July 14, 2023

"On one hand, Luke Combs is an amazing artist, and it’s great to see that someone in country music is influenced by a Black queer woman — that’s really exciting."

"But at the same time, it’s hard to really lean into that excitement knowing that Tracy Chapman would not be celebrated in the industry without that kind of middleman being a White man."
[According to] Tanner Davenport, a Nashville native and co-director of the Black Opry: White country singers struck gold this past decade releasing songs heavily influenced by R&B and hip-hop, but few Black artists are even signed to major Nashville labels.... 
The immediate success of Combs’s “Fast Car,” Davenport said, “kind of just proves that when you put a White face on Black art, it seems to be consumed a lot easier.... This genre needs to expand their boardrooms and let marginalized people be in these rooms and make a bigger bet on these artists.”...

There are 2 very different issues here. 1. How is the country music genre defined and enforced (and to what extent does it exclude black artists who want to present themselves as within the country genre)? and 2. Should white artists cover songs that were originally written by/for black singers? 

[T]he song has always had a particular significance in the Black and LGBTQ+ communities, Davenport said; the Black Opry performed a group singalong of “Fast Car” when it closed out its first show. (Chapman does not discuss her personal life, but writer Alice Walker has disclosed their relationship, which occurred in the 1990s.) “I think the song in general is pretty reflective for a lot of people who do identify as queer, and also for a person of color — the song almost seems like an anthem for us,” Davenport said. “It’s been pretty monumental in our lives, and I think it made us feel like we weren’t alone.”

So, actually, there are 4 issues here. Take the 2 spelled out above and replace "black" with "LGBTQ+."

Another issue is that there's a big difference between covering a new hit by a black/LGBTQ+ artist and covering an old song like "Fast Car." Tracy Chapman had her big hit 35 years ago. It is vastly in her interest for another artist to have a big hit covering it today. To convince straight white people not to cover the songs of songwriters who are not straight and white is to restrict the income of black/LGBTQ+ songwriters.

The author of the article, Emily Yahr, quotes an English professor who declares that "Fast Car," with its dream of driving a car away from painful circumstances, appeals to a wide audience:

Francesca Royster, author of “Black Country Music: Listening for Revolutions” and an English professor at DePaul University, said the song’s story of the narrator feeling trapped and trying to escape is “a really American iconography” about cars holding the promise of freedom. “This is something country music is very invested in, too: invested in, too: the American dream of reinvention and finding happiness after a life of struggle,” Royster said....

And yet: 

... as someone who lived in Oakland, Calif., when “Fast Car” came out and saw how it connected to the queer community, she said, it’s difficult to see the success of Combs’s cover knowing that country music, with its historic emphasis on “tradition,” has generally shied away from highlighting LGBTQ+ artists and their stories — which is all part of the complexity of the current life of the song.

But there's nothing LGBTQ+ about the lyrics of that song. That's why the article has to say "part of the complexity of the current life of the song." Some people who like the original recording have a personal bond with it that connects it to things that drop out of the picture when it's sung by a straight white man. But the song stands apart from the original recording and from the artist most closely associated with it. A great song deserves multiple versions and it would be horribly unfair if black/LGBTQ+ songwriters were put in a separate category and protected from covers. 


CORRECTION: In the first draft of this post, I wrote that the song is "clearly about a woman dissatisfied with a no-good man, just like so many country songs." It was only listening to the Combs version that I realized that "my old man" refers to the singer's father. I noticed that Combs hadn't changed the lyrics to fit the heterosexual man's point of view and wondered whether he was just, as some singers do, adopting the voice of the opposite sex. That seemed interesting, and I paid more attention to the lyrics of Verse 3:
See, my old man's got a problem
He lives with a bottle, that's the way it is
He says his body's too old for working
His body's too young to look like his

At this point, I'm convinced I'm hearing about a sexual relationship. The singer, originally a woman, is unhappy with the man who won't work and doesn't even look good anymore. But then there's this: 

When mama went off and left him
She wanted more from life than he could give
I said, "Somebody's gotta take care of him"
So I quit school and that's what I did

Oh, it's dad. Deadbeat dad. Bleh. Sure. Leave him. I always thought she was leaving an inadequate sex partner. "My old man"... in my head, those words resonate with Joni Mitchell: 


That's not about daddy. 

98 comments:

Jake said...

A History of Rock Music in 501 songs.

Temujin said...

Stop the madness. So much whining. So much victimhood. It's become so tedious, so predictable.

Every culture takes bits from another culture. Every one. This has gone on all over the world forever. It will continue to go on all over the world- forever. Foods, songs/music, words, ideas, clothing, architecture. We see, we like, we emulate or use. It's a form of compliment. It's saying- I love what you did so much, I want to try it.

But...whine. Scream that 'it's mine' and demand permission and attribution. Go ahead. People will stop looking to you for anything.

Just stop the madness already. Get on with your lives.

Strick said...

I've always understood the song from Chapman's point of view. That never stopped me from feeling it pretty well covered my life story growing up in West Texas.

If Johnny Cash can cover Hurt (and pretty much own the song at this point) or Willie Nelson Stardust, surely there's nothing wrong with this.

Not to mention Coltrane's Favorite Things for a door that swings both ways. There are only two kinds of music as the saying goes.

Hugh said...

Great song, but nothing in it implies a same sex relationship. The last stanza strongly implies a ne’er-do-well in the relationship that sounds like the complaints of a woman about her man, “Stay out drinking late at the bar, see more of your friends than you do of your kids” Of course same sex partners can have kids, especially these days, but 30+ years ago that would have been super rare. And lesbians (can I still say that?—it is the L Word in the ever-expanding LGBTQ+xyz) can stay out late at the bar too.

Gahrie said...

Cultural appropriation is a bullshit idea designed to bolster claims of victimization and exert power over others.

Why is it only Straight white people who are ever guilty of cultural appreciation? See above.

Strick said...

Sorry to have a second post, but I have to add this. Doesn't this demonstrate the essence of great art? That it becomes personal, that everyone can see (or hear) what they need to in it?

boatbuilder said...

Charley Pride and Darius Rucker, Eminem to the contrary, music is cultural and cultures are tribal.

Also, didn't Elvis cover some R&B and Blues stuff?

This Black Opry thing seems to want to have it's cake and eat it too. Another corporate shakedown?

Tom T. said...

It's a song about bad choices; that's country music all over.

I suspect that this article is just meant to draw in publicity for Chapman. I question how relevant her song still is to the queer community after 35 years, particularly since there's nothing in the lyrics that marks it as such. This article may be intended as a signal to younger LGB people that they're supposed to go out and buy Chapman's version.

iowan2 said...

Strick hits all the right notes.

Artists have been covering different songs forever. Some are way better, some sound "off" musically.
As Gahrie explains:
Cultural appropriation is a bullshit idea designed to bolster claims of victimization and exert power over others.

Breezy said...

The point of this article is division. Blech. I have loved this song since it first came out - her voice, her storytelling. It’s a perfect country vibe and I’m happy Combs picked up on that even decades later. It’s great to hear songs in different voices and arrangements. Why not write about that?

re Pete said...

"Black Rider Black Rider hold it right there

The size of your cock will get you nowhere"

rhhardin said...

It strikes me as bad art but I must have a very different ear for music. Joni Mitchell is okay but that's a noodling around song, musically.

rehajm said...

Oh boo hoo. The most boring artist lament- I put my shit out there and now I don’t have complete control over who listens and how and when. Artists can be forgiven for economic illiteracy but join the club. You aren’t a special flower because you sing pretty…

…and people who like jazz are the worst. I recall the fight Ken Burns had with black fans who lectured him because he isn’t black and can’t understand…I didn’t have to interview Lincoln to talk about the civil war

rehajm said...

I suspect this isn’t the place Ann wants it to be either but again, you put something out and people are gonna do what they want with it. Ever heard of free will? If you don’t like what people are doing with what you’re doing the problem is with you not them…

rehajm said...

I invite Chapman to come to my community and see the Nashville wash outs getting a few bucks for singing poolside to four kids screaming Marco? Polo!!!

Big Mike said...

There are 2 very different issues here. 1. How is the country music genre defined and enforced (and to what extent does it exclude black artists who want to present themselves as within the country genre)?

@Althouse, I guess you’ve never heard of Charley Pride or Darius Rucker.

and 2. Should white artists cover songs that were originally written by/for black singers?

Seems to me that if Ray Charles and Tina Turner can cover country songs written and originally sung by white artists then fairness demands that the reverse be allowed too, right?

rehajm said...

Did you know there’s a list of A level artists you can pay to come sing at your wife’s birthday party or your kids bat mitzvah? I think we paid for Josh Groban and Jimmy Buffett. I haven’t seen the list in a few years but I’d wager Chapman isn’t on it…

Mr Wibble said...

The last stanza strongly implies a ne’er-do-well in the relationship that sounds like the complaints of a woman about her man, “Stay out drinking late at the bar, see more of your friends than you do of your kids”

Yup. Plus, the whole "I had to take care of my old man" implies that her partner is just like her father, which would suggest another man.

Curious George said...

Sometimes covers are so good that the artists take ownership of the song...an example is "I Will Always Love You" by Whitney Houston. I like the Dolly Parton version better but most people associate Houston with it now.

Combs’s “Fast Car" is not one one of these times. It pales to the original. That said all this should he, is it right bullshit is tiresome.

Jimmy said...

Some of the most pampered and protected people in history invent new problems. The same people who cheered while statues are removed, cheered when thousands of years of Art and History are discarded as racist.
They have produced a culture that is empty and ugly. Buildings that glorify brutalism, and art that celebrates nothing of value.
People with no meaning, values, or purpose-pretend to be victims-
Eliminating everything that they deem racist- erases people, history and culture.
Every time I read these boiler plate predictable grievances, I am reminded of this quote.
"History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right."
It is so irritating to listen to professional victims whine like spoiled children.

Jamie said...

The immediate success of Combs’s “Fast Car,” Davenport said, “kind of just proves that when you put a White face on Black art, it seems to be consumed a lot easier....

What the...? The original got to #6 on the Hot 100. Stop trying to make fetch happen.

Kate said...

Tracy Chapman, as far as I can tell, is a one-hit wonder. Has she been writing and recording? I listened to "Fast Car" as much as anyone back in the day. I've never included it in one of my current playlists.

However, give me Cocteau Twins from the same era, and I'm there forever. A Chinese artist has remade some of their songs, and the versions are fabulous. Be grateful if your songwriting speaks to another artist.

tommyesq said...

Oh boo hoo. The most boring artist lament- I put my shit out there and now I don’t have complete control over who listens and how and when.

It is worse than that - the woman complaining here didn't "put her shit out there," she merely sang someone else's (non-country) song at a show one time!

farmgirl said...

I bought the Tracy Chapman cassette to celebrate her voice- in so doing, I celebrated her.
Same thing Luke Combs is doing. He loved the song and he didn’t make it his own- he’s celebrating her through himself.

Geez- isn’t that a human thing?
Can’t we lift e/other up?

Dogma and Pony Show said...

These advocates of cultural apartheid are never going to win. Even people within the performing arts tend to reject the idea that certain songs, roles, etc. "belong" to a particular demographic group. It's really tedious how the NYT and other would-be social reformers keep wringing their hands over something that probably 90% of the country considers a non-issue. Give it a rest.

Mea Sententia said...

The fast car belongs to a man she meets. He pays attention to her, and she feels loved. She hopes the fast car will take her away from her bad father, whom her mother had left. Years later, this man she’s with has become a bad father himself, ignoring their children and not supporting them, and she hopes his fast car will take him away from them and leave them in peace. That’s how I read the lyrics. A song about bad fathers.

NKP said...

I got your two issues right here...

How is the Rock genre defined and enforced (Not much, if you look at the roster of the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame)? Plus, who gives a rat's ass?

Should white artists cover songs that were originally written by/for black singers? That hardly sounds inclusive. Actually, it sounds like you're entitled to a bunch of mine but I'm to keep my straight white hands off of yours.

I see government $$$ support for black and homosexual song writers coming. Royalty income goes way down if you limit exposure to your art/product. Hell, everybody knows that's unfair.

Just "Shut up and sing".

Barry Dauphin said...

I thought music was supposed to bring people together. Saw it on a Coke commercial.

Birches said...

I know Tracy Chapman is a lesbian, but Fast Car always seemed like it was about a man. I mean it's a really unhealthy relationship and all gays and lesbians have perfect relationships we're led to believe.

Big Mike said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
rwnutjob said...

Luke Combs is fat and ugly & would have never been signed by a label singing in bars in Boone, NC without his poetry in music. did it in spite of traditions. Huge star & apparently is the same guy from Boone in real life. A decent human being so he must be trashed.
Race, race, race
We won't have healing until we stop talking about fucking race.

Patrick said...

My recollection is that Chapman was celebrated when the song came out - rightfully so because it is a terrific and compelling song. I despise the effort to restrict our even dissuade other artists from covering others - maybe especially when the ostensible reason is racial. I was unaware of any LBGT implications to the song and did not know Chapman is gay.

Do people really believe that is bad for a white artist to provide additional exposure to a great song by a black gay artist? I guess it's the same people who grouse about white people playing blues music. I find those people ridiculous.

robother said...

A great song, capturing the American belief in a fresh start, a clean getaway, the exhilaration of young love and fast cars. And the disillusionment that comes with the realization that we carry the very (genetic? karmic?) seeds of self-destruction that we thought we were escaping in leaving home.

gilbar said...

let's get down to Brass Tacks..
Tracy Chapman was a one hit wonder... Why?
Because when people saw her, they Didn't see a black lesbian.. They saw a FAT, UGLY black lesbian.
If she'd WANTED to make it BIG, in the Music industry.. She Should have LOOKED better.
Music is ALL ABOUT LOOKS. Think i'm kidding? OPEN YOUR F*CKING EYES!!

tim in vermont said...

Tracy Chapman was popular maybe more among white people than black. I still have that CD, but nowhere to play it. It was a huge hit. I just don’t get it.

guitar joe said...

The consensus in the comments on WaPo indicate that most people think the writer is full of crap.

Heartless Aztec said...

The Combs residuals for Chapman will be amazing. It reminds me of Smokey Robinson upon hearing on 1964 that The Beatles had covered "You Really Got a Hold on Me" for their second album With/Meet the Beatles. Paraphrased quote: "What did these white boys from England know about our music? Then I got that first so writers royalty check."

tim in vermont said...

The only whole album by Chapman was good, BTW, so calling her a “one hit wonder,” maybe strengthens her point rather than weakening it.

Brian McKim and/or Traci Skene said...

This post reminds me that "difficult" conversations aren't. And most "thorny questions" are thorny only in the minds of those who seek power, money and clicks.

Chapman's accountant and business manager aren't aware of any difficult conversations other than how best to handle the influx of income so as to pay the least amount of money to Uncle Sam. Everything else is just social justice pilot fish bullshit.

Kevin said...

Shorter article: Chapman was much happier not receiving the additional royalties.

mikeski said...

Tracy Chapman, as far as I can tell, is a one-hit wonder.

Ack-shully, "Give Me One Reason" is her biggest US hit.

Charlie said...

Tracy Chapman is going to be able to buy a huge new home (or several) with the money she's going to make off this.

Spare me the whining.

Michael Fitzgerald said...

“kind of just proves that when you put a White face on Black art, it seems to be consumed a lot easier...."
Because no one ever heard Fast Car until the white guy recorded it... Oh wait, no, akshually it topped the charts when Chapman cut the song in the 90's, and her recording of it has been a staple of radio and muzak play in the three decades since... So, racism!!!11!!!!11!!!

Ann Althouse said...

I haven’t seen Chapman complaining. Theses thinkers are obtruding themselves. I’m assuming Chapman is pleased with the new recording’s success.

Ann Althouse said...

“ The fast car belongs to a man she meets. He pays attention to her, and she feels loved. She hopes the fast car will take her away from her bad father, whom her mother had left. Years later, this man she’s with has become a bad father himself, ignoring their children and not supporting them, and she hopes his fast car will take him away from them and leave them in peace. That’s how I read the lyrics. A song about bad fathers.”

Thanks. I didn’t keep reading the lyrics and have always found the words hard to hear.

I like the time lapse and story arc. Reminds me of Cat’s in the Cradle. Bad father.

Lloyd W. Robertson said...

Jews and blacks in the music industry in New York. Jews who had song-writing chops, and access to venues for performance, inspired by the sexiness and youth of black music (church, soul, street, to some extent jazz and ragtime) wanted to channel songs inspired by that music to suburban teens--the gold mine. To some extent they worked with black artists, discovered or developed them. Going back a ways, Harold Arlen wrote musicals with black performers in mind, and arranged performances in Harlem. Pat Boone, whitest of white boys, covered Little Richard songs. Richard had foolishly signed some contracts that were a rip-off, but Boone didn't rip him off. As Boone said, Richard got a lot of record sales from white kids discovering his songs, and wanting the authentic version. Instead of saying: still way too much racism, one could say: opportunities created for blacks that otherwise wouldn't have existed.

Hank Williams learned guitar and a few songs from a black guy named Rufus Payne. Rufus, for example, had actually spent time "down on the Bayou"; Hank got a hit about it before he had been there. Rufus in Alabama was restricted to busking on the street; Hank could get them both into some of the performing venues of the day.

On the other hand, Keith Richards was asked to put together some kind of show honoring Chuck Berry, and he was happy to do it. Early on in the planning, he asked Chuck whatever happened to one of his original bandmates, Johnnie Johnson, someone whom many people think should have been credited as co-writer on some songs. Berry had sort of lost track of him; I think he was driving a bus. Johnson got a new launch to his career, partly thanks to Richards.

Dude1394 said...

It never stops, treat me like a child.

M said...

Fast Car was a big hit 35 years ago. I don’t follow pop music and even I knew about it. So 35 years ago nobody cared that the singer was black and gay. Gay, not “queer” which now just means doesn’t want to identify as vanilla straight and so identifies with an extremely powerful “out” group for status points.

35 years ago most POC could get along in the USA with little hassle from whites. It was other POC who were a danger to them both physically and status wise. Really the same with gays as far as physical harm. The only real problem gays had from whites were teenage boys pretending to be gay and then rolling the nasty old pervs for their wallets in the back alley they thought they were going to do disgusting things to them in. Yeah, not feeling bad for them anymore than a straight guy getting rolled for his wallet after following an underaged girl into an alley.

Randomizer said...

I liked Fast Car when Tracy Chapman put it out. I can't believe that was 35 years ago. I never cared that Tracy Chapman was queer or black, so I guess that makes me a homophobic racist.

Punishing White people has to stop. Anybody can listen to whatever music they want, cover whatever songs they want or make more money licensing their song to someone else.

Marc said...

The crossover between Black folk traditions and country music has a long history. Fast Car is beautiful, and is decidedly longer than an ordinary pop or country song. Like a lot of folk music, and like much of Dylan's writing, it earns its length with its storytelling, memorable refrain, and its space for individual vocal color.

I think this particularly successful crossover highlights the validity of the class vs race discussion today. At the same time I think this particular complaint highlights the pointlessness of the eternal victim/oppressor frame. It's possible to acknowledge the historical exploitation of Black musicians and at the same time laugh at this particular criticism.

[Also relevant is this podcast from Malcolm Gladwell about the specificity of country/folk and hip-hop: http://revisionisthistory.com/episodes/16-the-king-of-tears.]

Wilbur said...

Charlie Pride, Stoney Edwards, hell, even the Pointer Sisters were country.

Darius Rucker is not. You may like him, and that's fine, but he ain't country.

I quit listening to country music on the radio 30 years ago, when the Garth Brooks of the world took over. It's only gotten worse since.

rehajm said...

I haven’t seen Chapman complaining. Theses thinkers are obtruding themselves. I’m assuming Chapman is pleased with the new recording’s success.

We have a winner- ”I never expected to find myself on the country charts, but I’m honored to be there,“ she told Billboard.

That's a great attitude for an artist- be humble then stifle, Edith...

Bob Boyd said...

I...wondered whether he was just, as some singers do, adopting the voice of the opposite sex.

I think you're right because he sings:

"You still ain't got a job
And I work in a market as a checkout girl"

Either that or he's being cruelly misgendered.

Anthony said...

I'll just throw myself out there as not particularly liking the original. It just bores me. I wouldn't turn the dial (well, okay, maybe I would), but wouldn't actually choose to listen to it either.

Covers can be awesome. You'd probably find a few people who would prefer the original "You really got me" by the Kinks, but most think Van Halen's version is the definitive one.

I also wonder how many young people don't even know lots of these are covers. Probably not a lot.

MadisonMan said...

Now do Dolly Parton's I will always love you. I doubt she complained when Whitney re-did it. Did Donna Summer complain about Kris Allen's take on She works hard for the money?
Holly G and the Post are demonstrating their myopia.

MadisonMan said...

...and let me add: 35 years ago. SMDH.

Heartless Aztec said...

As of two days ago: According to Billboard's estimation, Combs' rendition of the song has generated a minimum of $500,000 in global publishing royalties. The majority of these royalties go directly to Chapman, as she owns both the writers' and publisher's share of the song.

RigelDog said...

I always thought the song chronicles a young woman who finds herself supporting a drunken depressed father whom she feels guilted into staying with. Then she meets another man who promises to take her away from all that in his "fast car." By the end of the song, she is again stuck in a going-nowhere relationship with a user.

I liked the song where it captures that freedom and feelings you get when you are driving in a car, especially a fast one.

But I absolutely HATED the rest of it because it was nothing but a downer. I kept thinking, you are a hard worker who seems to have no problem getting a job, why don't you make something of your life instead of tying yourself down with a loser? There's a strong implication in the song that her situation is hopeless and that's just the way it is in America for unskilled workers.

lonejustice said...

I still have her debut album on CD. I've always loved it. I also still have a CD player, and a Sony Discman, so yes, you can call me old.

Mark said...

One "hit" wonder Tracy Chapman was over-hyped the first time around. Why anyone would want to cover her song is the real question.

actual items said...

Mea Sententia has the gist of the song correct:

“The fast car belongs to a man she meets. He pays attention to her, and she feels loved. She hopes the fast car will take her away from her bad father, whom her mother had left. Years later, this man she’s with has become a bad father himself, ignoring their children and not supporting them, and she hopes his fast car will take him away from them and leave them in peace. That’s how I read the lyrics. A song about bad fathers.”

And I’m glad to see Ann getting on board:

“Thanks. I didn’t keep reading the lyrics and have always found the words hard to hear.

I like the time lapse and story arc.”

But I can’t believe you both are missing one big piece.

I was 9 or 10 when the song was popular, wasn’t my genre at the time, I wasn’t in the demo. A decade or so later, the girl I was dating (now my wife) liked that song. She got me into that album. I became a fan (of that particular album at least, Chapman had a minor hit when I was in high school, “Give Me One Reason,” that I still have never liked).

One night in college, listening to “Fast Car,” I joked to my girlfriend (now wife), “if they were so broke, why didn’t they sell the car?” She shot me a dumbfounded glance and asked, “are you serious?” Then without her explaining any further, it dawned on me. There was never any fast car. It’s a metaphor for sex (or love or attention or whatever). Being with him was like being in a fast car.

Anyway, I’m not a big country music fan and was only loosely aware of Luke Combs previously, but my wife and I both heard his version last week for the first time and both liked it.

Mal said...

As Tony Soprano would say, "why don't we call this what it is - a shake down."

https://youtu.be/AbkJ7O0F_sk?t=125

Jupiter said...

"There are 2 very different issues here."

Actually, there is nothing here except more whining from people with no useful skills.

Jupiter said...

"Of course same sex partners can have kids ..."

You know, I think we have finally found a form of "cultural appropriation" that really is a problem. People should not be allowed to purchase other people's children as lifestyle accessories.

Jamie said...

There's a strong implication in the song that her situation is hopeless and that's just the way it is in America for unskilled workers.

The way I always took it was that she thought she was a victim of these worthless men, first her father and then her boyfriend, but in fact she was a victim of her own mentality. She continued to see a man as her escape from her hard life, even while she was, herself, taking the actions that could get her out.

In essence, I saw it as "Wake up! You can be the hero of your own story" song - though the narrator never actually gets there.

As far as fast cars as American symbols of escape go, I prefer Thunder Road, even though in the end it only sounds more hopeful - there's nothing in there to indicate that the Thunder Road couple is actually going to win, just that they're pulling out of here to do so.

And as far as LGBTQ anthems go, stick with I Will Survive (though, sorry, you can't keep people in terrible relationships from owning that one too). It makes a lot more sense as an anthem - claiming your power and staying yourself, rather than desperately trying to run away from your life. Unless the LGBTQ community wants to be identified as a bunch a snowflakes.

And the Cake cover is almost as good as the Gloria Gaynor original, IMO.

Free Manure While You Wait! said...

"Said Holly G, "founder of the Black Opry, an organization for Black country music singers and fans,""

Charlie Pride didn't need no "Black Opry". He was great enough to headline the real one.

The drive for Separate and Unequal continues apace.

Krumhorn said...

We have a winner- ”I never expected to find myself on the country charts, but I’m honored to be there,“ she told Billboard.

That's a great attitude for an artist- be humble then stifle, Edith...


Not to mention the mechanical royalties and public performance royalties being paid 50% to the music publisher and 50% to the songwriter for a song written over 30 years ago due to Combs.

I'm now appreciating the victimhood of all those classical composers like Bach, Rachmaninoff, Beethoven, Pachebel, Mozart, Chopin and Brukner whose work was introduced to new listeners by the likes of Celine Dion, Billy Joel, and Barry Manilow. Of course, they were Western Civilization white men (whose estates are not paid royalties for their public domain works)....so fuck 'em if they can't take a joke.

- Krumhorn

Pillage Idiot said...

"Tracy, your songs suck. I would never cover one of them." -- Response: You bigot!

"Tracy, your songs are awesome. I am going to cover one of them." -- Response: You bigot!

The only way to play the game is to tell the ACTUAL bigots to FO.

Gahrie said...

You'd probably find a few people who would prefer the original "You really got me" by the Kinks, but most think Van Halen's version is the definitive one.

I like both, but my favorite version is the one by Oingo Boingo.

Oingo Boingo

Van Halen

The Kinks





farmgirl said...

Heard the song yet, Mark?
It’s worth it.

Gahrie said...

I haven’t seen Chapman complaining. Theses thinkers are obtruding themselves. I’m assuming Chapman is pleased with the new recording’s success.

Trent Reznor loves Johnny Cash's version of Hurt. (Country version of a Grunge song)

Dolly Parton loves Whitney Houston's version of "I Will Always Love You" (R&B version of a country song)

Free Manure While You Wait! said...

"Rufus, for example, had actually spent time "down on the Bayou"; Hank got a hit about it before he had been there."

When Jack Norworth wrote "Take Me out to the Ballgame" he had yet to attend one.

H said...

If a person wanted to make a serious case for diversity, they would look at examples from music. I'll begin to consider these arguments about "x people shouldn't do y music" when someone explains why "black people should not perform opera and other classical music". You notice the only x's in x people shouldn't do y music are x's that are white heterosexuals. I guess the other groups believe that they cannot stand the competition from the superior white heterosexual. /s

mccullough said...

Chapman now has over 11 million Spotify listeners.

This cover is shit, like most country music, but it boosts her income.

Blame women if Chapman isn’t more popular.

Old and slow said...

The fat guy does a pretty good job. The song suits him.

JaimeRoberto said...

The theme of the song is similar to about a dozen Springsteen songs. I had no idea he was such a gay icon. Must be the tight jeans.

Rocco said...

Wilbur said...
"I quit listening to country music on the radio 30 years ago, when the Garth Brooks of the world took over. It's only gotten worse since."

You really don't want to know about Country Rap.

Rocco said...

Anthony said...
"Covers can be awesome. You'd probably find a few people who would prefer the original 'You really got me' by the Kinks, but most think Van Halen's version is the definitive one."

As a fan of both bands, I like both versions, and think each captures the spirit of the respective band.

"I also wonder how many young people don't even know lots of these are covers. Probably not a lot."

YouTube has a bunch of "Bet You Didn't Know They Were Remakes" videos. A lot of times the original was a hit; but a lot of times the original was obscure, too.

Clyde said...

In my family, my brothers and I called my father "The Old Man" all the way back when he was in his 30s. We're all far older than that now (Dad's 85).

Gahrie said...

And as far as LGBTQ anthems go,

If we're going to talk about anthems, what ever happened to...

Clyde said...

Also, you didn't have to be black or LGBT back in 1988 to hear and appreciate Tracy Chapman's music. If you made good music, people of all types would listen to you back in those days before everything was sliced and diced and segregated by identity politics. I liked those days better.

Real American said...

This article just cuts right to the problem that identity politics creates unnecessarily to divide people. Why can't we just enjoy a fucking song for what it is without having to get into the color, sex and preferences of the artists, especially in a case where that's not what the song is about? It's a classic song with a broadly relatable theme, it's not a song only for black lesbians.

It's amazing how no one has any racial grievance until some Wokie comes along and starts inserting "broader context" into it, which is amazingly usually quite limited to the race/sex obsession of the Wokie who's too fucking dumb to think beyond these shallow attributes.

boatbuilder said...

Would it be inappropriate to suggest that Chapman borrowed the main riff in the song from John Cougar Mellencamp's "Jack and Diane," which is what I hear when I hear Coombs' version? (I don't really like either song).

Leora said...

Maybe "Fast Car" is just a good song. They seem to have less of them these days than they used to.

Marcus Bressler said...

I believe that not only did Paul McCartney like Joe Cocker's covers of his (the Beatles') songs, but he thought that Joe did a better job with them.

I liked "Fast Car" but man it was depressing.

MarcusB. THEOLDMAN
(I've had three fast cars" 67 Mustang, 68 Pontiac Firebird 400 cu in, and a 69 'Vette. Only me and my friends, all male, were impressed by them)

Mikey NTH said...

Perhaps just enjoy the music you like and ignore the professional gripers and groaners. Why give them power over you?

Iman said...

🎼 Last night the Afro let me down…🎼

Iman said...

“Muh best cow died today
I loved her in a special way”

—- Li’l Chubb the Wrangler

Iman said...

“I quit listening to country music on the radio 30 years ago, when the Garth Brooks of the world took over. It's only gotten worse since.”

Wilbur @9:59am, oh Hell yes!

Chris Daley said...

Are we still having this debate about cultural appropriation?

Can’t we admit that great music is great music? Frankly this should have been buried by Ray Charles “Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music” back in 1962.

donald said...

“On one hand, Luke Combs is an amazing artist”. Tell me you don’t know jack shot about country music without saying you don’t know anything about country music. This woman is a garden variety bigot. Nothing more, nothing less.

Another old lawyer said...

In 1988 I was not black, not a lesbian, and not a woman. (Though I can apparently be maybe all 3 today, but at least 2.) I bought Chapman's CD on the strength of Fast Cars, back when a CD cost $15-20, around $40 today, and I bought rarely CDs. I had no thought at the time that Chapman was a lesbian, nor would I have cared to know or cared if I had known. The lyrics in Fast Car conveyed feelings of despair and hopelessness that are pretty universal even though individual circumstances obviously vary.

As to the complaint here, I was reminded of Lionel Richie and his song Lady. Written by him, he pitched it to his then-group The Commodores and wad rejected. He then offered it to Kenny Rogers - a white country singer - who recorded it to great success. I guess taking the position of Holly G, that never should have happened, and Lionel, Kenny, and the people who enjoyed and bought Lady would all have been poorer. But racial and sexual preference purity! I guess.

donald said...

There’s all kinds of great country music. Listen to “For Free” by The Pine Box Dwellers. Seriously. It’s one of the prettiest songs you’ll ever hear.

Tina Trent said...

Next up, dead Faulkner wants his royalties from Toni Morrison.

D.D. Driver said...

In what timeline was Tracy Chapman's Fast Car not a massive radio hit? So bizarre to denigrate Chapman's success that way. The premise is just bullshit.

lonejustice said...

"Fast Car" may have been her biggest hit, but the one that drew me to her and kept me listening was "Telling Stories."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wapCTd5fS2Y

lonejustice said...

"Sometimes a lie is the best thing."

Jon Burack said...

Temujin and others have well summed up the idiocy of all this nonsense about cultural appropriation. I think one way to see it is to go way, way back. When, say, Jelly Roll Morton began playing piano in New Orleans brothels was he playing an African instrument? When the Fisk Jubilee Singers started out was it some African religion they were giving their hearts and souls to? When country music picked up the banjo, was that a crime against Africa, where the instrument came from? I also fail to see why this Fast Car song itself is such a big deal. It doesn't move me much at all. I guess it must be because of my skin color. You know, for instance, I like Hank Williams ("Hey, Good Lookin') or his son's terrific "Family Tradition." Of course, when it comes to opera, I'll take Marian Anderson over some Italian guy. But that's just me.