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CMAs and the End of Genre or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Kid Rock
Old 12-09-2008   #1 (permalink)
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CMAs and the End of Genre or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Kid Rock

CMAs and the End of Genre or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Kid Rock < Columns | PopMatters

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CMAs and the End of Genre or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Kid Rock
Pickin' Down the Line
[9 December 2008]

Among the wonderful and terrifying things about massive awards shows is their ability to contain contradictions and present the viewer with surprises that call more for puzzling than rejoicing. Sometimes it takes the form of the rocket from the crypt, as with the appearance of Morris Day and the Time at this year’s Grammys. Sometimes it’s the all-star tribute, like Sting and Puffy getting together to admit how much they’d be missing Biggie Smalls. Occasionally, it’s the sworn-enemies team-up edition, like the unforgettable pairing of outspokenly homophobe Eminem and outspoken homo Elton John at the MTV Music Awards. And every so often, it’s a simple WTF juxtaposition, like Celine Dion following/trampling Elliott Smith at the Oscars.

This year’s Country Music Association Awards, held in November at the Sommet Center in downtown Nashville, were certainly no exception. The gala ran the gamut from teen-pop to flag-waving (actually, there was plenty of flag-waving) to the downright inexplicable. First awarded in 1967, the CMAs are administered by the Country Music Association, the organization that also oversees the Country Music Hall of Fame. The Country Music Association was founded in 1958 to promote country music as a distinct genre, one of the first genre-specific industry organizations of its kind.

According to its own vision statement, the CMA “is dedicated to bringing the poetry and emotion of Country Music to the world… We will take risks, embrace change, and always exceed the expectations of those we serve.” The Country Music Association Awards are the primary showcase for this mission, a chance for country to step out of the cable ghetto of Country Music Television and onto the main stage of network TV.

Traditionally broadcast from the Grand Ole Opry, this year’s awards were aired from the larger Sommet Center, an arena in downtown Nashville with seating capacity for 20,000 that has served as the show’s home since its one-year sojourn to Madison Square Garden in New York in 2005 at the behest of Mayor Mike Bloomberg. While the CMAs and NYC didn’t make for a permanent match, that broadcast did garner a daunting 36 million viewers, an all-time high for the show, while providing the country-music industry the opportunity for a different type of networking. In the week leading up to the 2005 CMAs, country stars popped up at high-end fashion and culture events across the city; even Project Runway underwent a country makeover.

This year’s show roped in an estimated 15.9 million viewers (about the same number of people who’ve bought copies of Shania Twain’s Come on Over, the best-selling country album according to SoundScan statistics, which only date back to 1991) and presented the world with a fractured vision of what country music looks like. Sure, the stalwarts were out in full force, with George Strait picking up enough statues to make him the biggest winner in CMA history, Alan Jackson turning in a solid performance, and Reba McEntire pairing up with Brooks & Dunn for an old-fashioned bar-room rocker, while a surprise visit from presenter Shania Twain, who’s been largely hidden away for the past four years, certainly made the CMAs feel familiar for long-time country fans.

Last year’s Best Male and Female vocalists and this year’s hosts, Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood, served as the shiny, cherubic faces of country-to-come with style and sufficient reverence to their elders, each taking home repeat wins in the top categories and ensuring their spots as next year’s hosts. Underwood provided arguably the show-defining moment, following an introduction by the widow of a soldier killed in Afghanistan with a devastating version of the war widow’s lament, “Just a Dream”. But more than anything, the CMAs seemed to be not just in a generational crisis, as young stars still finding their own outshone established acts, but an identity crisis, as the show scrambled to include a broad array of genres and left itself looking like the Grammys done up in boots.

Solid performances by American Idol alum Kellie Pickler and 18-year-old Taylor Swift, who took the Horizon Award for new artist last year and was garnering more press than any other performer coming into the awards with her top-selling sophomore album released earlier in the week, spotlighted country’s next generation but came off as not particularly country-sounding. Swift’s pro-marriage ballad was pure teen pop with a slight Southern accent, while Pickler’s whip-smart performance recalled equal parts Shania Twain and Britney Spears. You know, before Britney was sad and depressing.

But nothing underlined country’s generation gap as clearly as the Cyrus family. Standing next to Miley, his media empire of a daughter, Billy Ray looked like he’d stepped onto the stage directly from 1992, confused by the lights and sounds of country music 16 years after “Achy Breaky Heart”.

Filed under “rocket from the crypt” (or possibly “reunion addicts"), the Eagles were in attendance, performing the limpid “Too Busy Being Fabulous” in business suits, highlighting the style-over-substance California slickness that has so often managed to derail their country efforts. Brad Paisley introduced the band with a parable about remembering who dug the well you drank from. “These men dug the well,” Paisley affirmed. Unclear on which well Henley and company had dug, by the middle of the song, I found myself wishing they’d dig a few more holes and crawl into them.

And then there was the reggae.

You might not have caught it in Carrie Underwood’s quick introduction, but that sure enough was the remains of the Wailers backing up Kenny Chesney on a medley of “Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven” and Bob Marley’s hit “Three Little Birds”. Which would have won the best mash-up of the evening hands-down if it hadn’t been for Kid Rock’s “All Summer Long”, a surprisingly poignant hybrid of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” and Warren Zevon’s “Werewolves of London” (although the live version leaned heavily toward the former) which has become Rock’s first hit on the country charts, performed with rapper Lil Wayne possibly playing guitar alongside a gentleman who looked oddly like AC/DC’s Brian Johnson in a “Joe the Strummer” T-shirt.

Kid Rock’s performance was a wild clash of symbols, with Detroit-born Rock’s unabashedly white trash appropriation of urban style grafting onto Skynyrd’s oft-misunderstood call not just for Southern pride but a reevaluation of the stereotypes of Southern culture. With his oversized Titans jersey, Lil Wayne at his side, and huge American flags projected behind him, Rock seemed ecstatic to be part of country music, and the audience seemed thrilled to have him there.

The surprise performance of the evening came from, of all people, Darius Rucker, better known as Hootie and the Blowfish fame. Sounding more like straight country than any performer but, well, George Strait, Rucker’s “Don’t Think I Don’t Think About It” eschewed the polish and sheen of the rest of the awards and delivered the kind of heartfelt weeper that has defined country music for decades.

Of course, those decades are long gone and their departure leaves the question of what defines country now. While the CMA’s mission statement includes verbiage about providing a unifying vision for country music, ultimately, the CMA is a trade organization driven first and foremost by sales. And as with the music industry as a whole, the numbers don’t look good. But strangely, the sales of country albums are slumping less than other genres, due at least in part to a spirit of inclusiveness adopted by country music.

While Rucker’s label was quick to ask him to tone down the country in his new album, fearing it would hurt the album’s potential on the pop charts, the country-music industry seems more than happy to throw whatever sells into the mix, be it country’s close cousins in the rock sounds of the Eagles and Skynyrd or distant sonic relatives like the Wailers. Traditionalists have been crying the death of country music at least since Faith Hill dared to utilize the vocoder effect made popular on Cher’s comeback single “Believe”, but we might be seeing something bigger than the death of a genre.

In an age where every possible type of music is instantly available to new audiences, where American Idol prioritizes vocal prowess while tossing soul, R&B, pop, and country into the massive blender of Celebrity, and the number of listeners who staunchly self-identify as fans of one particular genre dwindle without new devotees to replace them, the country-music industry seems to have made an astute decision. When more kids are following MySpace phenom Taylor Swift to Country Music Television than are looking to CMT for their next Taylor Swift, it might simply be that the first genre to unify in order to protect and encourage its own financial interests back in 1958 is, 50 years later, the first to embrace the death of genre as a concept.

The folks holding trophies at the end of the night were certainly cut from the same piece of denim as the last decade worth of winners, and reinforced the fact that neo-traditionalism remains a fringe element in the country-music industry. But the performers and the crowd’s reaction to them pointed to a future country as the ultimate genre of inclusion, where the only thing necessary to be classified as country is a desire to join in and sing.
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Old 12-09-2008   #2 (permalink)
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Thank you, Cary, for posting !! What is going on with your Governor today ? Your governor got arrested !!! WOW .
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Old 12-09-2008   #3 (permalink)
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where the only thing necessary to be classified as country is a desire to join in and sing.

Or warble half heartedly in one case.
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Old 12-09-2008   #4 (permalink)
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So basically the bottom line is money and country has decided to open it's arms and accept all types of music to a great extent. Perhaps this means that country will no longer shun (awards wise) artists who call themselves country but release 'pop' music instead. Wonder if other 'country' artists will take this into consideration for their cd releases? Why not go for a piece of all the pies instead of just one? Will be interesting to see what happens next.
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Old 12-09-2008   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mirasa45A View Post
Thank you, Cary, for posting !! What is going on with your Governor today ? Your governor got arrested !!! WOW .
I know. Not a good day for the state. If convicted, this will make 2 governers in a row.
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Old 12-09-2008   #6 (permalink)
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Interesting article.
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Old 12-09-2008   #7 (permalink)
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Great article
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Old 12-09-2008   #8 (permalink)
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wow interesting!
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Old 12-09-2008   #9 (permalink)
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Have I missed the big picture here? Sing anything, anyway you want but call yourself country. No problem!

I don't like the idea.
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Old 12-09-2008   #10 (permalink)
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neat find!
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Old 12-09-2008   #11 (permalink)
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Great Article! Thanks for posting Cary!
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Old 12-09-2008   #12 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by robinannhunt View Post
Have I missed the big picture here? Sing anything, anyway you want but call yourself country. No problem!

I don't like the idea.
Me neither, that's for sure.
It's not worth the extra money you may make if you have to sacrifice the country music genre in the process.
A thoroughly interesting take on the CMAs, though.
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Old 12-09-2008   #13 (permalink)
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This whole thing about the end of the country genre has been going on forever. Yes, the CMAs may highlight the fringe elements disproportionately to pull in viewers in the performances. However the awards themselves generally went to the country genres core element. And outside the awards show, the core of the country genre is still dominant. There will always be things that people see as threatening the country genre, but they always seem to turn into shot-term fads.

The amusing thing I see in this article is that a few years ago, there were many people that identified Carrie as too pop and meybe saw her as part of the threat to the country genre. And now she seems to be viewed more and more as part of that core element that I mentioned.
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Old 12-09-2008   #14 (permalink)
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kid rock, jess simpson and jewell please see the door and exit country music you posers.
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Old 12-09-2008   #15 (permalink)
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I agree Cary. They are only going to allow a few in their club even though they will welcome many into the genre. Carrie has been the only one in the newer acts to be asked to join the Grand of Opry, won FVOTY three times, etc. Shows that Carrie has been accepted into the core country establishment (i.e. her country peers) even though w/ some flack/resistance from people outside that core.
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Old 12-10-2008   #16 (permalink)
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Wow! That is an outstanding review of Carrie as a country artist. Very interesting analysis of the future of country music. I still prefer Carrie to diversify and branch out some more and re-invent herself like Shania Twain in order to further strengthen her "roots" in staying at the TOP. I hope the third album will look like that of the "Carnival Ride II" Live Concert Tours and "Bonus Christmas CD", COMBINED!
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Old 12-10-2008   #17 (permalink)
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interesting article. it has a good carrie mention.
but i can't comment on the rest. =/
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Old 12-10-2008   #18 (permalink)
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In 2005 Simon Fuller himself brought Carrie to Nashville and told the country establishment that in a short time Carrie would energize country music and usher in a new era with her particular style of country. It's interesting how quickly Fuller's prediction has been realized!

It was so smart of Fuller to schedule Carrie on the Opry so early and often and thereby solidify her country bone fides. That opening set of teh 2006 Grammy's was also so smart.
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Old 12-10-2008   #19 (permalink)
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Smart of Fuller, yes. But without Carries sincere effort and undeniable talent it would have backfired. JS.
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Old 12-10-2008   #20 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Brucei View Post
In 2005 Simon Fuller himself brought Carrie to Nashville and told the country establishment that in a short time Carrie would energize country music and usher in a new era with her particular style of country. It's interesting how quickly Fuller's prediction has been realized!

It was so smart of Fuller to schedule Carrie on the Opry so early and often and thereby solidify her country bone fides. That opening set of teh 2006 Grammy's was also so smart.
Simon Fuller can take credit for a lot of things in Carrie's career, but I don't think the Grand Ole Opry is one of them. Yes he may have had a part in the initial appearance, though I expect the record label was more of a factor in this.

As with any manangement, the main goal is to make money. Opry apperances do not make money. Artists only get a nominal fee for appearing. And I don't know if members get any compensation.

Beyond the initial appearance, I suspect that Carrie has been more the driving force for her appearances at the Opry. She said in an early interview that she expressed her interest in eventually becoming an Opry member right from the start.

Also note that Carrie's PR person from the beginning has been Jessie Schmidt. Jesse just happens to also be the PR person for Gaylord Entertainment, which includes the Opry. So there has been a strong connection between Carrie and the Opry from the start.
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