able to step to Morgan like that, and Charley has nothing of the sort. It would be like some American idol contestant attacking Carrie. It’s laughable.
How many number ones has Charley had? Number one albums? Stadium tours? How much is he making at each tour stop? How popular are his songs?
If you can’t answer those with some stats of you own you have no business even breathing the same air as Morgan.
Shoo fly! Buzz off
August 20, 2025 @ 1:33 pm
Charley is not getting “destroyed.” The only people who believe this are people that wouldn’t ever listen to his music anyway. Crockett’s star will burn brighter by going after Adcock and Wallen, and Adcock’s star will burn brighter as his 19-year-old fans continue to make him into some folk hero for taking a stand.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:35 pm
It might not have been bro, but there was definitely a shift after Garth, Shania and Billy Ray Cyrus hit the scene. Nashville was so busy trying to clone Garth that all the progress from the 80s and early 90s (Steve Earle has dubbed it the Great Country Music Credibility Scare) was pushed out. It became more about sales numbers and spectacle. Country music has always dealt with this. Olivia Newton-John and John Denver come to mind. They were pushed on the fans because of charts and sales numbers and the fans resented it. I discovered alt-country, Texas country, whatever you want to call it in my living room in upstate NY in 1987-88 watching ACL on PBS. Nanci Griffith, Lyle Lovett, Darden Smith, and the list goes on. Then I moved to Texas and found out that I hadn’t even scratched the surface. There’s always been independent artists doing their thing. Musicians have been around longer than record companies.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:39 pm
“And so now you have folks tearing apart Charley Crockett“
That’s not what happened at all for the most part. Adcock’s tweet did NOT go over well. He got “ratio’d” as the young people call it.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:08 pm
Yeah it really is just a solid wall of people telling Gavin that he sucks, lol. Almost zero support.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:35 pm
Well, there are people in this very comments section trying to tear Charley Crockett apart. So clearly, somebody is. If Adcock’s getting ratio’d,” that’s a different thing.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:40 pm
I guess Charley Crockett is at that point in his career where he’s namedropping pop stars and starting beefs and controversies on social media – a well worn strategy a lot of hip-hop artists employ to get on the larger pop-culture radar.
That said, I’m not sure what he’s implying about rap music or its association with pop country artists considering he started out busking on NYC subway trains with music that had a distinct jazz/funk/hip-hop influence – flavors present on his earliest albums but now gone (sadly, I prefer those earlier albums). Speaking of revisionism, why’d he update the cover artwork on his first set of albums from photos of himself as a bohemian jazzbo in loafers and a fedora to photos of himself as a 70’s-era cowboy in boots and a Stetson?
Clearly there’s a lot of calculation in everything he does now, curating his own mythology, revising inconvenient truths, deliberately elevating himself into the mainstream. Whether that is, or even feels, authentic or not is up for debate but as they say in the hip-hop world – don’t hate the player, hate the game.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:41 pm
It’s kind of funny watching all this play out when ZERO of the artists mentioned in this article are traditional country. Yall need better experts.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:42 pm
That guy who tried to mock Charley gave in much cock but has no balls.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:50 pm
Who is Gavin Adcock? Never heard of her.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:57 pm
“The machine points to a black woman who’s making a statement about marginalized people being removed from the conversation altogether, and somehow we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music.“
Does he realize roots music was made and appreciated by more than just black people? I don’t think he does. This is what I meant when I said we hated Beyonces country effort because it wasn’t doing what Charley says it did. It wasn’t about big upping black artists in the genre. His statement explicitly is about silencing white voices within the genre to prop up and exaggerate black voices and suggest they wed the sole creators of the genre. Which is outright ludicrous.
“I don’t need to put down a black woman to advance my music. That’s just embarrassing to the idea of America and I got no respect for it.”
This is insane. It’s explicitly saying if you criticize a black artist you are a racist. This itself is racist and it takes agency away from the groups he loves. If blacks are so fragile they can’t deal with critiques that artists of all colors deal with, then it plays
Into racist stereotypes. If any artist releases something they have to be critiqued, just because someone is a black woman why should they be praised for that solely, and given good reviews. Review need to be reviews on the art not profiles in woke courage.
“#1 country artist on earth listen’s to nothing but rap. Openly says he doesn’t really know any country music. Gotta respect his honesty.”
Strange that’s a slight by him. He could listen to polka music solely, but he absolutely has steel on some
Songs here and other albums. His roots are country even if he says otherwise. And as stated before he brings the most amount of people to country from
Outside of the genre we’ve ever seen. Even more than Garth who was obviously massive. Morgan attracting a rap crowd to his shows isn’t a bad thing, Im not sure why Charley views this as negative. Why would attracting an outside the genre crowd be bad for the genre? Charley isn’t bringing people to the genre, Morgan is. And in numbers never seen before. The goal is to gain more country converts. Morgan wins this hands down genre wide.
“Hey country folks. @beyonce ain’t the source of your discontent … These “country boys” been *singing* over trap beats for years.”
Is country in a bad place in 2025 with a lot of complaining? I must have missed that. We are a dominant genre. We’ve never been more popular and successful. Tours are going gangbusters. Country albums are lighting up the charts and staying there. The amount of stars in our genre is incredible, the depth is insane and we have superstars in the wings waiting. We have a bullpen full. People
Complaining about the genre will exist until Jesus comes back, but are people really pissed about the state of country in 2025? This is the literal best time to be a country fan. It’s the big genre, it’s cool and hip, it’s of the moment, all the rock stars have been replaced by country stars.
It’s just the kind of country Charley makes isn’t selling. That’s the impetus for his whining. The number one artist is country music isn’t him, meaning Charley. It’s someone else. And the number one country artist will never be Charley. Ever. And that must be hard for him to deal with. But it’s reality. I don’t want Charley as a spokesman for our genre. He sure as fuck doesn’t speak for me and mine. His values aren’t mine. He doesn’t make music that resonates to the deep extent Morgan’s has. Nor will he ever, even if Charley makes the Grammy award winning album
Of the year. That’s not in the cards for him. Morgan has touched popular culture and country music culture in a way few artists ever have. He is an anomaly and special in our genre. There are 15 Charley’s busking on lower broadway daily. His template is
NPR woke coded which is basic as Hell. There’s only one Morgan. He’s the only person on earth who could make the art he does. Tucker is on the rise but he will
Never be as big as Morgan.
It’s ironic Charley focuses so much on authenticity and doesn’t seem to extend it to include himself. People have spoken and chosen, they find Morgan authentic. Non authentic people don’t spend half a year as the number one album. They don’t attract millions to concerts. They don’t become figureheads for an entire genre. Authenticity has spoken and its name is Morgan. People also just want fun music. Hard times isn’t a fun record. It’s stale, staid and monotone. People want party music, and music to listen to in their daily lives not to cry about. Morgan’s music is fun.
Charley’s music has been done by 1950s and 1960s early era artists before. And it’s been done better, by those early originators. Why listen to his style when I could listen to someone do it better? He’s a copy. A fake. A snake oil salesman.
The crowd has spoken Charley. And we chose and choose Morgan. His complaint sounds like someone in 2021 and trying to figure out why Morgan was on the rise to superstardom. No, he is there. He’s staying there and there isn’t a damn thing Charley can do about it. Certainly none of Charley’s albums or songs will knock Morgan out of the top spot. Instead of whining like a woke snowflake, maybe create music that appeals to the masses and not a npr leftist and maybe you will go far! Until then I’m streaming Morgan until the wheels fall off.
August 20, 2025 @ 12:59 pm
“Then when Crockett says, “we all act like the entire pop industry didn’t just ambush roots music,” he seems to be attempting to marginalize Beyoncé’s major role in this very ambush. In large part, she spearheaded it.”
This is blatantly false. At most, she rode the wave that you documented in pretty good detail in the paragraphs above.
Multiple songs on cowboy Carter are as “country” as a lot of what is still to this day being played on country radio, and particularly Wallen. You love to skirt around that fact by pointing out that we’re in a different era now, but I think you make a good argument in this article that we still aren’t really out of that era. I respect that you try to respect Beyonce saying that it’s not a country album, but it’s objectively as much a country album as some albums and artists you cover.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:41 pm
“Multiple songs on cowboy Carter are as “country” as a lot of what is still to this day being played on country radio, and particularly Wallen. You love to skirt around that fact by pointing out that we’re in a different era now…”
That was literally the very first point I made when breaking down Charley Crockett’s comments. My very first point where I said he was 100% correct.
I completely understand that making a big point about how Bor-Country hasn’t been around for 25 years can come across as pedantic or hectoring. But I actually think it’s really important. If you listen to Morgan Wallen’s last album, it is NOT Bro-Country. I went out of my way to make that point in my review. Bro-Country was marked by lyricism about beer, trucks, girls, backroads, and often features hip-hop cadences. That album actually has very little of that. You do have tons of trap beats and electronic stuff. But it’s more of a post Bro Southern pop album.
Bro-Country was a very specific and distinct thing that existed in a very distinct era. I do think we’ve moved on from that era for for multiple years now, even if a few stray singles indicative of it pop up occasionally on country radio.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:00 pm
The sad part is Beyonce would make an amazing country record with her talent and voice. What she released just wasn’t very good and I think that’s what upsets people about her pushing into the space that is C&W.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:42 pm
Huge, missed opportunity for Beyonce to do what so many people are giving her credit for, which is reclaiming and highlighting the Black roots of country music. Instead, she made a mostly pop album with some minor country textures. To her credit, she was up front it wasn’t country. It’s the world that seems to not want to listen to her.
August 20, 2025 @ 1:23 pm
From this article, today I learned / realized that Gavin Adcock and Graham Barham aren’t the same dude. 🙂
August 20, 2025 @ 1:49 pm
Gotta love how people here act like
Trolls or don’t address the arguments, and make trolling comments. Either post and comment on the arguments made or don’t post at all.
I’m here to discuss and debate, I’ve never understood people who go to comment sections and read a rant and post “someone sounds mad”. Either debate my points or agree with them but explain why.
If your response to me suggesting Morgan is the biggest country artist of our lifetime, and you disagreed. Cool! Make some argument for someone else and present some evidence. Otherwise it’s just acting rude and gross to those of us who want to discuss about our genre.
I’ve never understood those who just post just to post. Say something, make an argument, go off. But to post one sentence replies and act like that’s a slick
Burn or something is absolutely asinine.
You all are adults. Make the argument.