Rascal Flatts - “Every Day”
Songwriters: Alissa Moreno and Jeffrey Steele
Machoism, patriotism, alcoholism, romanticism… and if emoism isn’t part of the list of country music concepts yet, you can certainly add it with Rascal Flatts’ release of their latest single, “Every Day.” Rascal Flatts is usually an easy target and a lot of criticism might be unfairly levied upon them, but this could be a new all time low–until they choose to release “It’s Not Supposed To Go Like That” as a single. I try to keep an open mind when it comes to their music because I know quite a few people like them and I’m sure they have legitimate reasons, but the group is making it harder to do so every day.
On some shallow, irrational level, “Every Day” might actually be considered romantic or endearing, but I’m failing to comprehend how either of those sentiments would apply to such an overblown, completely emo lyric. Take a look: “I drive myself crazy / Tryin’ to stay out of my own way / The messes that I make […] Every day, every day / You save my life […] Sometimes the place I go / Is so deep and dark and desperate.” What kind of weight does that put on the woman in the relationship to know that if she becomes unhappy and calls off the relationship that she’s simultaneously ending her partners life. Isn’t that equivalent to a woman getting pregnant to keep an unwilling partner in a relationship (other than it being addition instead of subtraction)? And with all the negativity, clinginess, and general depression, it won’t be long before the woman does become unhappy and wants out, so perhaps he really is shooting himself in the foot and can’t “stay out of his own way.” Anyways, you can take away these three words: overblown, irrational emoism.
![]()
Listen: Rascal Flatts - “Every Day”
If you enjoyed this article, be sure to subscribe to our feed or receive updates via email.
Popular Stuff
Sponsor
Tagged In This Article
Current Discussion
- Stormy: Can't we just ship all of the uptight Purtians who worry about who's having sex ...
- 2004: Anyone remember the Trailers 2004 release Welcome to the Woods (WTTW)? For those...
- Paul H!: I agree with Chuck and Helena; others are grossly over- reacting. Click on the p...
- Bubba: Over the weekend Angela was doing a show in Wrightsville Beach, NC. Just over he...
- Razor X: I've listened to it three times in a row. It's magnificent. This has got my vote...
- leeann: Razor X, That's pretty much how I felt about it....
- Razor X: OK, I'm listening to it now and I feel like I have died and gone to Hillbilly He...
- Stormy: Steve: We all know that Brady is a little strange and somewhat eccentric. WE d...
- Stormy: I’ve always wanted my music to sound like a good band And I want Russell ...
- Jake B.: This review is very harsh.. What do you expect out of someones second album? She...
Forgotten Artists: Bradley Kincaid In a manner similar to Alan Lomax, William Bradley “The Kentucky Mountain Boy” Kincaid was one of the great American musicologists and collectors of American folk, country and parlor songs.
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.
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.







1 Trackbacks/Pings
Trackback URI for this postMay 18, 2008
[…] of lackluster performances. Are “She’s A Hottie,” “Last Name,” “Every Day“, “Back When I Knew It All,” “Put A Girl In It,” and […]
21 Comments
RSS for comments on this post | Trackback URI for this post
February 19, 2008 at 2:40 pm Permalink
This is part of a fascinating trend that I keep meaning to write about: in contemporary country songwriting, women can do no wrong. The most striking thing about the RF album is that on every song about a relationship the only blame ever placed is on the man. The woman is always sheer perfection.
That’s smart marketing, since most of their target audience is female. It just comes off as self-loathing over the course of an album.
February 19, 2008 at 2:45 pm Permalink
you know, the worst thing i had to do today was to go out and get my taxes done. until you had to go and put this abomination up. you win.
February 19, 2008 at 2:57 pm Permalink
I wonder if these guys have started “cutting” yet. What is the deal with this chorus?! Add another reason to the list of why I dislike Rascal Flatts.
February 19, 2008 at 5:06 pm Permalink
Is this a “He Ain’t the Leaving Kind” religious type of song, or is it actually referring to a woman?
Wasn’t sure if was supposed to be their next version of that song like “Here” is to “Bless the Broken Road” and “It’s Not Supposed to Go Like That” tries to be like “Sarah Beth”.
Don’t care much for the song myself. Brad Paisley also released his new single today, though, and Chris Cagle’s CD is out today, so we have enough new content to check out for now.
February 19, 2008 at 5:21 pm Permalink
Chris, that’s interesting. I didn’t listen to half of their new album, so there’s no way I ever would have noticed it. I didn’t notice it as a trend in contemporary country music, either, but do you think it’s a conscious decision or the byproduct of trying to appeal to women?
MikeKY, you’re welcome.
Zach, you bring up a good point about the song being overly generic, but I don’t think it works as well in the religious context.
February 19, 2008 at 5:27 pm Permalink
I do not know why people dislike Rascal Flatts I must say that they are trully an amazing group and they can sing. I do not have anyhing bad to say about their music, I think their music is the best that they have come out with and all i can say is keep up the great work guys. hope to see you in concert for the 6 time really soon.
February 19, 2008 at 10:01 pm Permalink
Samantha I dislike them because the powers that be in country music have pushed them to the forefront and taken away the country music I grew up listening to and i miss it on the radio. I can go to a top forty radio station and hear music like this if i want it…they are not bad musicians or singers….they just should not be on country radio. Just one man’s opinion from nashvegas.
February 19, 2008 at 10:52 pm Permalink
Samantha - Rascall Flatts is no more country than Aretha Franklin, the difference being that Aretha is the Queen of Soul and Rascall Flatts is the antithesis of soul. If you check the dictionary for the definition of “bland” you will see a picture of Rascall Flatts next to the definition.
Their music is not terrible, just incredibly uninteresting
February 19, 2008 at 10:59 pm Permalink
i know this is irrelevant, but someone mentioned the new brad paisley song. is anyone else dissapointed with the song choice? i just don’t get it, with so mayn good songs on 5th Gear, why would he choose that one??
February 20, 2008 at 9:43 am Permalink
@Brady: Both. I wouldn’t necessarily have noticed it myself, except a songwriter friend of mine pointed it out. He said it’s an unspoken rule nowadays that major-label male acts will not cut a song with a lyric in which a woman is faulted.
February 20, 2008 at 9:48 am Permalink
Doesn’t that sort of violate the other unspoken rule that a major label artist will never cut a song that makes themselves look bad? Or am I getting my unspoken rules mixed up again?
I really need to pay more attention to what people don’t say at those NSAI meetings.
February 20, 2008 at 10:15 am Permalink
So, “Papa Loves Mama” wouldnt get made today??? I tell ya, I just dont know what to think;)…
February 20, 2008 at 11:03 am Permalink
That’s the trouble with unspoken rules — people don’t speak ‘em.
February 20, 2008 at 11:48 am Permalink
Kelly — I wish radio played more songs like Papa Loved Mama today! Novelty songs usually lose their charm once the joke wears off, but I still love listening to that song after 16 years.
And I’d much rather hear a singer talking about burying your rig in the local motel than going to a place that is “so deep and dark and desperate.” The Garth song brings the anguish alive (and tempers it with humor,) the Rascal Flatts song makes the anguish seem boring.
February 20, 2008 at 11:50 am Permalink
Women have been salvific figures in country music for about the last 15 years, so Rascal Flatts is nothing new. The general formula for the mid to late 90s was bad boy meets woman and/or finds Jesus and becomes good boy. I haven’t really thought of this in terms of country radio’s increasingly female demographic but it makes sense. However, country songs have always been harder on men than on women, which is why I find songs like “The Midnight Oil,” where the woman is unquestionably the bad “guy,” to be so interesting. Fast-forward to the modern day: even in a female cheating song like “Stay,” we get the sense that the woman is the one being wronged.
February 20, 2008 at 1:18 pm Permalink
Hairandtoenails: I am with you. while i cant say I enjoy that song now as much as you, I appreciate the songs unique method of telling a classic cheating story. it is sad that we’ll hear more “working woman’s holiday” in a million different forms, before another song that attempts such fresh and often-times dark storylines…
February 20, 2008 at 3:11 pm Permalink
“Salvific”! Gotta write that down.
April 3, 2008 at 7:51 pm Permalink
Your dissection of the song is totally shallow. This song is about Jesus. It has nothing to do with a woman.
May 7, 2008 at 4:53 pm Permalink
I completely agree with Joe. This song is about God, not about a person who someone is dependent on. It’s beautiful.
May 8, 2008 at 7:39 am Permalink
Wouldn’t an omniscient God know that he’s hanging on to every word?
I maintain that the song isn’t about God. In fact, the video concept calls into question whether or not Rascal Flatts even knows what the song is about. It’s ridiculously overwrought and attempts to make the song socially encompassing despite it’s inward focus. How it ties in with the song, I don’t know.
May 17, 2008 at 2:40 am Permalink
It took every ounce of self-discipline for me to stay seated during one of the songwriters’ (I won’t name names!) live performance of this song, and felt completely nauseous by the end of it (and I saw some others in the audience letting out long, deep breaths of ‘thank god that’s over’, too!); frankly, it doesn’t belong in ANY genre; it’s a classic case of two songwriters’ tapping into each other’s ‘deep dark desperate place’ of dysfunction and coming up with lyrics - entirely heartfelt and sincere, if that performance was anything to go by - which belong in a therapist’s office (spoken from a couch!), not a song. Sorry. We songwriters ALL have our musical ‘odes to dysfunction’ (!) but there ought to be some system of checks and balances which helps us to assess which ones belong in the world at large, and which one’s should stay put in (in the bathroom cabinet behind the razors?!). Too bad this team didn’t provide each other with such checks and balances before they shopped the song, thereby inflicting it on the world: THAT said, the damn thing’s a hit…so who are we to fault it?! - Go figure ’cause this is one I can’t figure at all….
;)
Leave a Comment