canbelto
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I worked with a woman who screamed at me for saying I liked country. She said all country music was racist. Ok then.
I have never liked any of the people mentioned above except The Beatles. Just because they sang a song that a "country" singer sang first doesn't mean I have to like all country songs or singers. (Can't listen to Whitney Houston or Linda Ronstadt. They make my teeth hurt. Dolly Parton is adorable, but her voice grates.) I used to play Ringo's Act Naturally more than what was on the "A" side of the 45 (I'd have to go look). That does not mean I'm going to go out and buy the album of whatever country singer sang it first. I already said I liked Southern Rock. Not the yodeling and twanginess, and somebody stole my truck and my dog ran away stuff. And I liked Glen Campbell and John Denver songs that they played on popular radio. What genre of "country" music does Wichita Lineman fall into? It's one of my favorite songs of all time. It does not mean that I would have to like every country song Glen Campbell ever sang. I liked a lot of the songs on Nashville, especially the duets, but not others.I always wonder when someone says they don't like "country" music given there are multiple styles that fall into the genre, what aspect they don't like. Did you like Elvis? Ray Charles? Ever listened to George Strait (smooth as butter...I recommend Amarillo by Morning). Did you like early rock? The Beatles or Stones, both of whom had records that were originally performed by country artists. Maybe you don't like Bluegrass, or classic country, but like outlaw country, western swing, the Bakersfield sound (Dwight Yokum), Louisiana (Mary Chapin Carpenter), Linda Rondstadt, Dolly Parton (Jolene is my absolute favorite). All of these have had country hits many of which crossed over to pop. Dolly Parton wrote and sang I Will Always Love You before she let Whitney Houston record the song. I always preferred Dolly's version as I thought her delivery was more moving than Houston's.
That'd be Buck Owens.. . . Ringo's Act Naturally . . . whatever country singer sang it first. . . .
Not because she repeats "Jolene" about 50 times? I went to school with a Jolene. She hated it.The lyrics to Jolene annoy the crap out of me because they take all the onus for cheating off the man -- the one doing the actual cheating!
Well saying it is "all" racist is ridiculous. But there is certainly a history there that I think has less to do with most of the artists than with some of the fans.I worked with a woman who screamed at me for saying I liked country. She said all country music was racist. Ok then.
I think Burns is doing such a good job focusing on the story behind the music. The focus on individual struggles, the social climate of the time, the evolution of the business of music is what makes this documentary so fascinating. My parents were county music fans so I grew up knowing the music through the time periods, but putting it into social context is different. This week's feature is Dolly Parton. I did not know she wrote I will always love you as her good bye song to Porter Waggoner when she left his TV program and went solo.We've recorded the episodes and watched the first one last night (none tonight -- skating!). We knew the story of how the Carter family was first recorded in Bristol, but not about Jimmy Rodgers. I'm kind of ashamed, being from Mississippi, that I don't really know much about him. We were not big country fans in my family, but i love a lot of it now. Just not the 'pop' stuff.
Just heartbreaking about his struggles with TB. I think the story of TB is one that needed to be told, that's something that doesn't need to be forgotten.
For Burns and his co-author; context illumines and explains, as a recitation of "facts" never does.I think Burns is doing such a good job focusing on the story behind the music. The focus on individual struggles, the social climate of the time, the evolution of the business of music is what makes this documentary so fascinating.
I think Burns is doing such a good job focusing on the story behind the music. The focus on individual struggles, the social climate of the time, the evolution of the business of music is what makes this documentary so fascinating. My parents were county music fans so I grew up knowing the music through the time periods, but putting it into social context is different. This week's feature is Dolly Parton. I did not know she wrote I will always love you as her good bye song to Porter Waggoner when she left his TV program and went solo.
I had the pleasure of seeing and hearing MCC and her band last fall here in Richmond. I have loved her music for decades and it was an amazing time.I was raised to think that country music was for racist hillbillies, proving that prejudice flows many ways. But in 1991, in the midst of divorce and then tumultuous love affair, I heard Mary Chapin Carpenter’s You Win Again on the radio.
That didn’t sound like the twangy country I grew up making fun of, but the lyrics really resonated. Turned out Mary was my gateway drug for learning to love it all, from Reba to Garth to Alan and more.
This week's feature is Dolly Parton. I did not know she wrote I will always love you as her good bye song to Porter Waggoner when she left his TV program and went solo.
Amen!Marty Stuart knows more than you do.
16 hours to cover all those decades and genres. And they even stop at 1996. How could they tell everything about everybody?If the "critics" watched the preview show; all concerned said that they knew that they weren't going to be able to cover every influential figure from every perspective. Their emphasis became to uncover the personal history/stories of those who lived them, while they could still share; as well as appreciating their ongoing influence in a format that a viewer will want to watch.
The "historians" will have their way, later.
We'll see how many people accept their view of something which they have usually trivialized, marginalized or denigrated.
Mary Chapin Carpenter, Rosanne Cash, Kathy Mattea and Alison Krauss are on the list of concerts we always attend whenever they play in our area.
I found this:Now I still want to know how Hank Williams really died.
I found this:
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Hank Williams' last ride: Driver recalls lonesome end
Editor's Note: This article first appeared in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Dec. 30, 2002. Montgomery --- Just before sunrise on New Year's Day 50 years ago, a sleek baby-blue Cadillac roared up to the rural Oak Hill, W.www.ajc.com
I’ve seen the historians whining on Twitter too. Buzz off guys, this is not the Civil War and Marty Stuart knows more than you do.
If the "critics" watched the preview show; all concerned said that they knew that they weren't going to be able to cover every influential figure from every perspective. Their emphasis became to uncover the personal history/stories of those who lived them, while they could still share; as well as appreciating their ongoing influence in a format that a viewer will want to watch.
The "historians" will have their way, later.
We'll see how many people accept their view of something which they have usually trivialized, marginalized or denigrated.