I get your point, but what the heck. Cars and girls have always been a big deal for young men. It's part of the American dream, right? Right next to that suburban house with a nice back yard, picket fence, 2.3 kids and the golden setter.
I get your point, but what the heck. Cars and girls have always been a big deal for young men. It's part of the American dream, right? Right next to that suburban house with a nice back yard, picket fence, 2.3 kids and the golden setter.
This means some interesting paradigm shifts are coming to country music.
Ha! One thing I know is that there are always exceptions to lists like yours. Country music is for those exceptions. And from what I see, there are a lot of exceptions.
It was Merle Haggard who sang in 1968, "We don't smoke marijuana in Muskogee."
Uh huh. My point is that in 1968, the media was focusing on the Woodstock generation, with hippies and long hair. Very similar to your list of what young men are interested in today. Meanwhile, country music was providing the alternative. That's how it is now. If your list is accurate, young people who aren't comfortable with that lifestyle will find a lot of common ground with the jacked up trucks and coolers filled with beer and buxom ladies in cut off jeans featured in country music. Different strokes for different folks. That's what music provides today.
But there's something else my brother in-law brought up a few days ago; why are there STILL no openly gay/lesbian country artists allowed in mainstream country music? Chely Wright and k.d. lang been banished to alt-country.
It has nothing to do with being "allowed" or "banished." They made crappy music. For years the criticism was "Where are the black country stars?" Then Darius Rucker came along with great songs and a great attitude that wasn't built around his color, but his music, and it worked. Country music isn't about people flaunting their differences. It's about bringing people together. And it's working. In a world that's focused mainly about divisive political issues, country music is one place people can go to hear songs about having fun. That's what people want.
After she came out, no one remembered her name.
Some interesting facts:
1. Fewer young men today are driving (Cars - CHOP!)
2. Most young men today are tolerant of gay relationships (Girls - CHOP!)
3. Many young men work in low wage jobs and live in efficiency micro-apartments (That suburban house with a nice back yard, picket fence - CHOP!)
4. Many young men have a negative or undecided opinion about children (2.3 kids - CHOP!)
5. Many are favoring smaller pets (Golden setter - CHOP!)
This means some interesting paradigm shifts are coming to country music. The days of loading up the pickups with beer, fishing gear and girls and going to a party on the lake may give way to loading up the bike baskets with soy milk, protest signs and platonic gay friends and going to a Noam Chomsky lecture. I hope Nashville is ready....
You're forgetting one thing: there is a difference between reality, and the stereotyped, idealised mythos that is sold via the mass media, whether it's movies, TV, or advertising -- or country music -- and how it appeals to the desires of people.
Probably the vast majority of country listeners since the 1970's have never set foot on a farm, unless it was a field trip in elementary school. Country music sells a sort of storybook, fantasy Americana, where people still live in rural areas and can go out and party in the woods on weekends. It sells an image. I doubt that image would ever include anything like Noam Chomsky lectures or promoting vegan lifestyles.
As for your list, even though much of it has some accuracy, it doesn't mean that the majority of young men prefer to have no car; that they prefer to work in a low wage job; and they would prefer a studio apartment over a split level ranch style house in the exurbs; or would would prefer a chihuahua over a different breed of dog. There's a difference between what they have, and what they may actually want. I think a lot of what is 'sold' via the themes in country music appeals to what the country fans want.
There may come a day where there is an openly gay performer selling big with songs about gay relationships. It's happened in pop, I suppose it could happen in country music also.