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Music

The Return of Country Protest Songs

Sincere concerns, twangy guitars.

J.D. Tuccille | 8.21.2023 7:00 AM

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Country music singers Jason Aldean and Oliver Anthony | Illustration: Lex Villena; Gage Skidmore
(Illustration: Lex Villena; Gage Skidmore)

It's not often that country music songs grab the attention of largely city-based name-brand media, but Oliver Anthony's "Rich Men North of Richmond" did exactly that with anti-elite, anti-tax, anti-welfare lyrics—and his undeniable singing talent. Even more remarkable, Anthony's tune bumped the similarly earnest anti-urban "Try That in a Small Town" by Jason Aldean from the top of the charts. If you add in Austin Moody's lefty-taunting chart-climber, "I'm Just Sayin'," you have a cluster of songs grabbing popularity with a shared sense of populist outrage. Call it the return of the country protest song.

You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.

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Urban-Rural Tensions Aren't New

These songs represent the long-standing tension that exists between rural areas and small towns on the one hand, and denser urban and suburban communities on the other. Buck Owens wasn't exactly breaking new ground when he sang "I Wouldn't Live in New York City" over half a century ago. Forty years ago, Hank Williams Jr.'s "A Country Boy Can Survive" came pretty close to the tone of the trio of songs getting listened to this summer. But that tune was more of a rejection of city life and an expression of pride in what the singer (and his audience) considered a better way of life in the country where people "catch catfish from dusk 'til dawn." By comparison to their predecessors, the recent songs bare more teeth and bristle at perceived threats from elsewhere.

"These rich men north of Richmond, lord knows they just wanna have total control," calls out Anthony. "Wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do. And they don't think you know, but I know that you do."

"Got a gun that my granddad gave me, they say one day they're gonna round up," similarly taunts Aldean. "Well, that shit might fly in the city, good luck."

Moody's sentiments are equally defiant. To my ears, they're the most libertarian in tone.

"I believe in live and let live, we're all free to each their own," he sings. "If you were born a he, but wanna be a she, do your thing but leave my kids alone."

Country/Folk Protest Songs Have a Long Tradition

All three songs are explicitly political, in opposition to what the artists see as intrusive, smug, urban elites who want to dictate terms to the unwilling. By any reasonable definition, they're protest songs from a long tradition of similar music. That's especially true if you consider that country music is just folk music for righties (and folk music is country music for lefties). But music critics don't want to put Aldean, Anthony, and Moody in the same tradition as Woody Guthrie because times have changed, name-brand media types overwhelmingly like today's elite establishment, and the protest songs come from a different direction than Guthrie's socialism. But not approving of a protest doesn't mean it's not a protest. Times have moved on, but the gap between rural and urban, populists and elites, remains.

"Republicans have consistently been more likely than Democrats to express a preference for communities with larger houses," reports Pew. "Currently, 72% of Republicans and Republican leaners, compared with 43% of Democrats and Democratic leaners, would opt for this type of community."

Americans have been self-sorting for decades along lines of preferred lifestyle and the politics with which they correlate. "America is growing more geographically polarized — red ZIP codes are getting redder and blue ZIP codes are becoming bluer," NPR noted last year a decade and a half after Bill Bishop literally wrote the book on the phenomenon. "People appear to be sorting."

Evolving Positions Breed Evolving Grievances

Whatever their political beliefs in the past, people who prefer the spread-out life available in small towns and rural areas—the kind of people who tend to be country music fans—tend to the right, politically. Or maybe (Oliver Anthony describes himself as "pretty dead center down the aisle on politics") it's more accurate to say that they find themselves in opposition to institutions, including government, media, academia, and large corporations that they see, with reason, as dominated by urban progressives who sneer at them and their way of life. It doesn't take too many denunciations by political candidates of "deplorables" or a whole lot of big-media contempt-porn about the supposed miseries of life behind the (stories suggest) corn-silk curtain before the message is received.

The political turmoil of recent years "has consolidated progressive norms in almost every institution susceptible to pressure from activists (or activist-employees), and it's pulled the entire American establishment leftward," conservative columnist Ross Douthat wrote in 2021 for The New York Times.

Populist country songs attacking elites necessarily sound like they're coming from the right because the elites of today are largely on the left. And the divide between right and left is wide and growing.

"Over the past two decades, partisan gaps on all of the issues included in this analysis have either remained roughly the same or expanded," Gallup reported earlier this month. "The issues and topics on which the partisan gaps have grown the most since 2003 are (predictably) the issues that have been at the forefront of the political and ideological battleground in recent years and that have gained high visibility in the media. These include views of government power, global warming and the environment, education, abortion, foreign trade, immigration, gun laws, healthcare, and income tax."

And it's no secret that America's political tribes are divided not just by their views, but by hostility—even to the point of violence. "America is grappling with the biggest and most sustained increase in political violence since the 1970s," according to Reuters.

Prime Time for Protest

It's not a shock to find this particular moment producing protest songs; it just offends some journalists that a few of those songs come from the right, backed by twangy guitars.

It's tempting to over-parse protest art if you disagree with its messaging. It's easy enough to point out that a song misstates policies, overlooks flaws on its own side, is logically inconsistent, or whatever. But musical protest represents an expression of anger and, potentially, a peek at what matters to a segment of society. The fact that these songs are finding large audiences is an indication that they tap into popular sentiment. That matters whether or not anybody else agrees with that sentiment. People act on what matters to them, not on what others think should matter or even on what makes sense.

Enjoy Oliver Anthony, Jason Aldean, Austin Moody, and their peers for their music if you're so inclined. But even if you don't enjoy it, their work represents a new round of country protest songs expressing the sincere concerns of their creators and their listeners.

The Rattler is a weekly newsletter from J.D. Tuccille. If you care about government overreach and tangible threats to everyday liberty, this is for you.

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NEXT: Brickbats: August/September 2023

J.D. Tuccille is a contributing editor at Reason.

MusicPoliticsEntertainmentProtestsMedia CriticismCulture
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  2. Longtobefree   2 years ago

    Not exactly a protest song, but Waylon Jennings had one titled "The last one to leave Seattle (please turn out the lights)"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0PkA1FuqAM

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    2. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

      Best working class song of all time is "Big City" by Merle Haggard.

      https://youtu.be/LkrQMfL9MKg

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

        Merle also had a song called "I'm a White Boy". The lyrics are a bit racist.

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  3. Will Nonya   2 years ago

    "libertarian in tone"

    Most people are libertarian until you tell them it means government won't force people to do the things they do want people forced into.

    1. creech   2 years ago

      Like the smug pinko college student who changed his tune only when the professor redistributed his "A" grade to the rest of the underachievers so that everyone got a "C" on the test.

    2. ErinS   2 years ago

      You probably thought that was clever and well thought out.

    3. CE   2 years ago

      Nothing libertarian about class envy or blaming the rich. It's Marxism.

  4. JesseAz   2 years ago

    Uh oh. Mike just said yesterday that the LP even mentioning this song was a conservative dog whistle. Et tu Reason? Where will Mike go now?

    1. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

      Daily Kos?

    2. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

      Where will Mike go now?

      Wherever ENB goes.

    3. Minadin   2 years ago

      Does this mean that Reason has been seduced by the Mises Caucus? Or is it just J.D. that needs to be sent for re-education / struggle sessions?

      1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

        Flattering to find you guys talking about me.

        1. Minadin   2 years ago

          I was talking about Tuccille, AKA 2-Chilly (street name)

          1. Mike Laursen   2 years ago

            Sorry, you are right. I was one off in where I pasted my comment to the page.

            1. Minadin   2 years ago

              Mistakes happen. At least I didn't take it as evidence / absolute proof that you ARE @real2Chilly

  5. Jerry B.   2 years ago

    The Liberal commentariat at WAPO are having a cow over these songs.

    Keep 'em coming.

    1. Longtobefree   2 years ago

      Cut 'em out, ride 'em in
      Ride 'em in, ride 'em in
      Cut 'em out, cut 'em out
      Ride 'em in, rawhide

      1. Minadin   2 years ago

        They don't know they are the cattle.

      2. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

        Buttless chaps...

  6. Social Justice is neither   2 years ago

    Wait, I thought arson, assault, attempted murder and mass looting were how you peacefully protested. Or was that just TooSilly covering for his marxist brothers and sisters?

    1. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

      Anger about police abuse and perceived racism is just as valid as anger about urban elites trying to impose their "cultures" on country folk using government power. They're both about abuse of government power. It's not "whataboutism" it's justifiable anger even if the response isn't necessarily rational.

      1. Ronbback   2 years ago

        So burning buildings and killing people is now equivalent to singing a song. Amazing

        1. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

          Really? That's all you got? Amazing! Why do you even bother responding?

        2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago (edited)

          Not whatl MWAocdoc said and you know this.

      2. Nardz   2 years ago

        Die.

        1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

          Until the Etropians/Transhumanists/Singularitarians solve that problem, there's 100 percent chance of that for you and your side too. In fact, your Putineer buddies are doing it by the thousands as we speak.

          Do better.

      3. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

        It’s not “whataboutism” it’s justifiable anger even if the response isn’t necessarily rational.

        AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

        I guess we know which brainless millennial cunt whore manque operates this sock. How you doing there, Lizzie?

  7. Yes Way, Ted   2 years ago

    My rural conservative neighbors decry urban lawlessness, like street racing and vandalism. But they have no problem setting off massive and illegal fireworks over others' property during a historic drought. Some love to ride dirt bikes on their five-acre parcel, and these unmuffled bikes are twice as loud as the 52db maximum allowed level set under the county ordinance; they're far louder than the butt-trumpet cars raced in the city. Conservatives are just as bad as liberals because they're both about laws for thee but not for me.

    1. mad.casual   2 years ago

      Conservatives are just as bad as liberals because they’re both about laws for thee but not for me.

      And you're more retarded than either one with your, "The real reason for urban noise reduction policies? Rural folks." idiocy.

      1. Yes Way, Ted   2 years ago (edited)

        You sure showed me! You must looooove the taste of straw. MUTE.

        1. JesseAz   2 years ago

          Why do idiots think mutes are a threat to someone?

          1. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

            You can't hear their primal scream before they attack.

            1. Fats of Fury   2 years ago

              When you're on mute no one can hear you SCREAM!

        2. tracerv   2 years ago

          Maybe they are worried about street racers going gang busters through intersections & school zones and killing people like we have here in Nashville more than noise. They are a dangerous as fuck & have no regard for anyone.

          You ever thought of that Ted?

          1. Idaho Bob   2 years ago

            Ted calls the cops when he hears chainsaws.

            1. tracerv   2 years ago

              Yeah. And shows them his Excel spreadsheet with times and decibel levels.

              1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 years ago

                And dozens of videos showing how upset his cats get.

      2. Happy Miser   2 years ago

        the real retards are the mad.casual we met on the way.

        1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago (edited)

          A nod to MST3K and a burn on mad.casual, our very own Dr. Clayton Forrester. Double billing of FTW!
          🙂
          😉

          1. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

            Replying to your own sock 12 hours after you posted a comment that drew no attention is about as fucking pathetic as it gets you bootlicking Nazi faggot.

            1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

              You again, Bullwinkle? I don't have sockpuppets.

              And what is your obsession with sockpuppets? Do you identify with them and like a smooth hand up your ass?

              Fuck Off, Troll!

        2. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

          Nah, regardless of which sock you use, the real retard is still you.

    2. rbike   2 years ago (edited)

      55 db ( twice as loud) is a Prius driving past at 50 meters. Everyone of your neighbors should be in jail.

      You need to get a db meter and nailing your neighbors with fines.

      1. Nardz   2 years ago

        Meters?

        Go back to Canada, hoser!

    3. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

      So, you consider destroying or defacing other people's property no more offensive than riding a dirt bike on your own property.

      And it's these other guys who pose a problem. Gee, I can't for the life of me figure out why your rural conservative neighbors aren't fans.

    4. Mike Parsons   2 years ago

      ^retard level take.

      You need to take your critical thinking skills all the way back to kindergarten, and then build up again. The public school system has seriously failed you friend.

      LMAO woof

    5. Bruce Hayden   2 years ago

      Wear ear protection, if the dirt bikes are a problem. We do it for running chainsaws and shooting guns. The reality is that sound drops off by distance at a rapid rate (cube rule, since it is expanding in 3-D space). Loud maybe by the time it gets to you, if you live next door, but probably not loud enough for long term hearing loss. And, if you aren’t an A-hole to your neighbors, talk to them, and they will likely accommodate you. Teenaged grandson and his friend appropriated my wife’s UTV one night, and went roaring through the neighborhood at 1 AM. Neighbors commented, and we laid down the law. Problem solved.

      As for the fireworks, have you been burned out as a result of the fires they caused? Didn’t think so. These days, you are more likely to be burned out by the carefully set fires by climate activists - for example, the Canadian fires early this summer that caused the NE to experience the sort of smoke that those in the NW experience most every year, were almost assuredly intentionally set.

      1. Eeyore   2 years ago (edited)

        The husband of Denver’s DA has probably started at least a dozen fires in Colorado.

        Take a look into that sordid tale.

    6. Eeyore   2 years ago

      My rural liberal neighbors call the cops on me when I ride my snowmobile down the street.

    7. Longtobefree   2 years ago

      52db? Really?

      40db, Quiet residential street
      50db, Quiet office
      60db, Normal conversation at 3 feet
      70db, Busy traffic

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

        160db, the shriek of a misgendered proggie.

      2. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

        shreekotoxic is a stupid mothefucker.

      3. CE   2 years ago

        85 dB (8-hour weighted average): OSHA requires that employers provide free hearing protection to their employees

    8. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago (edited)

      While conversation level noise shouldn’t be the target of noise ordinances, people do forget or don’t understand that sound is not totally harmless.

      Sound on the Infrasonic frequency can cause disorientation and nausea. Long Range Audio Devices (LRAD) used by Law Enforcement and the Military operate on Infrasonic frequencies for crowd dispersal and deterrence.

      Acoustic device deters enemies with ear-splitting noise.
      https://youtu.be/oyYs_B-LPkk

      Also, noise on the Ultrasonic frequency can vibrate small machine parts loose. Ultrasonic frequencies are used in pest repellers against insects, rats, and other vermin and could conceivably stampede these pests towards another person’s dwelling. In fact, in the episode of Becker where Chris becomes part of the cast, the Ultrasonic pest repeller in Chris’s apartment drove roaches to Becker’s apartment.

      Neurologists have also found that Ultrasonic frequencies are powerful enough to work on the brain’s Amygdala to stop shaking from Parkinson’s disease, to numb the fear centers of the brain…or to disrupt the amygdala entirely if used improperly!

      And of course, anyone who has seen the old Memorex Commercials knows the effects of audible sound with sufficient Decibel level:

      Is It Live or Is It Memorex? (1981)
      https://youtu.be/dfcCXh_RLjE

      If sounds like these are not controlled for use in manageable ways strictly for peaceful or self-defense purposes, then these sounds can definitely threaten Life, Liberty, Property, and Pursuit of Happiness.

      In an ideal Libertarian society, talking with the neighbor is a best first resort if possible, as Bruce Hayden says elsewhere here. But if neighbors are irrational, harmful sound should be treated as an actionable tort subject to relief and punitive damages in a civil court if inflicted accidentally, and subject to fines or imprisonment in a criminal court if harmful sound if inflicted intentionally.

      Problem solved.

  8. Idaho Bob   2 years ago (edited)

    All this time I thought Rich Men was a fat phobic body shaming song. That’s what I keep seeing on social media.

    1. Minadin   2 years ago

      Just because I don't want to pay for your fudge bars doesn't mean I think they should be illegal for you to buy.

    2. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Don't forget a QAnon conspiracy for dating to mention pedo Island.

  9. Happy Miser   2 years ago

    How do I know J.D. is full of shit?

    "Populist country songs attacking elites necessarily sound like they're coming from the right because the elites of today are largely on the left."

    So great. The entire article is horseshit, but this is my favorite line.

    1. sarcasmic   2 years ago

      Who are the right wing elites that the line is missing?

      1. Happy Miser   2 years ago

        Rupert Murdoch
        Charles Koch
        Robert Mercer
        Stephen Schwarzman
        Rebekah Mercer
        Sheldon Adelson's family (I know that fucker's dead, but they keep on keeping on)
        Peter Thiel
        John Malone
        Kelcy Warren
        Foster Friess
        Linda McMahon
        Leonard Leo

        Let me know if you need more.

        1. damikesc   2 years ago

          Linda McMahom?

          Seriously, SHE is elite?

          Koch ain't conservative. And Rupert Murdoch is barely involved with Fox.

      2. Happy Miser   2 years ago

        Donald Trump
        Sean Hannity
        Tucker Carlson
        Mitch McConnell
        Kevin McCarthy
        Ted Cruz
        Rand Paul
        Ron Johnson
        Tom Cotton
        Greg Abbott
        Ron DeSantis
        Mike Pence
        Paul Ryan
        Newt Gingrich
        Karl Rove
        Mike Huckabee
        Nikki Haley
        Sarah Palin
        Ben Carson
        Betsy DeVos

        1. damikesc   2 years ago

          Sarah Palin?
          Ben Carson?
          Karl Rove?

          While I'm thrilled you know the name of some "conservatives" (seriously, KOCH?), you're confusing quantity of argument with quality.

      3. Happy Miser   2 years ago

        T. Boone Pickens
        Steve Wynn
        John Catsimatidis
        Tilman Fertitta
        Joe Ricketts
        Dan Cathy
        Richard Uihlein
        Diane Hendricks
        Thomas Peterffy
        Stanley Druckenmiller
        Ken Langone
        Stephen Ross
        Harold Hamm
        Dan Gilbert
        Kenneth Griffin
        Frank VanderSloot
        Bernie Marcus
        Jim Justice
        Jeremy Jacobs
        Bill Haslam

        1. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

          Next time you decide to make a list of conservative elites you should try not filling with people who have been dead for a fucking decade, shreek, you child-fucking imbecile.

      4. sarcasmic   2 years ago (edited)

        I don’t recognize very many of those names other than the Kochs, talking heads who I wouldn't call "elite", and politicians.

        1. CE   2 years ago

          And the Kochs are libertarians. Or so I'm told.

  10. mad.casual   2 years ago

    That's especially true if you consider that country music is just folk music for righties (and folk music is country music for lefties).

    No mention of Western Music? Typical Reason BOAF SIDEZism.

    1. Happy Miser   2 years ago

      Paint chip eater^^

      1. JesseAz   2 years ago

        Another Jeff sock?

        1. Super Scary   2 years ago

          We'll find out eventually given what happened last week.

        2. InsaneTrollLogic   2 years ago

          Looks like it, or at least a part of the same sock farm.

        3. Minadin   2 years ago

          Dunno, but super boring.

        4. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

          Correct! It's nice to see you poor fucking retards finally able to spot them out the way I've been teaching you for 8+ years, even though none of you would believe me until you saw the proof for yourselves.

    2. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Outlaw country is better anyways.

  11. Jerryskids   2 years ago

    Guthrie's socialism

    I'm pretty sure Woody was a straight-up Communist. He even praised Hitler right up until Hitler turned on old Uncle Joe. Of course, by today's standards he might as well have been a country club Republican.

  12. Quo Usque Tandem   2 years ago

    Remind me again; which element has been infiltrating and taking over every institution in our society with the aim of imposing its beliefs and behavior upon everyone else?

    1. Happy Miser   2 years ago

      uranium

      1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

        Not a living thing, much less a political animal.

        And with breeder reactor technology, it's even less of a problem. If only we constructed more reactors since 1978 and didn't let a stupid Jane Fonda movie scare the shit out of us.

        1. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

          If only you weren't a bootlicking Nazi faggot leg-humping your own socks 12 fucking hours after you failed to get any responses.

          1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

            If only you would Fuck Off, Troll! Begone!

    2. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

      Well, the good news is that every institution they have infiltrated has gone to hell in a handbasket shortly afterwards.

      1. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

        Yeah, the FBI is just such a powerless mess, shreekotoxic.

    3. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

      That's a bit my thinking, as well. It's not like, if the progressives stopped pushing, the rednecks would be turning New York City and Los Angeles into Moncks Corner, SC or Vidalia Georgia. They could go along their merry way living by whatever standards they want. But, they aren't really into "live and let live". They have some sort of need not for just acceptance (at a distance) but approval and affirmation.

    4. Jerry B.   2 years ago

      Christians, per WAPO and their liberal readers.

  13. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 years ago

    Wait a minute. Songs that criticize center-right ideas and policies are protests; songs that challenge the left are illegal sedition.

  14. Bruce Hayden   2 years ago (edited)

    Whatever their political beliefs in the past, people who prefer the spread-out life available in small towns and rural areas—the kind of people who tend to be country music fans—tend to the right, politically. Or maybe (Oliver Anthony describes himself as “pretty dead center down the aisle on politics”) it’s more accurate to say that they find themselves in opposition to institutions, including government, media, academia, and large corporations that they see, with reason, as dominated by urban progressives who sneer at them and their way of life. It doesn’t take too many denunciations by political candidates of “deplorables” or a whole lot of big-media contempt-porn about the supposed miseries of life behind the (stories suggest) corn-silk curtain before the message is received.

    This explains a lot. Why is the Administration pushing >50 mpg milage requirements, EVs, etc? The technology isn’t there, and may never be, given the power densities potentially available in batteries, versus burning hydrocarbons. My answer is that EVs are only feasible in dense urban centers, when Dems have their power bases, and where control over everyone else is much easier. So, force everyone to switch from ICE to EVs, and everyone will be forced to live in dense urban areas, where politics are corrupt, criminals aren’t arrested or prosecuted, homeless are rampant, and there is shit, used needles, and filth everywhere. For many, it is a horrible existence, which is why, I think, EVs, among other things, are being shoved down our throats.

    In our subdivision in rural NW MT, literally everyone has a pickup, and only one isn’t full size. Of the 9 houses, the only one that might not have a gun, is that of our new ER Doc. Most have several. But then we have black bears ambling down the street, late at night (and juveniles sleeping outside the bedroom window) and brown bears and wolves on the ridges. No surprise – the county went heavily for Trump. And, yes, we are the ones who have to deal every year with the results of urban climate fetishes that have caused the fuel buildups that result in such devastating wildfires every year.

    1. emkcams   2 years ago

      One problem with EVs in addition to energy density: the speed of refreshing the batteries. ICEs can be refreshed in a few minutes, EVs require one or two orders of magnitude longer. Many cars in urban areas are parked on the street, or in lots, as opposed to residential garages. Providing energy refresh to those will always be a problem until battery recharge rates come down to several minutes. This capability is not on the horizon.

  15. Bruce Hayden   2 years ago

    Don’t think that these protest songs are loved by just rural whites. What was interesting were the Black rap songs wrapped around the N of Richmond song. The Rappers, with their gold teeth, and gold chains, were complaining about how hard it was to make a decent living, make ens meet, while the urban (DC in the song) elites just got richer.

    1. Minadin   2 years ago

      https://twitter.com/0rf/status/1691957955250331924

      1. Jerry B.   2 years ago

        Aww.

    2. CE   2 years ago

      It's class envy all the way down.

    3. damikesc   2 years ago

      Always said that whites and blacks got way more in common than the average person and the elites.

  16. Dillinger   2 years ago

    we got both kinds here, Country and Western.

  17. sarcasmic   2 years ago

    I always liked that bumper sticker that said "Discourage inbreeding - BAN COUNTRY MUSIC"

    1. Georgiana Burnes   2 years ago

      Sounds about right, you like pretty much every cliched wannabe-edgy 13 year old whiteboy trope from 1989.

  18. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

    Good article, overall. Tuccille seems to be on something of a roll.

    1. Nardz   2 years ago

      It's nice he's taking a break from calling for enemies of the regime to be executed

  19. JFree   2 years ago

    Country/Folk Protest Songs Have a Long Tradition

    So does the contempt that urbanites show towards country/folk. And the contempt that elites have for everyone that engenders populist protest.

    In early 1888, there was a blizzard in the frontier/rural parts of the Midwest (called the Schoolhouse Blizzard). 235 kids (mostly) died but the story in East Coast media was that they deserved everything that was coming to them because who the fuck would choose to live in a place that desolate where kids had to walk miles to a one-room schoolhouse and where there was no infrastructure at all.

    Two months later, a blizzard hit the East Coast - now called the Great Blizzard of 1888. Now THAT was a legitimate crisis. No surprise that the media paid more attention - and made the blizzard, not readers of the paper, the evil - to a now-local story. Especially since cities were completely shut down for a couple weeks. Which prompted those cities to move infrastructure underground - hence the subway systems.

    But it's not just a rural-urban story. It's a elite-populist aftermath. We had a 'gold' standard back then. Which meant money was created solely by those who had the gold (namely control of the shipping of said gold from London to NY). Since gold coinage is useless as money, it means that banks control money distribution/creation rather than say post offices selling silver coins or individuals buying T-bills or such.

    Guess who got their subways financed? Guess who got no infrastructure for the next hell 120 years? Guess where votes for/against came from in the first populist reaction/protest after that blizzard (WJ Bryan silver campaign of 1896)?

    1. Minadin   2 years ago

      You mean like how it's national news that LA is having a couple days of rain?

      Sky is literally falling.

      1. Dillinger   2 years ago

        weather channel guy standing out in sprinkles talking up what was to come was a hoot.

      2. CE   2 years ago

        And the fact that it hasn't happened since the 1930s is proof of climate change. Even though it wasn't proof of climate change in the 1930s.

  20. MWAocdoc   2 years ago (edited)

    The problem with taking “protest” songs too seriously is that they do not actually reflect the actual feelings of the demographics they are attributed to. Country and small town life has its advantages but it also has its downsides. Urban and suburban life likewise. The point of having both is so people can choose where to live based on their own preferences – which also may change as a person changes over time. Technological advances in communications and transportation have made the choices even more flexible.

    The downside, of course, is the polarization that has accompanied the evolution of society. There is no obvious necessity for that polarization to be a violent one. I have to agree that the urban elites have been almost completely and solely responsible for pushing their agenda over the last umpteen decades and the country and small town folk have only recently started to push back. I think it was way past time for that, I sympathize with the reaction even when I don’t agree with the specific positions being represented, and I don’t see any way to avoid escalating violence until the "side" that has been provoking the situation over a very long time backs off.

    1. Bill Dalasio   2 years ago

      I don’t see any way to avoid escalating violence until the “side” that has been provoking the situation over a very long time backs off.

      I'm going to admit I almost missed that last part. But, that's just it - back off. There's no reason urban cosmopolitanism has to be a universal. One of the major features of federalism is that it allowed multiple cultures to more or less coexist within one polity.

      Hell, the old urban elites used to have their country homes (I live down the road from the Luces' old place that they donated for and abbey). Maybe our society would be well served to bring that back.

  21. middlefinger   2 years ago

    Best artist on the country/soul/folk scene of the last two decades IMHO: Ray Lamontagne album ‘God Willin and the Creek don’t Rise’. Songs Young Man, God Wllin, Jolene ( I believe a single.)

    1. CE   2 years ago

      Alan Jackson. "Small Town Southern Man" -- problematic these days. He even mentioned Eskimos on his Christmas album.

  22. Gaear Grimsrud   2 years ago

    If I'm not mistaken urban dwellers outnumber flyover deplorables so the popularity of this music can't be limited to good old boys. Seems like the men north of Richmond just aren't well liked by anybody.

    1. emkcams   2 years ago

      Just a side note: the state with the largest number of flyovers, that is, planes that don't originate or terminate in that state, is Virginia. The second one is North Carolina. And, of course, both are on the Atlantic seaboard.

  23. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

    We don't smoke marijuana or have butt sex with Mexicans in Muskogee.

    1. Bazza   2 years ago

      I like that song but the line White Lightning is still the biggest thrill of all, gives me a chuckle. Cause moonshine ain't really breaking the law, is it. Don't smoke that joint but have a sip of this. Popcorn just made a batch out in the woods. There is an amusing song that Merle did recently with Willie Nelson called Its all Going to Pot. Funny to hear ole Merle singing about pot after all this years.

  24. Dillinger   2 years ago

    Charlie Daniels is the political-country example you should use from 40 years ago

    1. CE   2 years ago

      The Devil went down to Georgia, he was looking for a soul to steal. Not an election.

  25. Unicorn Abattoir   2 years ago

    The Return of Country Protest Songs

    They haven't returned. They were always there. They're just getting noticed more.

  26. edbeau99   2 years ago

    Try to imagine a Hollywood studio today creating a TV show about people from the fly-over country who unexpectedly come into money, move to an elite community like Martha's Vineyard, and proceed to show up all the rich elite folks for their hypocrisy, meanness, money-grubbing behaviour and lack of concern for their fellow human beings. A show that presents the country virtues as the timeless ones.

    The Beverley Hillbillies debuted on network TV September 26th, 1962, and was the top rated sitcom for its first two years, and in the top 10 for the next 6 years.

  27. Daddyhill   2 years ago

    No one who cares about music in general should overlook Steve Earle's anti-war and class divisions albums post 9/11: "Jerusalem" and "The Revolution Starts Now". They're just great music. Earle's politics probably does set him apart from the obligatory black-hat wearing musicians who share many of his ideas about populist economics (whether they recognize this or not) but can't seem to resist the evangelicals' determination to violate the privacy of our bedrooms and doctors' offices.

    No one who cares should also remember what happened to the Dixie Chicks when in 2003 they dared to speak out in opposition to the illegal Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld invasion of Iraq. They refused to back down, and that took balls, folks, big shiny brass ones.

    1. mad.casual   2 years ago (edited)

      No one who cares should also remember what happened to the Dixie Chicks when in 2003 they dared to speak out in opposition to the illegal Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld invasion of Iraq. They refused to back down, and that took balls, folks, big shiny brass ones.

      ^Tell me you weren’t around for the aughts and have don’t have a fucking clue about any of it without saying “I wasn’t around for the aughts and don’t have a fucking clue about any of it.”

      Saying it took big shiny brass balls to speak out in opposition against Bush is like saying it takes big shiny brass balls to speak out against Trump in public. Half the country was already spitting after pronouncing his name. I voted for the guy under the guise of shrinking the federal government and even I was spitting after the unequivocal reneging on “No new nation-building.” and the unprecedented consolidation and expansion of federal power under the DHS.

      If anything, the Dixie Chicks represented a prototype combination of the disingenuous formulaic country music and audience-despising “woke corporatism” we see today. People who know could say Merle Haggard or Johnny Cash’s name but who, rather than scraping by, bouncing in and out of prison, and laboring for a living, attended private school, went to college, and grew up in New England… like George W. Bush.

  28. Adam Wildavsky   2 years ago (edited)

    Why Rich Men North of Richmond is a Leftist Song:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_a5mC-Qml0c

    This in turn reminded me of Tom Lehrer’s “Folk Song Army":

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yygMhtNQJ9M

  29. Djea3   2 years ago

    I call BS that republican prefer bigger houses. I know FEW conservatives with huge homes. I know MANY Liberals with Huge homes and in fact multiple homes.

    What you have is a difference of people NOT by what they want or prefer, but by what they can afford. Currently, liberals can afford large and multiple homes on the government job. That's right. I know more police have waterfront and high end community homes than you wold believe. I know that too many people in unions and government have insane incomes, even in retirement.

    That is why they all vote liberal and keep liberals in office. Liberals care NOTHING for fiscal responsibility nor for what is best for the country. Liberal politicians cry out "Vote for me and I will make sure you have free ice cream every Friday". They get the vote then steal the money from everyone to give the ice cream away!

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