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Reason magazine on "Rednecks & Bluenecks: The Politics of Country Music"
Reason.com ^ | Jesse Walker

Posted on 04/26/2006 10:00:12 PM PDT by jdoeadeer

"Rednecks & Bluenecks" is a new book about the politics of country musicians, from Cash and Haggard to the Dixie Chicks and Brooks & Dunn to Steve Earle and Sara Evans. I put up a review of this from the American Conservative the other day, and it turned out not to have a working link. But this one I found from Reason is both linkable and interesting.

The One On the Right Was On the Left...

The political puzzle of country music

By Jesse Walker

The surprise tour of last year—a surprise, that is, to anyone whose worldview froze around 1970—was the series of concerts Bob Dylan did with Merle Haggard. In the last big culture war, Dylan was the guy who sang "You fasten the triggers/For the others to fire/Then you set back and watch/When the death count gets higher." Hag had a snappy number where he "read about some squirrelly guy who claims that he just don't believe in fightin'/And I wonder just how long the rest of us can count on bein' free." Put them together, and you get—

Apparently, you get kismet. In "Rednecks & Bluenecks," an engaging expedition into the politics of country music, Entertainment Weekly's Chris Willman watches the pair play a date in Los Angeles. When Haggard asks everyone to sing along with his vintage hit for hippie-hating hardhats, "Okie from Muskogee," more than a few fans do, and "the singer reacts with mock alarm: 'This is Bob Dylan's audience! You're not supposed to be smoking—I mean singing—along with that!'"

Even in 1970, Dylan was alienating his fan base with an album filled with pop-country covers; Haggard, meanwhile, had just written "Irma Jackson," an ode to a thwarted interracial romance. But if the singers don't fall on opposite sides of the so-called culture war, it wouldn't be entirely accurate to suggest they're sitting on the same side either. Like most people, they don't really fit into any rigid camp. Dylan has had an uneasy relationship with the left since he moved away from protest songs in the early '60s, and he sounded downright reactionary on 1979's brimstone-filled "Slow Train Coming"; in the liner notes to one '90s CD, the man who introduced the Beatles to marijuana declared, "give me a thousand acres of tractable land & all the gang members that exist & you'll see the Authentic alternative lifestyle, the Agrarian one." Conservative hero Haggard has a history of singing Guthriesque songs about economic hard times, and more recently he's taken to praising hemp and speaking out against the Iraq war, the Patriot Act, and the Bush administration. (In "Rednecks & Bluenecks," he declares the president one of "the top three ass----s of all time," right next to Hitler and Nixon.) But he's a populist, not a liberal, and is as hard to pigeonhole as Dylan is: In "Where's All the Freedom," one of two antiwar songs on his most recent album, he includes "can't show the Ten Commandments anymore" in a litany of lost liberties.

Haggard has also spoken kindly of both Toby Keith and the Dixie Chicks, who between them seized a genre that had grown terrified of controversy and dragged it back into the culture wars. Keith's 2002 hit "Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue," beloved and despised for the line "we'll put a boot in your ass, it's the American way," pissed off liberal listeners who saw the song as a calculated slice of jingoism rather than an honest reaction to the 9/11 attacks. (Peter Jennings barred Keith from an Fourth of July TV special rather than tolerate hearing the song on the air.) Early the next year, the Dixie Chicks unleashed some genuine jingoism when singer Natalie Maines issued a mild rebuke to George W. Bush at a concert in London. Her precise words were "we're ashamed the president of the United States is from Texas," which doesn't sound very unpatriotic to me—they didn't say they were ashamed that they're from Texas—but that didn't stop Team Red from picketing their concerts, smashing their CDs, urging stations to boycott their music, and, out on the fringes, firing off some violent threats. If you wanted to reinforce the cliché that country is the soundtrack to Red America, you didn't have to look any further than the airplay Toby Keith got and the airplay the Dixie Chicks didn't.

But of course it isn't as simple as that, as Willman's interviews with the industry's songwriters, performers, and business executives demonstrate. It isn't just that Nashville has a liberal minority—though they're there, from Rodney Crowell to Tim McGraw to George Jones, who made a rare presidential endorsement in 2004 when he came out for Journey fan Wesley Clark. It's that country music, like the country itself, doesn't divide easily into simple stacks of red and blue. Even if you clearly fall into one political party, that doesn't mean you buy the whole agenda. Take Ronnie Dunn of Brooks & Dunn, a devout Republican whose interview with Willman initially sounds like it could have been cribbed from The Weekly Standard—he denounces Wahhabism, recommends a Bernard Lewis book, and even works in a worried reference to the Chinese. Then he drops this bombshell: "right now, religion scares me to death. Historically, it's probably the cause of more deaths than any other force on the planet." He goes on to defend his song "Holy War," a track that raised eyebrows by conflating the fundamentalists of America and Afghanistan.

From Dunn we move directly to Sara Evans, a family-values Republican who has little to say about foreign policy and a lot to say about the Lord. (She also describes the crusade against the Dixie Chicks as "ridiculous.") And of course there's ass-bootin' Toby Keith, who's actually a Democrat, though he backed Bush in the last election. A strong supporter of the Afghan campaign, Keith has been more ambivalent about the invasion of Iraq, telling the Los Angeles Times in 2003 that "this war here, the math hasn't worked out for me on it" before adding that he's giving the president the benefit of the doubt.

Meanwhile, Willie Nelson and his old sleepover buddy Jimmy Carter chat with Willman about peace and pot. The book identifies Nelson as a Democrat, and that may well be his registered affiliation, but his hippie-populist politics are too independent to make him a Team Blue loyalist—he came out for Nader in 2000 and for Perot in '92. The outlaw movement he spearheaded in the '70s was more politically diverse than its counterculture image might suggest, ranging from the far-left Kris Kristofferson to the Confederate stalwart Hank Williams Jr. Willman paints Williams as a straightforward conservative, but that's not exactly right either: The same album that contains "I Got Rights," a paean to vigilante justice, also includes two tracks about getting stoned. Like Charlie Daniels, who started out singing the redneck-mocking "Uneasy Rider" and now issues jeremiads from Judge Roy Moore territory, Bocephus has changed with the times.

And then there's the whole "alternative country" movement, where the musicians are presumed liberal and where Republican fans feel as marginalized as a Democrat on Music Row. Its chief representative in this book is Steve Earle, who really is ashamed to be from Texas. (His exact words: "I'm from an awful f---ing place called Texas.") Earle told Rolling Stone in 1986 that "in some areas" his politics were "somewhat to the right of Attila the Hun," but like an inverted Charlie Daniels he has moved to the angry left, namechecking Emma Goldman in one song and mocking Condi Rice in another. He's surely the only major country-music figure to open a track with a snippet from an Abbie Hoffman speech.

Alt-country emerged in the '90s, but the idea of a purportedly progressive counterpart to the more conservative country mainstream goes back to the artificial segregation of "folk" from "country" in the '40s and '50s. Willman is usually a pretty sharp analyst, but he stumbles when he tries to distinguish the two genres' politics: He weakly suggests that folk is urban and country rural, and that it's easier for a city dweller to think in terms of "cooperative problem-solving." (Tell it to the Grange!) I'd argue that the most important reason for the divorce was the postwar red scare, which made the phrase folk music radioactive in certain circles. The second most important reason was the snobbery of the hard-core folk fans, who liked to pretend the music they loved wasn't "commercial." It's hard to say that with a straight face if your favorite singer is pitching Goo Goo Clusters at the Grand Ole Opry.

That isn't the book's only flub. I can forgive the author for misidentifying John Kerry as an opponent of the Iraq war—we all had to guess a bit when that guy talked about his platform—but what possessed Willman to claim the U.S. has repealed "nearly all governmental media regulation"? (Howard Stern would be surprised to hear it.) But such gaffes are rare. Willman knows this music well, and he is an inquisitive and generally impartial reporter with an ear for a good anecdote. My favorite comes when the left-wing singer-songwriter Todd Snider remembers his first face-to-face encounter with Garth Brooks. "The first thing he did when we met was to read me a poem," Snider says. "The first thing Steve Earle did when we met was to ask about my distribution, and then he answered his cell phone."

Does any of this matter? Most country songs aren't remotely political, and I doubt most fans care how their musical heroes vote. A peacenik who appreciates Harlan Howard's songwriting isn't going to stop enjoying "I Fall to Pieces" just because the same guy recorded a concept album called "To the Silent Majority, With Love." Likewise, a Republican who hates Steve Earle's views can still acknowledge that the five albums he released from 1995 to 2000 are one of the best artistic winning streaks in pop history. So why care at all?

There are plenty of possible answers to that, but the most important is that it's impossible to peer closely at the politics of Nashville and maintain the easy stereotypes that drive the culture war. If there's a moral to "Rednecks & Bluenecks," it's that most people don't fit into simple categories of blue and red, onstage or off. Not Toby Keith, not Natalie Maines, and certainly not Dylan or Haggard.

Managing Editor Jesse Walker is author of "Rebels on the Air: An Alternative History of Radio in America" (NYU Press).


TOPICS: Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: bobdylan; chicks; country; dixie; haggard; libertarian; music; toby

1 posted on 04/26/2006 10:00:16 PM PDT by jdoeadeer
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To: jdoeadeer

I rather like Bob Dylan's music. Actually, he's probably my favorite musician. Either him, or Johnny Cash.


2 posted on 04/26/2006 10:05:58 PM PDT by furquhart (Time for a New Crusade - Deus lo Volt!)
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To: jdoeadeer

Steve Earle is a joke, Hag is getting old and I never got Dylan in the first place. The Dixie Chicks got exactly what they deserved. Toby puts his money where his mouth is, just ask any of the troops that have seen his shows in Afghanistan and Iraq.


3 posted on 04/26/2006 10:07:39 PM PDT by swmobuffalo (The only good terrorist is a dead terrorist.)
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To: jdoeadeer
he declares the president one of "the top three ass----s of all time," right next to Hitler and Nixon.) But he's a populist

So glad I don't buy this idiot's music.

4 posted on 04/26/2006 10:09:18 PM PDT by Darkwolf377 (What part of 'If you don't vote Republican, DemRats will control our country' don't you understand?)
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To: furquhart
I agree about Dylan, a master songwriter, and will be remembered long after 99% of musicians out there now are forgotten, which will be in a few years for most of them.

Anyone who thinks Dylan is this total lib hasn't read his autobiography; you could hear the libbie hearts breaking across the land.

5 posted on 04/26/2006 10:10:51 PM PDT by Darkwolf377 (What part of 'If you don't vote Republican, DemRats will control our country' don't you understand?)
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To: jdoeadeer
I'm a little bit country.
Well I'm a little bit rock-n-roll!
I'm a little for supportin' our troops.
And I'm a little for bringin' them home.
I believe freedom isn't free.
No, but war shouldn't be our goal.
We must defend our country.
If it means war, then we say NO!
Did you forget them towers in New York?
Did you forget how it made you feel
To see them towers come down?
Were you like me? Did you think it weren't real?
I like to rock, but I don't wanna rock Iraq!
The only kind of rockin' America should do is the kind that we can all dance to, yeah!
We got GPS, ICBMs, and good old-fashioned lead.
We're gonna show Saddam what America means; that son of a bitch will be dead.
Why are we fightin' this war?
They didn't give me a choice.
War is not my voice! Yeaaaaahhhh!

6 posted on 04/26/2006 10:28:30 PM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Against stupidity the gods themselves contend in vain)
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To: jdoeadeer

My favorite country singer, Dwight Yoakam, is thankfully apolitical. Or at least he doesn't wear his politics on his sleeve.


7 posted on 04/26/2006 10:36:57 PM PDT by saganite (The poster formerly known as Arkie 2)
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To: jdoeadeer
Author knows as much about country music as I do about quantum physics, which is nothing.
8 posted on 04/26/2006 10:38:38 PM PDT by Ursus arctos horribilis
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To: jdoeadeer
Image and video hosting by TinyPic
9 posted on 04/26/2006 10:40:48 PM PDT by Dick Vomer (liberals suck......... but it depends on what your definition of the word "suck" is.)
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To: jdoeadeer
Good article. Populism was a lot stronger in the country music of Cash's and Haggard's day than either conservatism or liberalism. There's still some truth to that today.

Things are even more complicated since it can be really hard to distinguish "real" from "fake" populism -- especially in show business, which is devoted to creating illusions and deceptive images.

Two "outlaws" -- real or fake -- can find a lot to admire in each other across political divisions.

10 posted on 04/26/2006 11:09:10 PM PDT by x
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To: jdoeadeer

"Much ado about nothing" here. A song is a song is a song. Some are great. Some suck. The political opinions of jugglers, clowns and minstrels are irrelevant. If and when one of them turns out to be qualified to serve as Secretary of State or something, give me a call.


11 posted on 04/27/2006 4:58:25 AM PDT by Emmett McCarthy
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To: Emmett McCarthy; All

Excuse me for butting in, but has anyone seen any threads discussing Darryle Worley's new song "I just came back from a war"?


12 posted on 11/13/2006 5:10:47 AM PST by NucSubs (Islam delenda est.)
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To: jdoeadeer
If there's a moral to "Rednecks & Bluenecks," it's that most people don't fit into simple categories of blue and red, onstage or off. Not Toby Keith, not Natalie Maines, and certainly not Dylan or Haggard.

When he included fatNat he "flubbed"! She fits nicely into the "moron leftist loon" category.

13 posted on 11/13/2006 5:20:40 AM PST by sausageseller (Look out for the jackbooted spelling police. There! Everywhere!(revised cause the "man" accosted me!)
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