LogFAQs > #975004336

LurkerFAQs, Active DB, DB1, DB2, DB3, DB4, DB5, DB6, DB7, DB8, DB9, DB10, DB11, Database 12 ( 11.2023-? ), Clear
Topic List
Page List: 1
TopicSo it turns out country music was always kinda super-racist
HylianFox
07/22/23 5:58:51 PM
#1:


https://www.npr.org/2023/07/22/1188908968/jason-aldean-small-town-vs-city

The discourse over city and country has evolved over time, and taken on its own identity within country music. Songs that pine for an idyllic rural past have been a part of country music since the genre was first invented as a marketing category for rural white Southerners in the 1920s. Some of the earliest country songs, like Fiddlin' John Carson's "Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane," recorded in 1923 and often celebrated as one of the first country records, yearns for a rustic home. Carson's song, like many others in popular music at the time, was a minstrel tune, commonly performed in Blackface, and written in 1871 and presented from the perspective of a former slave who longed for a pre-emancipation past. Carson also regularly performed at KKK rallies.

---
THIS SPACE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK
Do not write in this space.
... Copied to Clipboard!
Topic List
Page List: 1