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https://southloophistorical.wordpres...e-c-1900-1960/ |
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Really dude? Alright, this conversation is over because you are clearly living on some other planet where country means whatever you want it to mean and not what the fucking name represents. https://www.greatamericancountry.com...-20-road-songs Hmmmm, what songs indeed. Fuck outta here bum edit: it's sad my run of good behavior was ruined by such a dumb argument :D |
I mean... the Stockyards were kind of country right? Presumably they had cowboys of some sort or other.
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Tex Mex food, along with country music may even appeal to some Mexican immigrants who came from rural areas. My girlfriend’s family, all of which are from Central Mexico, are self described “rancheros” that love country music. If you have a discriminatory music taste, simply do not come.
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Someone way earlier made a good point that country music of old is good. Real countryusic. The shit they put out now is atrocious.
But texmex is putrid. Literally. |
That was me. Most of what they call mainstream country music these days on the radio is like the worst of butt rock with growly southern accents and camouflage baseball caps. It bears little relation to classic country from the 40's-60's acts, or the Glen Campbell's/John Denver's singer songwriters, to the more primitive bluegrass and Americana roots music that came before all of them. It reminds me of that movie Ghost World where the girl takes the guy who is a delta blues aficionado to some tool bar where a band called Blues Hammer was playing:haha:
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Speaking of music in the West Loop, has anyone been to the restaurant across from Duck Duck Goat, Kuma's Corner?
It blasts heavy metal 8 hours a day. Even walking past feels like an assault on the ears. I can't imagine trying to digest food in there. I would much rather have a country place there - and I say that as a sometime fan of metal. |
the original kumas in avondale has been around since the early 00s and had a mostly metal/punk clientele. the chefs and bartenders working there liked to play loud music and named all the burgers after bands, so thats the way it was. there was also sort of a "if you dont like it go eat somewhere else" kind of vibe. i guess it kept the lames away (as did explicit S&M pornography on the walls). it was a super tiny kitchen with good line cooks so the quality control was solid and it was usually worth waiting for. then it got on the travel shows and the "best burger in the city" lists and the suburbanites flooded in and they expanded to other locations. now its mostly a dumb watered down gimmick (along with the crazy toppings, which frequently are overbearing and not harmonious with the burger itself). their quality has also taken a nosedive IMO, which tends to be the case when formerly tiny operations expand suddenly chasing profits. far better burgers in the city these days. at the time it was one of the first places trying to do "fancy" burgers before the whole fad caught on. im sure some will disagree with me but i dont think its worth bothering with anymore, esp at $15-20 plus tip
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Barn Dance may have been taped here and had huge success, but somehow I doubt the Chicagoans of the time were tuning into the broadcasts or buying all those tickets. Not so with today's country. There is indeed a large number of country music fans in Chicago, which is why we are able to support two large country music festivals in city limits alone (Smokeout and Lakeshake) plus numerous venues like two locations each of Bub City and Joe's Bar. |
“Plus it functions as "wholesome" party music when you want to forget that black people exist.”
So when a song by Darius Rucker or Cowboy Troy comes on does the party host race to their phone to change the song becuase they’re black? |
Sad songs and waltzes aren't selling this year...
(Fiddling while Rome burns if you will) |
I would argue that the disdain for country music has little to do with the music itself and more to do with the demographic that listens to it. It’s essentially the Trump voter. Obviously this is a generalization, but it’s not a horrible approximation of that demographic.
I have a friend who loves country music but hates Trump, for example. So exceptions are going to be aplenty |
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no, i hate "it" because its generic, mindless, factory generated pop music, disguised as "Country" because the lyrics feature the words "truck" and has an electric fiddle and banjo
there are obviously talented and creative county artists who exist outside the corporate machine apparatus, but thats not what i imagine most people are talking about here |
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The irony of this is that sometime in the 1950's my great grandfather who owned a family farm just West of Green Bay, WI became one of the first farmers in WI to switch from Dairy cattle to beef cattle. All his cattle were taken to Chicago to be sold. He used rail shipping exactly one time because the cattle were left for days on a siding in the city where they collectively lost hundreds of pounds of weight that he could have cashed in on. From that point on he paid truckers to drive the cattle down from Wisconsin and accompanied them in person the whole way. So all of you who claim Chicago has no country roots can just deal with the fact that my own great grandfather was one of many farmers who would come into Chicago multiple times a year to ensure they were getting the best price for their produce. Chicago is the agricultural marketplace of the world, just because that's grown into financial behemoths like CME Group doesn't make the roots of Chicago as the agricultural capital of humanity any less. Fun fact I learned from my Grandma when she was telling me the beef cattle story: Apparently everyone thought they were crazy when her parents switched to beef cattle, but it was wildly profitable and the next year they were able to buy a Harvestore steel silo which is apparently a status symbol among farmers. So whenever you see a farm with a row of big blue HARVESTORE TM silos you know they are the baller farmers. |
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i'll grant the genre it's very important and illustrious past. but what it's morphed into over the decades, becoming utter corporate musical garbage, is a travesty. |
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While I have become deeply political now in my 30s and yes admittedly I do make a loose connection between country listeners and conservative worldview, I have to reign myself in by acknowledging this is a weak link stereotype. Probably a majority do lean (or lay) right because of country's rural identity, but that doesn't make the statement that country fans = ignorant resentment Trump voter true. Correlation is not causation. I can honestly tell you that from the youngest years of my life when I became interested in music, it was the sound itself of [contemporary] country music that I found repulsive - the over the top drawl, the absurd masculinity, the party-on hillbilly lyrics - the culture attached to it I didn't fully grasp until later. I have since grown to greatly enjoy and appreciate older country music and roots music from bluegrass to Patsy to Willie and so forth (mostly the sad bastard stuff), but still have to absorb it in smaller doses as it is far from my favorite genre. Another country music "reinforcer" is our armed forces. Because the military draws a high % of recruits from the rural parts (and Red) parts of our country, there seems to be a strong proud hick/country element and that transfers to many country music fans. As a personal note that I still am a bit sore about, I had a good high school friend who joined the army after Sept 11. He went in loving underground alt rock/punk and 1960's soul/R&B and came out a country fan. I don't fully understand how such a thing happens but I suspect peer influence had a hell of a lot to do with it. Due to what I presume are stress and boredom, military people seem to like to listen to shallow good times music and much of modern country fits that bill. |
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