Country Music Is The Best Music In The World…
and I’ll stand on anyone’s coffee table in my cowboy boots and say that. If you’ll check out our About page, it states what we all know to be true–country music is the greatest music in the world. That could be a controversial statement if it weren’t on a country music blog, but let’s humor ourselves and assume it’s true.
Now, I’m sure just about every country music fan has been in a conversation with another person who, for whatever reason, makes the claim that they like every kind of music there is–except for country. It’s usually based on some preconceived notion and a whole lot of thought hasn’t been dedicated to it on their part, but they just haven’t given it a chance or learned anything about its illustrious history. With all of that in mind, if you had the opportunity to play one song to convert someone to country music, which song would you play?
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Forgotten Artists: Goldie Hill Had Carl Smith and Goldie Hill been born 30 or 40 years later, they might have been like Faith Hill and Tim McGraw–the dominant married couple in country music.
Forgotten Artist: Wynn Stewart Both Buck Owens and Merle Haggard have cited Wynn Stewart as a major influence on their careers, yet somehow, he was never able to translate his enormous talent into extended and consistent success for himself.
Miranda Lambert - “More Like Her” This kind of material, as opposed to her tough-chick-done-wrong romps like “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” and “Gunpowder and Lead,” is where her real promise lies
Joey Rory - “Cheater, Cheater” It’s actually downright frivolous, but that just makes it all the more fun. And really, are you allowed to say “ho” on country radio?
Josh Gracin - “Unbelievable (Ann Marie)” Despite initial marketing that touted the album as deep and personal, “Unbelievable (Ann Marie)” is anything but deep or personal.
Josh Turner - "Everything Is Fine" Turner is the rare example of an artist who records material that’s both quality and trademark.
Darryl Worley - "Tequila On Ice" A groovy mid-tempo that sways, a refreshing reprieve from the exhausting pace of a format that clamors for loud music and swelling choruses.
Blake Shelton - "She Wouldn't Be Gone" It’s all about nailing the melody rather than providing a legitimate interpretation that accentuates the lyrical content, although Shelton does do a pretty good job of injecting what limited emotion he can.
Don’t look now, but Darius Rucker, lead singer of 90s rock group Hootie & The Blowfish, has a country hit on his hands. What you probably haven’t heard is that Rucker is the first black artist to chart a single in the country top 20 since Charley Pride last did it in 1988.
News that former Sugarland member and co-founder Kristen Hall is suing her ex-mates, to the tune of $1.5 million, goes a long way towards providing a bit of context regarding the Atlanta singer/songwriter’s sudden departure from the group.
In Memory of Don Helms (1927 - 2008) Helms dated back to a time when an excellent four or five piece band and a good singer were all that were needed to make great country music. No drums, no light shows, no production tricks in the recording studio–just good music.







51 Comments
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March 1, 2008 at 10:55 am Permalink
I’ve definitely heard that line!! It drives me crazy. I don’t know how I would answer your question though. I suppose it depends on the person. Country music is so broad in its influences that I usually try to find the song that might appeal to the particular person that I’m trying to convince. If I know their general music tastes/leanings, I try to show them a song that might have that sort of influence in it. Sometimes, I find that I’m showing them a song that I don’t necessarily like, because I’d rather that they embrace a country song than hate it altogether, even if they’re not the same songs that I personally prefer. Does that make sense?
March 1, 2008 at 11:06 am Permalink
Sunday Morning Coming Down by Cash
March 1, 2008 at 11:15 am Permalink
Leeann, it makes perfect sense and I thought of it while writing the question, but I figured it might be kind of hard to choose a song to appeal to any single person in a general setting. So, the song you choose would probably provide more insight to you and the reasons you chose to share it, rather than who you chose it for.
Mike W, good song. Any particular reason you chose that one to convert someone?
March 1, 2008 at 11:26 am Permalink
Usually when I have those “I like all music but country” I ask “What have you heard?” A typical respnse cover the top 40 from the last 20 years - Garth, Shania, Tim, Kenny, Faith…and I have to agree, I don’t music care for that strain of country-pop music either.
Then I break out some Dale Watson, Ryan Adams or Neko Case and they eat it up. I figure music is like beer, if you don’t like it your probably wasting your time with Bud or Coors instead of a nice Shiner…
March 1, 2008 at 11:29 am Permalink
There are really only two kinds of music:
1) Music you like
2) Music you don’t like
Categories are great for consumer guidance but little else.
I like varying percentages of the music I hear. Roughly, By category:
Traditional Country: 90%
Modern country: 33%
Modern Bluegrass: 60%
Western Swing: 90%
Acoustic Country: 75% (think Jimmie Rodger,
Carter Family, Wilma Lee & Stoney Cooper, Doc Williams, Bradley Kinkaid, Karl & Harty, Grandpa Jones)
Traditional Jazz and Big Band: 75%
Bebop and Post Bop: 25%
Smooth Jazz: 10%
Pop Standards: 75%
Adult Contemporary: 40%
Irish Folk: 80% (Clancy Brothers, Dubliners)
Celtic: 40% (Pogues, Chieftains, Clannad)
American Folk:60%
Rock ‘n Roll: 75%
Rock: 20%
Traditional R&B 75%
Motown: 50%
Disco: 20%
Funk/Hip Hop/Rap/Techno/Punk - almost Zero
Classical: 50%
Blues: 30%
Obviously most of my listening is in the areas I’ve marked with higher percentages. Country is my favorite music but I wouldn’t argue its superiority.
All I would say is listen to the lyrics and the stories they tell. This is the one area where I would argue that traditional country was better than today’s country music. The newer songs seem mostly written by committee - they lack soul and often tell vapid stories, if they tell any stories at all
Jazz greats like Lester Young and Charlie Parker liked country music for its storytelling as did Ray Charles
March 1, 2008 at 11:33 am Permalink
here’s an older article from Pitchfork on just this topic.
http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/feature/40330-everything-but-country
from the piece - Mainstream hip-hop has been filtering into indie culture for a few years, but contemporary country music has been slow to take root beyond safe alt- holdovers. Perhaps it’s because the music as played by corporate radio stations is perceived to be simplistic, jingoistic, and sentimental– which is true to an extent– or simply because Arcade Fire fans don’t want to be associated with NASCAR fans and Wal-Mart shoppers. As a result, indie faves Neko Case and Jenny Lewis are considered to be merely dabbling in country, and Tim McGraw covering “Stars Go Blue” doesn’t mean Ryan Adams is the new Kris Kristofferson. Instead, older country music gets a pass, and artists like the Carter Family, Dock Boggs, and Bob Wills are perfectly acceptable to indie ears, perhaps because there was no rock’n'roll to compete with at that time or because they’re so far removed from our current music climate that they don’t register as country anymore. Even the next few generations of country artists have found an audience among younger listeners: Willie Nelson is a favorite due to his ceaseless experimenting, Loretta Lynn found a new audience working with Jack White, and Johnny Cash is more popular with the indie (and every other) crowd dead than he was alive.
March 1, 2008 at 12:02 pm Permalink
Brady, the problem is that you ask such a great question that I can’t get it out of my head. What song would I choose? I know that when my husband and I met, when we were simply friends, he said that he liked just about everything but country. Today, he’s still not exactly a huge country music fan, but there are certain songs that he absolutely loves now. Most importantly, he can stand listening to it, because I make him listen to it a lot.:) He tends toward the traditional though, particularly Johnny Cash.
March 1, 2008 at 12:19 pm Permalink
I’ll dare to list a song. “Good Ol Boys Like Me” by Don Williams.
Its well sung, well played, always a joy to listen to, insightful about a universal theme; The singer learns to appreciate his upbringing without resorting to nostalgia and while recognizing the hypocrisy of it all. He recognizes that he can go places, that he “can choose,” that he is an agent, not an object. But he also recognizes that he cannot become another person — in part he will always be a “good ol boy” no matter how far he goes in life. And thus he realizes that his idenity will be both fluid and constant, and always in tension. His relationship with society will be too — he’ll partly be just a good old boy, but he’ll also be one who cna influence others, who can “talk like the man on the six o clock news.”
This is such a great song because Williams raises complex and important issues about man’s relationship to society without then resorting to cliched responses. He does it by telling a story instead of lecturing at the listener.
A great song that smashes many stereotypes about country music and Southern culture.
March 1, 2008 at 12:30 pm Permalink
I like to use the line “Do you like Billy Joel?” “Yes, I LOVE Billy Joel, he’s a legend!” “What do you think of this song by Billy Joel?” You then play Mr. Midnight by Garth Brooks “I LOVE that song! That’s the first time I’ve heard it!” “That’s because it’s Garth Brooks!”
March 1, 2008 at 12:39 pm Permalink
Ha. I don’t think I could trick many people into thinking that Garth Brooks is Billy Joel. Most people that I know have a better ear music than that.
March 1, 2008 at 12:40 pm Permalink
Sunday Morning Coming Down is just brilliantly written. I think the problem that some people have with Country Music is that they think they cant relate to the lyrics. Which, to be fair, is true, the same way I cant relate to the latest Rap song, I doubt someone who grew up in the Bronx can relate to the smell, sounds and reality of Country life. Sunday Morning doesnt have that problem, anybody, from any walk of life can relate to the feeling and imagery of that song.
March 1, 2008 at 12:44 pm Permalink
Lucas, brilliant tactic. Ask them if they like the Velvet Underground and if they say yes play them Elizabeth Cook’s version of “Sunday Morning.”
March 1, 2008 at 1:04 pm Permalink
Paul, I’d argue that you do indeed consider country music to be better. Considering the amount of time you spend listening to country, there seems to be something you find more appealing about it in general. I went and saw Michael Bublé with my wife this past Wednesday and I thought he put on an excellent and entertaining performance. I’d highly recommend his show to anyone and enjoyed his rendition of “Always On My Mind” quite a bit, but I don’t consider it a disservice to him that I love country music more than any other genre. I think hypothetical questions require a certain amount of assumptions and the assumption here is that country music is the best.
Some people will automatically disregard the music you listen to most often based solely on the label. I know your argument is against the validity of labels, but if someone wouldn’t listen to country based on the label, what song would you play for them?
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Baron, which one song in particular would you play, though?
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Leeann, I gotta give credit to Matt for the question, I just added a little context. Think about it and see what you come up with.
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hairandtoenails (maybe I should shorten that to HAT), excellent choice and good job on the explanation. “Good Ol’ Boys Like Me” is one of my favorite songs and I think Don Williams–dare I say it–is underrated.
March 1, 2008 at 1:25 pm Permalink
I’d pick “The Blues Man.” It’s a positive song that frankly acknowledges the universal experiences of regret and suffering. The Alan Jackson version is my favorite.
March 1, 2008 at 1:34 pm Permalink
I’d slap ‘em up with “Choices” by George Jones.
March 1, 2008 at 2:42 pm Permalink
“Boulder to Birmingham” by Emmylou Harris. Vocal perfection, sincere emotion, and a great lyric.
March 1, 2008 at 3:01 pm Permalink
Well I have a friend who’s into artists like Ozzy Osbourne and Marilyn Manson, so i had a very hard time finding something he liked. In the end the only song that he says he really liked was Kathleen Edwards “Independant Theif”
March 1, 2008 at 3:12 pm Permalink
Brady, here goes:
Dale Watson - From The Cradle To The Grave
Lucinda Williams - Car Wheels On A Gravel Road
Whiskeytown (Ryan Adams) - Somebody Remembers The Rose
Neko Case - Things That Scare Me
Drive By Truckers - Tornadoes
I think these might prove to change people’s perceptions about what country music is
March 1, 2008 at 3:57 pm Permalink
“Margie’s At the Lincoln Park Inn”
In my very humble opinion it is one of the greatest country songs ever written. It was banned by a lot of radio stations when it first came out, not because the lyrics included offensive laguage, but because it painted such a amazingly graphic visual image of one of country’s seminal themes: cheating. To me country music always has been and always will be about a great lyric. Yes, melody, vocals, instrumentation and production are important, but only serve to enhance the lyric. “Sunday Morning Comin’ Down” and “Good Ol Boys Like Me” have great lyrics and imagery, too.
You know, I think I’m going to go listen to all three songs right now.
March 1, 2008 at 3:58 pm Permalink
Angel Lying To Close To The Ground - Willie Nelson
March 1, 2008 at 3:59 pm Permalink
Make that Angel FLYING To Close To The Ground since I can’t type
March 1, 2008 at 4:08 pm Permalink
Corey - Given the kind of women inhabiting country songs I think it could go either way.
March 1, 2008 at 4:21 pm Permalink
Baron, you haven’t converted anyone; at most, one (Dale Watson) of the songs that you listed is a country song.
March 1, 2008 at 6:53 pm Permalink
“More of Your Love” by The Derailers. If they don’t like that song, they’re hopeless.
Brody, you should listen to Billy Yates’ original version of “Choices” (which Billy co-wrote with Mike Curtis) off his fine Almo label self titled debut album. The album also contains Billy’s one minor radio hit “Flowers”, a cover of which has recently done well for Adam Harvey down in Australia. Billy tells a story of how he pitched “Choices” to his close friend George Jones many times over a period of a couple of years and finally one day George responded favorably! The rest is history, as they say….
March 1, 2008 at 7:34 pm Permalink
I’ve heard the duet between Yates and Jones, but never the original. As much as I like songwriters’ takes on their own songs it’d be hard to top the resigned acceptance that Jones’ vocals add.
Good choice with The Derailers, too. It’s hard to go wrong with them.
March 1, 2008 at 8:04 pm Permalink
Leeann, have you heard “Mr. Midnight”?
March 1, 2008 at 9:53 pm Permalink
“Pancho and Lefty.” If anyone says that’s not a great song, they’re not worth knowing.
March 1, 2008 at 9:58 pm Permalink
I actually did convert somebody with one song, way back in 1994 on a long subway ride from Manhattan to Queens. A high school buddy of mine said he hated country music, and I said that I could convince him otherwise. Played him one song. Kathy Mattea’s “Walking Away a Winner.” He shrugged, said it was okay.
He admitted seven years later that he was pissed off that he liked it so much and didn’t want to admit that I was right. He went out and got that CD and has liked country music ever since. Kind of a random song to convert somebody with, but it worked.
March 1, 2008 at 10:03 pm Permalink
Dave S, good choice.
Brody, some of The Derailers stuff ain’t so good, but then again, some of their stuff is superb.
Chris N, another one of my favorites. Every single line seems to overflow with meaning and isn’t content with merely advancing the story.
March 1, 2008 at 11:16 pm Permalink
Lucas, yes I have heard Mr. Midnight. In fact, I just popped in Scarecrow in an effort to prepare for an upcoming feature for country universe. While I get the Billy Joel comparison, it’s quite obviously not him and I maintain that my friends would not mistake Garth Brooks for Billy Joel. No matter how you slice it, their voices and their production styles are rather different, at to my ears. Anyway, I’m a big Garth fan, but only a casual listener of Billy Joel.
March 1, 2008 at 11:17 pm Permalink
“”Paul, I’d argue that you do indeed consider country music to be better. Considering the amount of time you spend listening to country, there seems to be something you find more appealing about it in general.”"
Brady, I don’t think that’s necessarily a valid assumption. My favorite singers are Webb Pierce and Ernest Tubb, but I would argue that Merle Haggard is the greatest all around artist the genre has ever seen, followed by Hank Williams and Johnny Cash
I don’t have one choice of songs - if somebody really forcefully says they don’t care for country music , I’d probably play “El Paso” by Marty Robbins” which until about 1990 was usually regarded as the greatest country song ever by fan polls and critic polls alike. Next in line would probably be “I’m So Lonesome I Could Cry” by Hank Williams (although the BJ Thomas recording is excellent) for its imagery. After that “The Old Man and His Horn” by Gene Watson. Beyond that there are many worthy choices although fairly few from after 1986 that I’d consider
My listening goes in cycles - there can go months in which most of my listening is jazz and I revisit Basie, Goodman and Ellington with great frequency. My big three favorite female singers are Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and COnnie Smith. Draw from that whatever conclusion you wish
March 2, 2008 at 1:03 am Permalink
It’s dependent on who I am trying to convert. A younger person between 16 - 24, definitely something contemporary and attainable which would be something by Sugarland. It’s not exactly deep and on the true pulse of country, but it’s very user friendly and a soft segue into the world of country. Otherwise, a thousand times over it would be Patsy Cline’s “Sweet Dreams”.
March 2, 2008 at 3:16 am Permalink
Y’know, I think that I could throw on any of Billy Yates’ records. Then I could throw in a bit of Garth, Cash, Merle, etc. The idea would be to show them there’s more than “I lost my dog, my wife and kids left me and I lost my job” type of songs. I think that the idea would be to show these peaple the RANGE of country rather than just one song. Still, “Choices” is a damn good choice, as is “Flowers” by Billy Yates. Also agree that “El Paso” would make for a good choice.
March 2, 2008 at 10:24 am Permalink
I’ve turned many a “I hate Country” people into “It’s not so bad” people. I don’t know how I do it. I figure out what songs are best for the person, throw them on a CD and tell them to listen. Listen to the words, the beat, and the voice. Don’t just play the song and assume you’re going to hate it. All music needs a chance, even if it is country. The next thing I know, they’re singing the songs in the car, they’ve got a station they like on the radio, and they bring up country songs in conversation. I try to give them classics and then some popular country, a good mix of both and they can decide what they like.
March 2, 2008 at 3:01 pm Permalink
“Indian Outlaw” and “Stays In Mexico” also do the trick. The instrumentals are catchy.
March 2, 2008 at 4:07 pm Permalink
Considering the shape mainstream country music is in I will take Dale Watson and others over any of it.
I’ve also become very fond of Bluegrass.
March 2, 2008 at 6:25 pm Permalink
if i had to convert somebody i wouldnt showem anything other than the legends hank, waylon, merle and george cause todays country is really starting to be gay rascal flatts are just about gay as they come sugarland if i hear her one more time im gonna go on a baby punching spree little big town the boondocks makes me want to push them off a dock im just saying i love country i was raised up on it but i can see why some people dont like it cause most of them are stupid there are some good ones that are newer like jamey johnson, brad paisley, brooks and dunn, and of course mcgraw and strait and even thow shes hot if i hear taylor swift again ill put a 12 gauge slug into somebodys radio
March 2, 2008 at 7:56 pm Permalink
Robby, don’t worry, I’m sure you are out of the woods concerning Taylor Swift. No chance of hearing her again, nope.
March 2, 2008 at 7:58 pm Permalink
Bread & Water - Ryan Bingham
It’s been my goto over the past 6 months and actually even converted a indie punkrock British friend of mine.
March 2, 2008 at 7:59 pm Permalink
Speaking of New Country Music, man, that Bucky Covington sure must suck given the amount of advertising spent on him. That cute little face is everywhere online. They must totally own him the way they push him like a commodity.
March 2, 2008 at 8:43 pm Permalink
Matt, I think your wrong. If you give people that don’t like country music something that sounds like typical country music you’ve not convinced them. They’ll say “Yep, don’t like that.”
But if they hear country influences in music that they DO like…well I look at it as a gateway drug.
March 3, 2008 at 7:31 am Permalink
Joe Diffie’s “Pick-up Man.”
March 3, 2008 at 7:53 am Permalink
When I first started dating my husband, he was pure heavy metal - Pantera, and the likes - and now while he is not a true country fan, he likes Trent Tomlinson, and Taylor Swift (hey, if he likes it, I will go with it) and Allison Krauss and he can even pick out singers on the radio — sometimes it drives me crazy because he only likes the women because they are good looking, but at least he is listening and not complaining about the music that I listen to. But I am not sure that I could pick one song, as others have said it would have to depend on the person I was trying to get to listen.
March 3, 2008 at 5:33 pm Permalink
I have thought about this topic at great length.
Obviously this is a huge decision, since hypothetically some person’s lifelong relationship with country music relies on my choice.
I’ll go with “Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain” by Willie. It’s by a classic artist and it was written by a classic figure in country music (Fred Rose). It also has a good track record of bringing people around to country music. It is a safe choice, but I think that it’s a strong one.
my back-up choices would be
Wine Me Up - Faron Young (though I know that its a record that sounds old enough to scare some people off initially)
If Drinking Don’t Kill Me - George Jones
March 3, 2008 at 8:38 pm Permalink
A really easy way is to get them buddy-buddy with a country singer, then as they’re pretending they like country because their new found friend is a country singer, they start getting hooked. Haha, I’ve done that my share of times.
I agree, go with rock-influenced songs. Easier to convert people.
March 4, 2008 at 10:09 am Permalink
I’ve converted some anti-country types with Nickel Creek, particularly the “This Side” album, which had that great Pavement cover. These days, I think Little Big Town is a good example of how broad country is. (In my experience “anything but country” folks think it’s all like “Achy Breaky Heart.”)
March 16, 2008 at 1:35 pm Permalink
I’ve heard it said that there’s two types of people: those who admit they like Country music; and those who don’t admit it.
Just whip out something like “Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound” and dare those “non-Country” fans not to tap a foot or mouth the words.
March 18, 2008 at 11:45 am Permalink
“I May Hate Myself In the Morning” - Lee Ann Womack :)
Or something by George, Merle, Tammy, Dolly, or Loretta
March 19, 2008 at 1:52 pm Permalink
“Back When” - Tim McGraw
“The More I Drink” - Blake Shelton
“It Ain’t Easy Being Me” - Blake Shelton
“We Tell Ourselves” - Clint Black
“Findin’ A Good Man” - Danielle Peck
“Friends in Low Places” - Garth Brooks
“Give It Away” - George Strait
“Lonesome, On’ry and Mean” - Waylon Jennings (from Waylon Live)
March 21, 2008 at 12:13 am Permalink
I am a pure country music fan. I was raised on country and western cowboy movies. to me Country music is the best music I’ve ever heard. It is the only music that touches your soul and relates to real life. The lyrics are clean and the country sound is so relaxing. I think the reason many people refuse to listen to country is because they have not been exposed to it.
April 21, 2008 at 11:49 pm Permalink
Depends on the convert. Rock and southern rock fans get Van Zant, pop fans get Taylor Swift, rap fans, well, they don’t get my time unless they are listening to Ice-t or Ice Cube.
I agree with Don Williams being a good example for fans of soft rock or adult contemporary. My wife likes Don Williams and he is completely underrated.
Usually though, when someone tells me they listen to everything but country, a little conversation reveals theat they haven’t listened to any.
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