Posted on 09/21/2001 9:46:20 AM PDT by dead
NEW BEDFORD, Mass. - Young children exposed to country music score lower on IQ tests than kids raised on rock 'n' roll, declares controversial music professor Dr. Roger Solett - and he bases his startling claim on the results of a study of 1,000 kids!
"Country music makes kids stupid," he said. "It's the mind- warping lyrics." And he cited a few examples drawn from what he called "some of the most popular country songs of the past two decades." On the list:
"I'd Rather Have a Bottle in Front of Me Than a Frontal Lobotomy."
"Get Your Tongue Outta My Mouth 'Cause I'm Kissin' You Goodbye."
"If You Wanna Keep Your Beer Cold, Put It Next to My Ex-wife's Heart."
Dr. Solett is the former director of the prestigious Chopin Symphony and a professor of music. He said he and his research team gave IQ tests to 500 6-year-olds whose parents played country music in the house or car daily.
"They're Billy Ray Cyrus, Faith Hill, Clint Black, Randy Travis, Garth Brooks fans - and their children scored, on average, 10 points lower on standard IQ tests than 500 6-year-olds whose parents are rock 'n' roll junkies," said Dr. Solett.
"Now what's the difference between rock and country? It's just wild people banging on drums and strumming guitars in both cases. Lots of howling. Lots of noise. The only difference between rock and country is that country is stupid - the lyrics, I mean.
" 'I wanna whip your cow . . . I fell on a pile of you and got love all over me . . . Drop-kick me, Jesus, through the goalposts of life' . . . I mean, c'mon, this kinda stuff'll warp your mind."
But Dr. Solett's controversial study, and particularly his views, are not shared by many, if any, of his peers. And a member of his own research team, who asked to remain anonymous, told Weekly World News, "He hates hick music with a passion."
Hmmmmm... Somehow, I think that the results might turn out to be unpublishable in today's sociopolitical environment. If you get my general drift.
That song always disturbed me...
The survey concluded overwhelmingly that they preferred older country-western.
I just listened to The PatsyCline Story CD for the last two weeks and prefer Hank WIlliams Sr. Granted most of those artists recorded the themebook songs from others, they nevertheless displayed artistry and communicated their feelings and mood better than today's 'rappers' and curse sophistry.
A friend of mine just sent me some of that. I loved it. It is way out so we'll never hear it on mainstream radio.
. . . WELL, A FRIEND OF MINE NAMED STEVE GOODMAN WROTE THAT SONG
AND HE TOLD ME IT WAS THE PERFECT COUNTRY & WESTERN SONG
I WROTE HIM BACK A LETTER AND I TOLD HIM IT WAS NOT THE
PERFECT COUNTRY & WESTERN SONG BECAUSE HE HADNT SAID ANYTHING AT ALL ABOUT MAMA,
OR TRAINS,
OR TRUCKS,
OR PRISON,
OR GETTING DRUNKWELL HE SAT DOWN AND WROTE ANOTHER VERSE TO THE SONG
AND HE SENT IT TO ME,
AND AFTER READING IT,
I REALIZED THAT MY FRIEND HAD WRITTEN THE PERFECT
COUNTRY & WESTERN SONG
AND I FELT OBLIGED TO INCLUDE IT ON THIS ALBUM
THE LAST VERSE GOES LIKE THIS HERE:WELL, I WAS DRUNK THE DAY MY MOM GOT OUT OF PRISON
AND I WENT TO PICK HER UP IN THE RAIN
BUT BEFORE I COULD GET TO THE STATION IN MY PICKUP TRUCK
SHE GOT RUNNED OVER BY A DAMNED OLD
TRAIN
How could that make you stupid? Great song.
I once knew a guard who had walked watch over Charles Manson and asked him what most of the people were like in the hardened prisons. I fiqured a guard might have had a fair amount of time on his hands to contemplate how to deal with criminals and what made them click.
He said one could generally partition them into 2 groups. One group simply made a mistake somewhere, had been caught, judged and held accountable. The other group simply were criminal without much redeeming quality, but would find any and every humanly possible method to avoid accountability or repentence.
Johnny Cash's songs seemed to speak to the former class rather than the latter class. His songs have a classic quality because there are many in society who have made mistakes, but simply didn't get caught and have repented but realize the grace afforded them. His songs relate a varied response by which many men adapt to those circumstances which thrust an awkward predicament.
I'd pick a 100 such 'violent' CW songs over one chorus of Lennon's 'Imagine' if I wanted to sincerely influence the world towards a more peaceful existence.
Well my bucket's got a hole in it
My bucket's got a hole in it
My bucket's got a hole in it
I can't get no beer.
I have often wondered whether or not this was to be constured concretely, that is, his bucket really does have a hole in it and he is sad,or. . .is the bucket a euphemism for his girl friend and she is cheating on him and he unable to enjoy intoxicating beverages as he once could because of his great sorrow. Or does "beer" represent sexual relations with his cheating lover, and he is unable to experience sexual joy (or maybe performance)because he fears he is being cuckolded.
EVERYBODY DOES IT IN HAWAII
C D7
Talk about Hawaii, I didn't know it was so grand
G7 C G
I picked me out a hula-hula girl, before my boat could land
C G7 CEverybody does it in Hawaii
C G7 C
A yodel ay-hee, olay-hee, hee
E
CHORUS: She's got it here and she's got it there
A
Her lips are red and her feet are bare
D G
She's shy on clothes, but I don't care
C G7 C
'Cause everybody does it in Hawaii
C G7 C
A yodel ay-hee, olay-hee, hee
She's got two pretty legs with dimples knees
Two brown arms and they know how to squeeze
A perfect form, and I'm hard to please
But everybody does it in Hawaii
A yodel ay-hee, ay-hee, hee
F
yodel ay-hee, odle eedle ay-hee
C
yodel ay-hee, odle eedle ay-hee
C G7 C
A yodel ay-hee, olay-hee, hee
When I leave Hawaii, when I leave old Waikiki
I'm going to get my hula-hula girl, and bring her home with me
Everybody does it in Hawaii.
A yodel ay-hee, olay-hee, hee
Recorded by Jimmy Rodgers on The Short but Brilliant Life of Jimmy Rodgers
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.