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Monday, February 18, 2008
Burt Prelutsky :: Townhall.com Columnist
Just a Country Boy at Heart
by Burt Prelutsky
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A few years ago, I re-connected with a guy I hadn’t seen in about 50 years. We’d been friends in junior high, but once my family moved, Gary and I wound up attending different high schools. Which is pretty much like living on different planets.

After he came across my stuff on the Internet, Gary contacted me and suggested getting together for lunch. And so we did. While reminiscing about the old days, I told him that I was still grateful that he’d taught me to play tennis. He was surprised to hear that I still played. But his surprise was nothing compared to mine when he said that he was grateful that I’d introduced him to good books and great music. Quite honestly, I hadn’t realized I’d done that. Unlike his teaching me tennis, it wasn’t something I’d set out to do. But he assured me that I was the first person he’d ever known who read Steinbeck and Dickens, Salinger and Dostoyefsky, Benchley and S.J. Perelman, and who listened to classical music.

It had never occurred to me back then or at any time since that I was anyone’s role model. In fact, the only time I ever set out to influence anyone’s taste in books was with my son and, in spite of or perhaps because of my efforts, he’s always hated reading anything but a hand of cards. As for music, the only kind he ever seemed to like was the sort that people of my generation refer to as a lot of very loud noise.

Actually, my own taste in music, as with books, is pretty eclectic. Along with Beethoven, Bach and Brahms, I enjoy Puccini, Copland, Debussy, Rachmaninoff, Barber, Prokofiev, Porter, Gershwin, Rodgers, Berlin, Kern, Sondheim and Loesser. I also have a soft spot for the best of those guys who have enhanced so many movies with their dramatic scores; people named Steiner, Waxman, Korngold, Bernstein, Legrande and Morricone.

But it was only in the past year that I discovered and fell in love with yet another musical genre; namely, country western. It happened quite by accident. When I’m in my car, I tend to listen to talk radio. But on weekends, guys like Michael Medved, Dennis Prager, Hugh Hewitt and Dennis Miller, thoughtlessly leave me in the lurch, forcing me to fend for myself. Well, some months ago, after station-surfing all over the AM dial and finding that the only topics under discussion seemed to be computers, vitamins and investment opportunities, I bit the bullet and switched over to FM. It was there I discovered a country western program, and there I stayed.

If it didn’t sound so grand, I would say that I’d had an epiphany. For, I truly had no idea that there were still songs being written today that were not only melodic, but came equipped with lyrics you could understand and that did not appear to have been copied off a bathroom wall.

Driving to and from tennis today, I heard about an hour’s worth of songs, and never heard anything about pimps and hos and killing cops. Instead, I heard love songs about husbands and wives, and celebrations of fathers, mothers and even siblings. Hard to believe, but in 2008, there are people busy writing and singing songs in tribute to grandparents, to teachers who made a difference, to soldiers and even, if you can believe it, to America.

There are songs, too, about unrequited love, about friends who have passed and about spiritual redemption. There is currently even a clever and touching song in which a grown-up is writing a letter to his 17-year-old self in which he tries to reassure the boy that even though it seems like the end of the world because his girl friend has dumped him, things will eventually turn out just fine, although he understands that for kids that age, it’s awfully hard “to see past next Friday.”

Many older people lament that life in these United States has gone to heck in a hand basket, and they long for the good old days when friends and family seemed to matter more, when people married and stayed married to their high school sweethearts, and when loving your country wasn’t dismissed as a cornball emotion.

Well, I’m here to tell you that the old days aren’t entirely dead and gone. They’re actually alive and well, and as I recently told Gary, you’ll find them on your FM dial.

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About The Author
W. Burt Prelutsky is an accomplished, well-rounded writer and author of "The Secret of Their Success: Interviews with Legends and Luminaries."
 
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For the record
When the DC made that statement in 2003 the immediate reaction was that a lot people in this country called their C&W stations and said that if they didn't get the DC off the air they (the listeners) wouldn't tune in that station anymore.
The predictable reaction was that the stations for the most part complied with their demands.
Censorship? If you insist on using that word please use the adjective "economic" in front of it, because that is what it was. I prefer the word boycott. Obviously the DC have recovered from that but in 100% of the pieces about them I have seen that incident is mentioned and usually there is a shot of them looking brave.

If you are famous and you decide to use your celebrity to advance your own political view and I disagree with that view the only way I can express my disagreement is by not contributing to your fame, i.e. NOT buying your product and letting you or someone in power know WHY I am not buying it.

Remember Ed Asner a number of years back? And because of the movie 'The DaVinci Code' I will never see another movie with Tom Hanks or directed by Ron Howard, and I used to admire both of them. Sean Penn is a world class actor and director. He is also a world class idiot and an admirer of Hugo Chavez. I will NEVER see a film he is invloved with either as an actor or director.

Censorship? No - boycott

Do they care?

no

FYI
I LOVE bluegrass music.

That is - GOOD bluegrass music.

A good bluegrass picker or singer is a great thing to hear.

Jerry Douglas, Mark O'Connor - 5 times straight musician of the year in Nashville now plays classical with such as Yo Yo Ma, Sam Bush - among other things he led Emmy Lou Harris' backup-band the Nash Ramblers in the 90s, Chris Thile, Bela Fleck - now plays jazz banjo for Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, Bryan Sutton (used to play for the DC) Ricky Skaggs, who started out with Keith Whitley in Ralph Stanley's Bluegrass band and went over to C&W and then came back.

Just a few
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