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What happened to Country Music?

GUEST 13 Aug 18 - 05:30 AM
JuliaGilliam 12 Aug 18 - 10:14 PM
GUEST,paperback 12 Aug 18 - 02:47 PM
Raedwulf 09 Aug 18 - 06:18 PM
GUEST,Dr John 09 Aug 18 - 06:08 PM
Kenny B (inactive) 02 Jul 18 - 05:41 PM
BobKnight 02 Jul 18 - 04:59 PM
GUEST,Kenny B sans Kuki 02 Jul 18 - 03:19 PM
voyager 02 Jul 18 - 03:03 PM
John MacKenzie 02 Jul 18 - 03:00 PM
Bonzo3legs 02 Jul 18 - 11:07 AM
GaryG 02 Jul 18 - 11:01 AM
GUEST,Texas Guest 20 Oct 06 - 11:54 PM
GUEST,jeez 20 Oct 06 - 08:08 PM
GUEST,IBO 18 Oct 06 - 04:37 PM
the lemonade lady 18 Oct 06 - 04:30 PM
GUEST,ibo 18 Oct 06 - 04:29 PM
Seamus Kennedy 18 Oct 06 - 03:57 PM
GUEST,Martin Gibson 18 Oct 06 - 02:52 PM
Richard Bridge 13 Oct 06 - 07:25 PM
Big Al Whittle 13 Oct 06 - 02:20 PM
The Fooles Troupe 13 Oct 06 - 06:55 AM
GUEST,Tunesmith 13 Oct 06 - 02:34 AM
Seamus Kennedy 13 Oct 06 - 02:28 AM
GUEST 12 Oct 06 - 06:21 PM
M.Ted 12 Oct 06 - 05:58 PM
GUEST,Cluin 12 Oct 06 - 05:37 PM
M.Ted 12 Oct 06 - 02:16 PM
GUEST,Martin Gibson 12 Oct 06 - 10:44 AM
M.Ted 11 Oct 06 - 11:40 AM
mustradclub 11 Oct 06 - 05:55 AM
Mudjack 10 Oct 06 - 01:54 PM
JohnInKansas 09 Oct 06 - 03:46 PM
Scoville 09 Oct 06 - 01:51 PM
GUEST,282RA 09 Oct 06 - 01:01 PM
McGrath of Harlow 09 Oct 06 - 12:52 PM
The Shambles 09 Oct 06 - 12:21 PM
Midchuck 09 Oct 06 - 11:53 AM
tenn_jim 09 Oct 06 - 11:35 AM
Scoville 09 Oct 06 - 10:45 AM
Scoville 09 Oct 06 - 10:39 AM
Scoville 09 Oct 06 - 10:33 AM
Tweed 09 Oct 06 - 10:20 AM
Uncle_DaveO 09 Oct 06 - 10:15 AM
Fortunato 09 Oct 06 - 09:31 AM
kendall 09 Oct 06 - 08:37 AM
BanjoRay 09 Oct 06 - 08:31 AM
Big Al Whittle 09 Oct 06 - 06:43 AM
GUEST 08 Oct 06 - 09:27 PM
GUEST,mick 08 Oct 06 - 09:24 PM
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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST
Date: 13 Aug 18 - 05:30 AM

0r, god help us, there's country and irish.....


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: JuliaGilliam
Date: 12 Aug 18 - 10:14 PM

Country is basically modern pop music, but with a fake southern accent.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,paperback
Date: 12 Aug 18 - 02:47 PM

"And have you noticed that today’s country music panders to those fans under the age or 30? Whereas classic country appealed to those fans or all ages"

https://www.redbluffdailynews.com/2018/06/06/letter-what-in-the-world-happened-to-country-music/ HERE

He mentions when Doo-Wop changed, he changed to C\W.

Radio station KWJJ in Portland Ore. did too.

Before my time, but was told by a older brother.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Raedwulf
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 06:18 PM

"What happened to Country Music?"

Urban sprawl? ;-) Knowing the long departed Shambles, I suspect he would not have appreciated the attempt at humour!


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Dr John
Date: 09 Aug 18 - 06:08 PM

There was a brief resurgence in the 1980's headed up by producer Tony Brown. Known as the "neo-traditionalists" companies started signing people like Patty Loveless, Dwight Yoakum, Randy Travis, Lyle Lovett, Allison Moorer, Steve Earle. Lee Ann Womack was the sort of magic unicorn that labels were looking for; someone with traditionalist authenticity who could also have major pop hits.
In the 1990's the focus seemed to shift somewhat towards "Americana' with folks like producer T-Bone Burnett, Alison Krauss, Gillian Welch, Kasey Chambers, etc. Nowadays, you might still find some good stuff out there but it might take some digging. Nashville is all about making money with the middle of the road, pop rock they are intent on marketing as the new country; identical sounding, auto-tuned voices perfect for beer commercials and SUV ads.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Kenny B (inactive)
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 05:41 PM

Thanks Bob good new country face & voice
Just been listening to a new to me version of Johnny Cash doin
" The Cremation of Sam McGee".... Brilliant


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: BobKnight
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 04:59 PM

Want to hear real country music - check out Mo Pitney on youtube. :)


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Kenny B sans Kuki
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 03:19 PM

isn't it a couple of reasons like:
The "country" generation of both singers and fans are now in care homes or worse
Nobody writes songs like that any more


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: voyager
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 03:03 PM

Q: What do you get when you play country music backwards?

A: You get back your wife, your dog and your truck, you sober up, you're released on parole and you find susej.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 03:00 PM

It went right wing


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Bonzo3legs
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 11:07 AM

Buddy Miller's music for me.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GaryG
Date: 02 Jul 18 - 11:01 AM

Chris Knight's music is what country music should have become. Try his songs Rural Route and If I Were You. They are gritty and real. Nashville is dead to me.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Texas Guest
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 11:54 PM

Music videos killed "real" country music the same way that MTV killed
off rock-n-roll/folk/pop/rock in the 70's. The genre caters to a specific audience and for anyone who's reading this - the audience ain't you and me. Seamus - Lee Greenwood is an asshole; he was a Vegas performer who jumped on the country bandwagon back when it became hip to be country. I was a working country drummer back then and shared many stages with country "stars" - I never liked Greenwood; on the other side, however, Eddie Raven, Emmylou Harris and
John Conlee were all fine folks and I've heard the same about Merle and Willie. Takes all kinds now don't it?


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,jeez
Date: 20 Oct 06 - 08:08 PM

What happened to it? It's still being played, Real old-time and country music, not the cartoon-country bullshit that comes out of the media outlets. There's enough of the old, good stuff out there for folks who love it to get hold of it, and there are a lot of people who sing and play it. You just aren't going to get them on your radio station that often. Probably helps to be on the West Coast in the US, and not in the Orkneys or something... but it's around.

There's also a lot of ironic poseur "alt" country shit, and if you check through rags like No Depression you'll see a fair amount of that too. Idiots like, oh, say The Be Good Tanyas keep trying to bring it into some sort of post-punk realm, where attitude is supposed to supplant talent. But most folks who actually like old-time and country music aren't fooled by camera angles and typefaces on websites.

But quit scrolling around on the radio to find it, or looking to posterboys like Paisley. I


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,IBO
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 04:37 PM

Ask morrisey


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: the lemonade lady
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 04:30 PM

Maybe you can answer a question for me: why is country music miserable words to a jolly tune? Don't get me wrong, I fancy singing some of the songs, cos I think the boots are fantastic.
sal


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,ibo
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 04:29 PM

It died,along with its dog,its children and its lovelife.What sad shite country music is.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Seamus Kennedy
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 03:57 PM

I agree with you, Martin

Seamus


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Martin Gibson
Date: 18 Oct 06 - 02:52 PM

It's me. For sure.

And of course I am right about this.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Richard Bridge
Date: 13 Oct 06 - 07:25 PM

bovvered?


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 13 Oct 06 - 02:20 PM

nice to hear from you Martin....


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: The Fooles Troupe
Date: 13 Oct 06 - 06:55 AM

Fee, Fi, Fo, Farty!
Methinks I smell Farty Marty!

For time being...

You see, Max still hasn't given me his IP number so I can follow up Marty's previous attempt at stalking me...


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Tunesmith
Date: 13 Oct 06 - 02:34 AM

Don't right off all modern country! There are so many talented people in Nashville. Also, the current "blue-eyed boy" of country music is Brad Paisley and he is one very talented - and very interesting - performer.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Seamus Kennedy
Date: 13 Oct 06 - 02:28 AM

I agree with John In Kansas.
And there's a fine radio show by Eddie Stubbs on Sundays here on WAMU in the D.C. area where he plays 'Classic" Country, Western Swing, Honky Tonk, and Bluegrass from the '40's, '50's, and '60's.
As a 'Classic' Country music lover, I have one little horror story.
Years ago the Pocono NASCAR track had an ethnic festival week, with a country headliner each night.
Well, I was one of the performers during the Irish daytime portion of the ethnic festival, and because I was a performer I got to go backstage that evening before the country headliner's show for a little wine and cheese, and mingle with the star and his entourage.
The star happened to be Lee Greenwood who had a hit at the time - God Bless The USA.
Now, the Festival organizers also had a deal going whereby members of the public and fans of the star could also come backstage for an extra $50 on top of their ticket price to do a little mingling, wine & cheesing and get autographs, pose for a picture, etc.
A guy came to the door of the tent and announced in stentorian tones:
"Mr. Greenwood is now entering the tent!!"
He sauntered in, wearing sunglasses, and a US flag jacket draped round his shoulder. Surrounded by hulking bodyguards, he strolled through the crowd of his fans who were holding out programs, tickets and various other scraps of paper for him to sign. He ignored them all.
He didn't sign one autograph, or shake one hand; he did one lap around the tent without making eye-contact with folks who had paid an extra 50 of their hard-earned dollars to see this guy close-up, and walked out still surrounded by bodyguards, leaving a lot of disenchanted fans in his wake.
I thought: "What an asshole!"
Then I went out front to see his show.
So here's this big country music star, with his big hit song, and the band's lineup consisted of drums, bass, lead guitars, keyboards and horn section. Not a fiddle, pedal-steel, dobro or banjo to be seen.
And one of the older fans who had been spurned inside the tent turned to me and said:'So country music has come to this!"


Seamus


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST
Date: 12 Oct 06 - 06:21 PM

'Hi everyone. It's really me.'

The poof it is.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: M.Ted
Date: 12 Oct 06 - 05:58 PM

Twice a day.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Cluin
Date: 12 Oct 06 - 05:37 PM

And he's riiiiight.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: M.Ted
Date: 12 Oct 06 - 02:16 PM

He's Baaack.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,Martin Gibson
Date: 12 Oct 06 - 10:44 AM

Hi everyone. It's really me.

I used to talk about this subject a lot as I have listened to country music and performed it for a long time.

Marty Stuart, Lyle Lovett, Rice, Rice, Hillman, and Pedersen, many others play real country music in the modern world.

WSM-AM 650 is still very much alive and well, and playing real country music all of the time out of Nashville, virtually spitting in the face of today's Music Row.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: M.Ted
Date: 11 Oct 06 - 11:40 AM

There something called "Low-Fi" in rock music, which is a move away from the studio sounds, and back to the sound of what a band sounds like when you just record what they play--it happens mostly on "indie" labels. It is centered around college radio, and it's getting to be a big thing.   

There certainly are a lot of folks out there doing this kind of thing with country music, but there isn't a real network for "alternative country music" that correspond to college radio. I think there's potential for it, though, with internet and satellite radio--the audience for it is certainly there--nobodies figured out how to reach it--


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: mustradclub
Date: 11 Oct 06 - 05:55 AM

Outside of the mainstream there is some great talent on the country music scene. Guy Clark seems incapable of making anything other than superb recordings. Saw him in concert in London recently he was brilliant. Iris Dement Gillian Welch and Mary Gauthier are a trio of terrific women singer songwriters,all of whose recordings are well worth a listen.

From a younger generation Uncle Tupelo, Lambchop, and Hank Williams 111 (the great mans grandson)are all making some good music.


Ken Hall


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Mudjack
Date: 10 Oct 06 - 01:54 PM

If it isn't formulated for commercial success then the "country music industry" won't produce it. There is a ton of good music out there, you just have to go look for it and usually find it in community radio programmins that don't have to sell used cars and mouthwash every nine minutes of air time. Of course "good" music is subject to personal taste.
(that's my 2 cents worth)
Mudjack


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: JohnInKansas
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 03:46 PM

My own earliest recollections from the 1940s is that there were two kinds of music: Cowboy and Hillbilly. Mostly, Cowboy music was Gene Autry and the Sons of the Pioneers, and a few similar, and was in the movies. Hillbilly was 'bout anything else that was on the radio.

Cowboy songs were all about horses, cows, sagebrush, sunsets, and being happy about lonesome.

Hillbilly songs were mostly about bein' drunk, chasin' women, and being broke, and bein' sad about bein' lonesome.

Toward the late part of the 40s, much of the hillbilly got called honky-tonk music, to separate it from the actual "hill country" music which later came to be called "Old-Time" and/or to some extent "1Folk."

Most of the lineage of artists people up above in this thread have called old-time Country got started at about the time that "hillbilly" became "honkytonk" in the minds of people in my part of the country.

The term "Western" came onto the scene at about the same time also, although for at least a time about the only one we knew of using the term was perhaps Bob Wills with his "Western Swing" band. Some of the recording companies sort of pushed the "Western" name, but it mostly splintered into a bunch of sub-types and was never used much - in my region at least.

Sometime in the early to mid 50s the "1Folk" stuff started to appear, but so far as most people could tell the main defining characteristic was it meant you had a guitar and could sing a little, but you couldn't afford a backup band. Instead of feeling bad about being lonesome, you just felt bad about everything.

Of course, as Mike Cross says, "that's where all that incest and inbreedin' comes from" so there has always been a lot of trading and mixing between styles and categories, and putting "labels" on them is mostly for the convenience of the record shops 'cause they ain't got enough bins to keep them all separate.

1 Neither of these usages of "Folk" has anything to do with the current concept(?) of "tradional and/or historically significant music reflecting the culture of an ancestral lineage."

Although it perhaps started with the Grand Ol' Opry, there has been a transition from music that most anyone could sing to "big entertainment" that's meant for numbnut listeners. Bluegrass came on the scene as a response to the public demand for "superstar performers" who were trained athletes we could hire to do things that you should be warned: "don't try to do this at home." A few do try, and some are injured - but it's the nature of the few lunatics to want to test themselves.

I don't know when the whole music busines turned to shit; but one can tell it's happened from the complete absence of an input jack (mic or audio) on the great majority of "music players" being sold today. In fact, for at least the last ten years or so, it's not assured that your new computer will have an input jack of any kind, although it probably will be called "multimedia" something or other.

So shut up and buy the DVD. (CDs are dead, since we demand ACTION now.)

John


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Scoville
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 01:51 PM

Okay, here it is: my blogspot with accompanying music links.

The genres vary a little but most of them are country-related; some blues, some rockabilly, one Western swing, some of this neo-old-time stuff, Cajun, old-time, etc.

I'm starting to think that Cajun (not zydeco) is the last bastion of genuine country. Most of the bands that come to mind when I'm looking for my preferred combination of musical elements, lyric content, and "real McCoy-ness", end up being Cajun bands. Not surprising, I guess, considering there are a lot of parallels and cross-pollination.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,282RA
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 01:01 PM

For me, country was Bob Wills. He da man. But I like Hank (NOT II or III), Jimmie and bluegrass. Then there's rockabilly which IS country.

I hate the attempted mix of rap and country. Rap doesn't go good with anything much less country.

With exceptions as Asleep At The Wheel, Junior Brown, Ricky Skaggs and Willie, there's no good country anymore. It's all pop crap with a fiddle or a steel accompanying the vocal and--viola!--country music, everybody. Tom Waits did far better country stuff than artists that were labeled as strictly country.

But ultimately, country for me is western swing. I don't care about much else.

The other thing I loathe about country music is the audience. Not a more brain-dead group of slugs in existence outside the Bush administration (whose strongest support comes from "country music lovers" not surprisingly).


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 12:52 PM

Then there's Country and Eastern


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: The Shambles
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 12:21 PM

http://www.oldtimemusicradio.com/Welcome.html

Old Time Music Radio

Hi friends and neighbors. Come on in, sit down, and relax. Old Time Music Radio brings you the best in Old Time Music from pioneers of Old Time Music like Uncle Dave Macon and Charlie Poole to contemporary Old Time Music groups like The Foghorn String Band, The Crooked Jades, and Uncle Earl


This internet radio station is a real treat.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Midchuck
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 11:53 AM

The way I've read it, around 1985, the record industry computerized their system of determining what records were selling best. When the new system got on line, it turned out that, at that time, Garth Vader, I mean Brooks, was the best selling artist of any genre.

So of course, all the big money boys descended on Country, with the demand that everybody (well, the guys, anyway) all had to look and sound just like Garth.

And that was when it became homogenized.

I don't know if it's true, but it was about that time that commercial Country ceased being at all interesting to me.

Peter


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: tenn_jim
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 11:35 AM

Everyone has different tastes in music. Like my grandpappy said, if everyone had the same taste as me, they'd be married to my wife.

Country music is alive...maybe not well but alive. You can still find almost any music style if you know where to look. For old time appalachian music I suggest you visit Virginia and West Virginia. Places like the Old Fiddler's convention in Galax VA still features music like the Carter Family introduced back at the Bristol Sessions. There are people paying their dues at clubs and joints every night in and around Nashville. They do decent covers of the respected artists of yesteryear.

Obviously people like the new Country or else you wouldn't have concerts selling out in almost every city on the tour. Radio Stations get their revenues from advertisers. Advertisers place their ads based on listeners so if the "new country" isn't being listened to, the station will change their format.

Just my opinion.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Scoville
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 10:45 AM

97.1 FM out of Cleveland, Texas, claims to be mostly 1960's-1980's and plays too much Ronnie Millsap for my taste, but will occasionally slip in some Hank I, Lefty Frizzell, Ernest Tubb, Kitty Wells, etc., and plays Randy Travis, Loretta Lynn, and Tanya Tucker (sorry, whatever you think of her songs, you have to admit that nobody else has Tanya Tucker's voice) on a regular basis. It's not fantastic, but it's a lot better than most commercial country stations.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Scoville
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 10:39 AM

Lone Star Music


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Scoville
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 10:33 AM

Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Billy Joe Shaver, Lucinda Williams, Guy Clark, Hank III

Add Wayne Hancock. He's deliberately retro in the vein of the Maddox Brothers. He also works with killer musicians.





Couldn't the "what happened to . . . ?" argument be made about almost any genre of music these days, just because commercial interests pretty much assure that only the most marketable stuff gets played on the radio? Does anyone know if the same complaints are made about "real" rock, gospel, jazz, whatever? I would be surprised if that wasn't the case.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Tweed
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 10:20 AM

Country Music is here Shambles. Scroll down and click the "listen here" icon:

KBON Radio, in Eunice, Louisiana


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Uncle_DaveO
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 10:15 AM

Some genius said it:

Country music: Rock and Roll with a ten-gallon hat.

Dave Oesterreich


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Fortunato
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 09:31 AM

(editorial) It's Roger Miller's fault.

In 1968 Roger Miller murdered Commercia Radio Country (and Western Music). The smoking gun was "Little Green Apples". This insipid little ditty surgically removed the red clay, honkey-tonk, barstools, cheatin', mama, trains, prison, rednecks and mountain music from country music.

It replaced it with Doctor Seuss, Disneyland, Mother Goose, nursery rhymes, make-believe and puppy dogs.

Of course you could also make a case that the endless, redundant cheatin' songs of the 60's and the tragically overdone 'country shuffle' weakened country music enough to be killed off by 'sensitive song writer' crap.

Ahem. I believe that settles the question.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: kendall
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 08:37 AM

Seems to me that it took a turn for the worst when Ernest Tubb introduced the electric guitar back in the 40's.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: BanjoRay
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 08:31 AM

You're right, Shambles. Old Time (not "old timey" for god's sake) music doesn't register with the Nashville Mafia as country music. It is however alive and well in the USA with many excellent musicians and superb festivals. It is also alive and well in the UK - see the Foaotmad website
We currently have around 400 members (most of whom are musicians or dancers), several festivals and a magazine.
Cheers
Ray (Foaotmad chairman)


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: Big Al Whittle
Date: 09 Oct 06 - 06:43 AM

Well I don't think its as good as it used to be.

I like Joe Ely and Guy Clark well enough, but........they are the stars rather their songs.

When I was a kid I used rush home at dinner time to hear Parade of the Pops and hear English artists like Craig Douglas sing Oh Lonesome Me, the Lorne Green Trio doing El Paso, and anybody who was free doing the Everly's material. And even they couldn't damage it. the writing was THAT good.

I know I knew Oh Lonesome Me from the first time I heard it. I've heard the Dixie Chicks and Garth Brooks a million times and none of their songs have registered. They just aren't as good.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST
Date: 08 Oct 06 - 09:27 PM

Bullshit. Country was dead long before that album came out.


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Subject: RE: What happened to Country Music?
From: GUEST,mick
Date: 08 Oct 06 - 09:24 PM

Bob Dylan's Nashville Skyline killed it.


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