Why Country Music Is Not Almost As Bad As Bieber: A Rebuttal

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We all know Bieber is the lowest form of auditory torture. Treating Bieber, Selena Gomez, Pink, Pitbull and so on as music is like saying butt chugging is the best use of alcohol. To treat modern country music in the same breath is a terrible, serious accusation. As disgusting as much of it is, good music, and good country music in particular, isn’t going anywhere. It all comes down to the right artists and the right situation.

This column, while containing some valid points, didn’t tell the whole story.

Why is pop music popular? Become it appeals to the lowest common denominator of people. That in turn allows it to appeal to the broadest number of people. Huge acts like Taylor Swift, Lady Antebellum, Keith Urban and Hunter Hays are terrible because they’re supposed to be. All of them have a major cross-over appeal. It’s upsetting now that the local country radio station will follow up Randy Travis with Rascal Flatts. Then again, what would you expect from a terrestrial radio station looking for as many listeners as possible? Have you listened to the “Country Pop” station on Pandora? It’s dogshit. One of the best country/party/end of the night songs is Friends in Low Places. Not surprisingly, the corresponding Pandora radio station is awesome. It’s free from the aforementioned “single woman masturbatory aides.”

Even Garth Brooks is relatively pop friendly. Pandora alone is a pretty much unlimited outlet for good, sometimes lesser-known music. Try Confederate Railroad, Whiskey Myers or Turnpike Troubadours, not to mention Johnny Cash, George Jones, Hank Williams (and decedents), Marshall Tucker, George Strait, Alan Jackson or the hundreds of other great artists. The Texas Country/Red Dirt scene is also a relatively unknown — on a national scale — source of great country music.

Major current mainstream artists like Florida Georgia Line, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan and Kenny Chesney, upon closer examination, still go past the grisly pop purgatory they’ve been relegated to. All of these artists have less pop-friendly songs on their albums that have a real country feel. Round Here, Amarillo Sky, Tailgate Blues and Back Where I Come From, respectively, are well-known songs that don’t fit the same vibe that could put them in Bieber Hell. Look at the lyrics, and those songs are all in a traditional country mold.

That doesn’t mean lyrics are the only factor in the credibility or merit of a song. Wagon Wheel is the perfect example of this. How did that go from the de facto Greek national anthem to one of the biggest pop songs of the year? Presentation. Get rid of the string section, add a poppy feel and some back-up vocals from Lady Antebellum, and you take a pure blue grass song (indirectly co-written by Bob Dylan) into straight pop.

Ultimately, it comes down to time and place. As great as it is to sit back with a few beers and a Bocephus record, there is a time and a place for lighter, more party-oriented music. Yes, somebody should smash the speakers if Rascal Flatts comes on during a tailgate. That doesn’t mean it makes much sense during a party to explain to a girl the lyrical genius of Ronnie Van Zant.

There is a disturbing trend of awful pop country garbage now. There always will be. It’s up to the listener to find good music and the right situation. Along with all the easy ways now to find it, there is an underrated amount of good music just below the mainstream.

Country music is as strong as ever. There’s just a lot of shit trying to cover it up.

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  1. Jon M Fratsman

    Florida Georgia Line’s “Stay” is actually a cover of a Black Stone Cherry song that I would call more hard rock than country.

    12 years ago at 11:35 am
    1. Tucker

      You’re*, is not a complete sentence. Don’t try to correct grammar when you yourself make a grammatically incorrect statement like that. You also failed to mention I had to add a comma after music. For somebody who gives no fucks ever… you sure do seem to give a fuck. This is a website not a English class, dipshit.

      12 years ago at 1:58 pm
    2. Tucker

      Your right, Im so angry! I’M SO MAD ABOUT GETTING CORRECTED ON THE INTERNET. RAAAAAAAAWRRRR. No… I’m not mad. I just think its stupid.

      12 years ago at 2:16 pm
    3. Frat_Fucken_Tastic

      ^ Are you fucking serious, guy? I cant even tell anymore. Once again, its “you’re” clever.

      12 years ago at 6:35 pm
    4. Tuco1855

      Actually fucking up because you’re retarded but flipping the tables on your critics by acting like it was an intentional trolling attempt. It’s a TFM.

      12 years ago at 11:44 am
  2. SouthernAndEndowed

    Great country musicians as well as fraternity men: Chris Cagle, Tracy Lawrence, Dierks Bentley, Tim Mcgraw, Jamey Johnson, Willie Nelson, Kenny Chesney, Keith Anderson, Luke Bryan, Jack Ingram.

    12 years ago at 11:40 am
    1. Douglas MacArthur

      Fraternity man ≠ Good music. Tim McGraw, Dierks Bentley, and most all of Luke Bryan’s new stuff is pure shit.

      12 years ago at 3:16 pm
    2. Jon M Fratsman

      I like Luke Bryan. I’ve seen him 6 times now, most of which were actually free shows, and never once have I had a bad time.

      12 years ago at 6:38 pm
    3. The_JiffyLube_Guy

      Jamey Johnson is awesome. He dropped out of college to join the marines. Then became a country singer.

      12 years ago at 10:07 am
  3. Okefenokee Joe

    Most of the old work of contemporary country artists is more akin to real country than some of the stuff they put out now. It grinds my gears when a country artist uses synthetics and auto-tune to make music. Unfortunately, as this article pointed out, to reach the most people artists have to go down that road. It comes down to the money (and they make a lot of it). I think one of the points ya’ll are missing is how they dress. Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean, etc. used to wear good ol boy clothes but now they can’t go out on stage without bedazzled skinny jeans and earrings.
    Then you have Rascall Flats, Hunter Hayes (He has never sung anything resembling a country song in his life), and Keith Urban (an Australian, really?) who just spew glitter and shit out of their vaginas everytime they sing. Kenny Chesney’s old work is good and I like to listen to his new stuff at the beach.

    12 years ago at 12:01 pm
  4. Fratterson Davis

    I agree, many of these newer country artists have great songs on their albums, but to have any hope of ever getting on the air and building a fan base these days, they have to compromise with a few songs that may be a bit more on the pop side. Once they get that momentum, they will have a better chance of fans being open to their more traditional songs.

    12 years ago at 12:42 pm
  5. Haze Em

    It’s also tough to find some good old fashioned southern rock music nowadays. My personal lesser-knows favorites are Maylene and the Sons of Disaster and StoneRider.

    12 years ago at 1:16 pm
  6. Enraged TFM User

    BECAUSE* you fucking idiot! Learn how to edit your damn columns you FUCKTARD!

    12 years ago at 1:53 pm
  7. InnaFrat

    Just listen to what you like. I honestly dont care what TFM has to say about any kind of music. But if you actually like Florida Georgia Line I suggest you kill yourself.

    12 years ago at 4:39 pm