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Friday, May 15, 2009
Brent Bozell :: Townhall.com Columnist
Country Music: Too Much Freedom Loving?
by Brent Bozell
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In these hard times, Americans are trying hard to relax and take refuge in entertainment. But The Washington Post is insisting that country music fans are not really sympathetic figures. They are prone to self-congratulation and "closing ranks" behind the thought that they live in the "real America."

The Post music critic going by the name Josh Freedom du Lac -- that just can't be his name -- doesn't really seem to like patriotic music, despite the patriotic byline. He worries that songs like Jason Aldean's "Hicktown" or the Zac Brown Band's "Chicken Fried" do something wrong: They are "narrowcasting to a specific community: the core country audience, whose roots aren't exactly in America's urban centers."

That claim in itself sounds silly. Aren't people who make rap music or big-band music or polka music "narrowcasting"? Maybe du Lac just doesn't like this particular niche audience. He doesn't like the message that's offered, either. "The symbolism and prideful sentiments of the songs are intended to create a sense of belonging among people with similar backgrounds and lifestyles, or at least people who romanticize life in the rural South," he wrote. "To some listeners, though, it might sound as if the artists are closing ranks."

Then he arranged an expert to echo his theme: "Some of these songs seem to fall into the 'we're from Real America, and you're not' camp," said Peter Cooper, who covers country music for Nashville's daily newspaper, the Tennessean. "Seems like being divisive while the industry around you crumbles is a poor decision."

At this point, the country music fan has a question: Is a newspaper writer from Nashville possibly making an unwise decision to deride his hometown industry while the newspaper business crumbles around him?

Where, oh, where, is the controversy in country music fans loving their country? Offended urbanistas (like big-city newspaper writers) never seem to ask whether they can be accused of their own superiority complex about how much smarter and more sophisticated they are than those ignorant rural rednecks.

Is divisive anger what these country musicians are selling? Take a quick look at lyrics from the Zac Brown Band song singled out by the Washington Post: "I thank God for my life/ For the stars and stripes/ May freedom forever fly, let it ring./ Salute the ones who died/ And the ones that gave their lives/ So we don't have to sacrifice/ All the things we love." Those things include fried chicken and beer and blue jeans.

Where, exactly, is a call to "closing ranks" in those lyrics? Is embracing freedom and the American military a form of "narrowcasting"? The only ones who could possibly be uncomfortable or feel excluded are those who don't embrace freedom.

So what does Freedom du Lac embrace? His "Best of 2006" list of musical favorites included a different kind of Southern vibe from the Virginia-based rap group Clipse: "The Virginia Beach brothers Pusha T and Malice make morally bankrupt music -- stark, punishing rap songs about selling cocaine." How on earth does that appeal to a broad audience?

His "Best of 2006" list was topped by the Bush-bashing Dixie Chicks, whose "Not Ready to Make Nice" was hailed as "one of the great singles" of the year. The song demonized people who supported a war on terror: "It's a sad, sad story when a mother will teach her daughter that she ought to hate a perfect stranger." Dixie Chick critics were cartooned as people who write letters "Sayin' that I better shut up and sing, or my life will be over." Don't look now, but someone is "romanticizing" their own viewpoint and "closing ranks" with people who aren't "haters."

But that song is a picnic of patriotism compared to another du Lac "Best of 2006" pick -- a disc by a rap group called The Coup, titled "Pick a Bigger Weapon." He hailed the musical genius of their leader, Boots Riley: "He hurls poetic Molotov cocktails at the usual suspects (capitalist pigs, President Bush, the CIA); but he also spikes this Marxist manifesto with lusty lyrics." Boots Riley has referred to this country as the "United Snakes," and believes that "the American flag … stands for oppression, slavery and murder."

So praise the freedom America offers, and Josh Freedom du Lac will curse you; write Marxist manifestos against the "United Snakes," and he will praise you as the best. Someone needs to drop the word "Freedom" from his name.

Something tells me he won't be attending Sean Hannity's Freedom Concerts this summer.

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About The Author
Founder and President of the Media Research Center, Brent Bozell runs the largest media watchdog organization in America.
 
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No, But It Sure Does Suck...
And I would also say that about the Dixie Chicks. It all sounds bland and generic, nothing like the Man in Black, Johnny Cash, or Willie Nelson, or Patsy Cline. Now THAT was country music. It was more than just about politics or America bashing or praising, or barbecue stains on white T-Shirts: Listen to "Blue Eyes Crying In The Wind" and you can feel the Blues riffing through Willie Nelson's guitar. The only good sounding country musicians nowadays are Tom Waitts and Hank Williams III because they aren't bland, they are throaty, they are raw, they are not sell outs. Oh, and if Crosby Stills Nash and Young or the Eagles count as country music, well, that's really fine (I could care less about their politics because I just like the way they make their music.)

And you know better not to patronize a moron like Sean Hannity. He is as vapid to the right as Sean Penn is to the left. Sometimes the truth hurts sometimes.

Country music?
Government and politics effect music like everything else. It just won't work.
Most of today's country music gives the genre a bad name. It sounds ignorant; boasting hick towns and how cool it is to be simple.
The Dixie Chicks are pop and appeal to the masses, inspire new haircuts. They struck gold when they whined about George W. Coincidentally, that was the last moment of "greatness."
Sadly, good country has been rare in the last 20 years.
Country music became popular because people-whatever political affiliation or color related to stories it was based on.
Jimmie Rodgers- influenced by and influenced the earliest blues musicians is considered the father of country. He, like Johnny Cash among other greats, sang from the heart stories people related to.

whut?
du lak da dik?

rap ain't rap. it do be crap

my hoe cuts weeds.

yo hoe be differnt

Just a thought.

Actually, I hated the twangy old
country music. I never much liked Cash or Nelson or Cline. I thought the lyrics were
laughable. I guess I started to like country music the last decade or so.It reminded me of old rock, you know, the simplistic rock of the late 50s and early 60s before it got trashed by the drugs. I liked the patriotic songs as well too. Another bonus, is you or your kids can listen to a "country" song of today, and generally not be shocked by a guy calling a woman a "female dog" or a "garden implement"

Did Bozell read the article?
Bozell gives large quotes from the article, but he doesn't seem to have actually read it.

Bozell seems to think he is scoring a zinger by noting that country does not narrowcast more than rap. But du lac makes the exact same point that Country is doing what rap does in narrowcasting. Could Bozell have read the article and missed that?

Du lac is noting a phenomenon, the column in question contains as much positive as negative. The artists profiled come across in a positive way.

How desperate does one need to be to be able to cry victim to misrepresent the article that badly?

Country Music
Lon: Be a good little boy and go back and re-read the article without your kool-aid co-ordianted glasses...

Your choice of the word desperate a reflection of all of your comments...

Country music is nice
I like it.

Rap is that stuff booming out of the cars that go past my house at all hours of the day and night. Shakes the pictures on the wall and loosens my fillings.

I don't like it.

Joel-De Opresso Liber
There are plenty of people in the ghetto who work hard and take care of their families despite the odds. I know and work with some of them. Probably the biggest churchgoers in America are older inner city black women. So are they part of your vaunted middle class Christian culture? What about middle-class Jewish people? Middle class Muslims? Are they are included?

I don't know you personally so I can't say you are any "ist," but I think you are rather narrow-minded.

God is Sovereign
Did you actually read the article? Did you also miss that the author, who apparently likes rap was noting that in narrowcasting country music was being like rap? Did you actually think that the singer being profiled in the beginning fo the column was being portrayed in a negative light? If so in what way?

There were people being quoted as saying that that country's strength is its broad appeal, and there was a lot of evidence put forward to the contrary. But to take that as a moral critique of the genre is bizarre. And to take it as contrasting with rap is illiterate.

OK, country music...
... is synthetic brain damage set to music, but it's outright hilarious to read that some WaPo critic can find it narrow and troubling in a country that offers rap music. Why is beaming a message to rural America bad, while sending one of drugs, violence and misogyny to urban America good? This may be part of an overall trend to starve and marganilize rural America (look at where most Chrysler and GM dealer closings will be).

Melissa -
Ignore Joel the Oppressor. He likes to pretend he's a former Green Beret to impress the ladies, while offering genocide fantasies about groups he doesn't like. Wish they'd ban him.




Grew up around Boston
I lived my whole life until age 25 inside the I-95 belt around Boston. I finally up and moved to Phoenix. Even before I moved I started to find myself enjoying Country Music more than most other genre offerings.

Country was one of the few genres where I could hear more narrative songs and songs that touched on themes that were relevant to my life. On the pop-rock, alternative, and hip-hop stations I could go months without ever hearing a reference to owning a home, trying to have a family life, and holding down an honest job. Sorry, but even when I was in college there was only so long I could listen to a loud baseline and nonsensical lyrics about trying to get into someone's pants, your wrist-cutting teen angst, or your academia-fed protest movements before I get bored.

I grew up in a small suburb. I worked in a big city. I find the songs about living in a small town or a rural community in the middle of nowhere to range from humorous to exotic as a splash in the day-to-day mix of songs. I still think my favorite country song over the last couple of years is Brad Paisley's "Online," though.

Give me Van Halen instead
Nothing says "America" more than screaming guitars, David Lee Roth, partying, girls, and good ol' fashioned hard ROCK!


Lon
Why do you come to this site? You seem to hate anything a conservative does or says. You have nothing positive to say about anything. You criticize everything without making a positive influence.

You're a perfect liberal.

Spot on
This might be one of the best lines I've read in a while: "Aren't people who make rap music or big-band music or polka music "narrowcasting"?"

I hate it when people criticize music as not being written to appeal to them specifically. Please, listen to what you like, and don't listen to things you hate. (A lot like Bozell complaining about TV shows he doesn't like. Face it, they weren't aimed at you.)

Besides, we WANT people to write something that appeals to the most people? Talk about a surefire way to get something boring and bland.

7Sticks
FYI: "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain"

Not a country fan.
I'm not particularly fond of the genre, but I'm also of the stripes that music is not one of those evil "influencing" sources. You have to be an amazingly narrow minded sheep to have your daily behavior influenced around what forms of entertainment you enjoy.

Country music is entertainment, no more, no less. It isn't a source of information or a philosophical font of knowledge. No music is, nor are movies or television shows. We listen to music to pass the time. It's about time everyone figured that one out.

Baby steps toward same ol
C'mon people with half a brain, since WHEN have the commmieqrs...
(see my The Big Mick blog on TH for the etymology of that semantically correct usage alternative to the "terminological inexactitude" "liberals")

since when have the commieqrs EVER been about ANYTHING OTHER than: "Tolerance for me but not for thee."

5 will get you 10 "du Lac" (SHREK!) has his real problem with the RELIGIOUS aspect of Country Music--i.e. NO to homosex!

What's so hypocritical about THAT is that homosex is EQUALLY done down in the BLURBAN
community he fawns on.

mick

the problem with baby steps toward
same ol is the inherent DENIAL people.

What does it TAKE for you to GET it that these people not only want to SILENCE you, they HATE and want to DESTROY you!

When are you going to GET IT that, as James Tiberius Kirk recently said: "Either we are going down or they are."

I prefer it to be THEM, cause I just want to be left alone, the ONE thing their agenda CANNOT let them DO!

When are you all going to do what you HAVE to do to prefer it be them too?

mick

Ever Been to "The Opry?"
If you have NOT, then GO!! It's worth your time and money just to go and observe!! I guarantee that you will be amazed at the cross-section of Humanity there on any Saturday night.

I spent 25+ years in Military Service during the 50s-late 70s and consider it the BEST YEARS of my Life..In addition to doing a SERVICE that I truly believed in, I was never stationed anywhere that I could not find 5 or more "Pickers" to help me put together some
Sh!tKickin Music!! I loved it then and I love it now!! But Carrie Underwood AIN"t Country!!

It’s all well and good…
to be patriotic (to the old America, not America 2009) but patriotic country music is really over the top corny. IMHO all country music is really awful but I will say some of the female singers really look good.
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