Posted on 05/20/2014 8:58:16 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
I’m a city boy, born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, and I love a lot of classic country music— Carter Family, Bill Monroe, Hank Williams, Bob Wills, Delmore Brothers, Patsy Cline— stuff that today usually gets called “Americana.” Contemporary country music, not so much, but I do like Rosanne Cash, Patty Loveless, Alison Krauss and Lucinda Williams.
PATSY CLINE DIED!?!
I’m not saying I could do any better but frankly, I don’t bother turning on the radio most of the time and haven’t purchased music for about 5 years.
That is not good for the industry.
Alan Jackson sings some great country music, though.
Merle Haggard, Johnny Cash, Buck Owens, Johnny Horton, George Jones and excuse me for forgetting to mention any mainstays, perhaps Loretta Lynne too, if anything, country went through a real golden age with the likes of these. Numerous other artists can be mentioned but I was trying to recall the real giants post-Hank Williams.
People can talk about Waylon, Willie, Conway Twitty, they definitely have their place as well.
Sounds like the crowd at a T. Tex Edwards concert...
http://www.reverbnation.com/ttexedwards
Although his music is country, not rap, white rap, etc. unless you maybe count old white "rap" found in country songs like "One Piece At A Time", "Smoke That Cigarette", "Wabash Cannonball", etc.
o
It’s formulaic. Just like wrap but with a fake twang.
I think Jimmie Rodgers was also paired up with the Dixieland Jug Blowers on a Victor recording as well.
Fascinating era, when it comes to music. So much variety, and wild-and-woolly experimentation. The musical changes between just two and three years throughout the decade of the 1920s were massive.
Hell, DISCO is still around.
I guess you could consider “Big, Bad, John” a rap song.
Not you, but authors like the one of the original article- I mean “critics”, yeah. I loath writers who gripe about how things used to be better in general, and in regards to the arts in particular. Those who can, do, those who can’t teach, those who can’t do or even teach write criticism.
There’s plenty of good music these days, just not on mainstream radio.
Just don’t listen to the radio. Plenty of outstanding music out there but you have to go find it as none of it is played on the radio anywhere.
Yeah. They call it Americana now.
“Hell,DISCO is still around.”
Staaayiiing aliiiive !!! I actually liked disco and The BeeGees.
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BINGO!
Tommy must have gotten guitar lessons straight from God. Catch him every time he comes around. Transcends any label description (oh, yeah he has a great music ministry, too).
Garth kind of died on the second album for me.
Not counting prior to mid 80’s since I liked most of them, I also liked Mark Chesnut, Tracy Lawrence, Diamond Rio, Shenandoah, Wade Hayes, Chris Ledoux, Tracy Byrd (not watermelon crawl though), Zone Jones, Rick Trevino, Patty Loveless, Gary Stewart, old Reba, and Toby Keith (Blue Moon and before). Some of the artists, like Garth, made it on their first one or two albums then sold their soul to make pop sounding crap and dropped their country sound (Lonestar comes to mind).
Was never an outlaw fan. Traditional country and western swing for me.
About a decade ago I started downloading some of the old radio CW and R&R classics I used to listen to in the late 50s. The only TV station went off the air at 10:30 p.m., so the only alternative for late summer nights was SuperStation AM radio.
I have collected about 300 of the old favorites in MP3 format. Now, when I get a tad nostalgic, I just load a few of them into the audio player, lean back, relax and enjoy.
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