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Jilly_in_VA

(10,844 posts)
Sun Aug 22, 2021, 03:15 PM Aug 2021

Explaining George Jones, a 'Haunted House of a Human Being' [View all]

When I was growing up in the ’90s, whenever I heard people claim to like all kinds of music, they tended to qualify it with “except for country and rap.” Other than sounding dumb and more than a little prejudicial, this was a superficial gloss of two genres that have plenty in common, as Ice-T once pointed out. They’ve both become solidly mainstream, but casual listeners often neglect the music’s intricate social, aesthetic, and political histories. As a music nerd, I must admit that I was a country music dilettante, a mostly Hank-and-Cash fan, until only recently.

Tyler Mahan Coe, son of the outlaw country singer David Allen Coe and half of the duo behind the fun podcast Your Favorite Band Sucks, is working to set the record straight. His celebrated podcast Cocaine and Rhinestones engagingly distinguishes between country music’s fact and fiction. C & R’s first season offered deep dives into the life and work of some of country music’s crucial but perhaps less widely known figures: Spade Cooley, The Louvin Brothers, Ralph Mooney, and others. As Coe explains, “I’ve been hearing these stories all my life. As far as I can tell, this is the truth about this one.”

As with many genres, country often suffers from the distorted projections and misapprehensions coming from both within and outside the community about what’s “real” country and what isn’t. Coe passionately defends his subjects against accusations of inauthenticity or reactionary posturing. There are also vivid, informed, and occasionally harrowing tales about what went on behind closed doors. It’s a crash course that subtly encourages the listener to explore further. And it works—I might not be theologically on board with the sentiment of the Louvin’s Satan is Real record, yet it still gives me the existential shivers every time.

Season two brings the listener into the world of George Jones, aka Old Possum, aka No-Show Jones. Jones’s turbulent life and wrenching songs—give “The Grand Tour” or “A Good Year for the Roses” or “The Window Up Above” a spin to find out why he’s so revered—are already pretty much canonical. But that only means that he can be an entry point into so much else.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/explaining-george-jones-a-haunted-house-of-a-human-being?ref=home
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I may have to investigate the podcast, because 35 years in E. TN meant being pretty familiar with two distinct strains of country music---what I heard on radio and TV, and what ai heard from local musicians, many of them older folks but some young

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It's a good podcast. luvs2sing Aug 2021 #1
Thanks for the rec Jilly_in_VA Aug 2021 #2
East Tennessee and East Kentucky-- lots of great musicians viva la Aug 2021 #3
The older country is fine Casady1 Aug 2021 #4
My israeli friend Jilly_in_VA Aug 2021 #5
Gregg Allman's Casady1 Aug 2021 #6
Okay boomer AZSkiffyGeek Aug 2021 #7
As I said to the other person Casady1 Aug 2021 #13
This message was self-deleted by its author AZSkiffyGeek Aug 2021 #15
Probably not Gregg's finest moment. luvs2sing Aug 2021 #9
I think he is right on about music Casady1 Aug 2021 #11
Actually, yes, I have. n/t luvs2sing Aug 2021 #12
do you think that person Casady1 Aug 2021 #14
So only people who can sing Begin the Beguine are real singers? AZSkiffyGeek Aug 2021 #18
I simply don't Casady1 Aug 2021 #20
Why does rap music sound so angry? underpants Aug 2021 #8
As the author points out, Country was the great draw of talent. There was no other language underpants Aug 2021 #10
Blues was a staple Casady1 Aug 2021 #16
But could he play drums on guitar hero? AZSkiffyGeek Aug 2021 #17
That is not what I said Casady1 Aug 2021 #19
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