WHY YOU SHOULD HATE TENNESSEE: COUNTRY MUSIC
Hate Week has been sluggish on these internets this week, mostly because the game itself looms like a possible blowout for Florida, Tennessee fans have been hedging bets and drinking corn liquor from boots quietly in their hovels to prepare, and Florida fans have focused their energies by bitching about Emmanuel Moody’s lack of playing time.
So we had to dig deep to remember just why we hate the whole state of Tennessee, and suddenly one startling, shit-flecked reason splattered up from the depths of our subconscious: Nashville, Tennessee, where country music is processed, compacted, and then released on the world with a great farting noise from the anus of the country music industry.

Johnny hated Nashville. So should you.
Oh, country music didn’t necessarily start this way. Originally country music was written by men and women who barnstormed up from the electricity-free rural cowplots they were born in, and who alternated writing songs about drinking and fighting and fucking with songs about drinking while fucking, fucking while fighting, or about combinations of the three that happened while driving semi-trucks.
You know real country singers because they are either now all dead or semi-retarded from years of excessive alcohol and drug abuse. They did not have six-pack abs and did not manage their money. They died in fiery plane crashes and holding bottles of liquor; they clutched their hearts and fell to the ground when whole pieces of fatback clogged their arteries after years of eating vile road food. They were not pretty.
Their music was about life sucking, and oh wasn’t that a shame, so let’s just have a drink and forget about it. It was, on the whole, fundamentally honest music about life being hard for poor, violent, and uneducated people.
Not self-congratulatory twaddle like…well, like this:
I had a barbeque stain on my white tee-shirt,
And you were killin’ me in that miniskirt.
Skippin’ rocks on the river by the railroad tracks.
You had a suntan line and red lipstick,
I worked so hard for that first kiss.
And a heart don’t forget, something like that.
Okay: so you’re poorly groomed, she’s wearing a mini-skirt (of course), and you propose that you actually skipped stones on a river by a railroad track. How trope-ish of you to cite all of that campy rural imagery in a single verse! Live like you were dying! Oh, only if Tim McGraw. You and the entire industry cranking out music that tells people exactly what they want to hear about themselves and their lives.
Country music plays out now like some kind of long, dumbed-down daily affirmation set to a bland rock beat. You know it’s “country” because occasionally they lay a fiddle down across a verse or two, or reference things like “railroad tracks” or “barbecue,” or sing with obvious planted accents. Hey, Kenny Chesney just wants you to take it easy and relax! Like you were on an island! Not a coup-ish, violent island seething with poverty, but one a them ones where every thang’s okay, and you and your baby got a couple a Coronas and nothin’ to worry ’bout but your tans. HOO-WEEE!!!
That’s one of our favorite things to loathe about country music–the demographic whores who run Nashville have this list of things to sandwich into every song. Hey, people like Buffett? Let’s have lots of songs about how great the beach is! People will love that. Hey, a song about how your hometown is just dandy! And your children and wife are awesome! And everything you’re doin’ is right and good, man.
We would kill someone for a good song about spooky rural murder. In fact, we offer to commit one, just to have a talented songwriter witness it, and then compose a badass song about it. Toby Keith will be on one side, and we’ll be on the other with an RPG. You and your Ford Truck and your shitty goatee, which you wear as the totem against obesity like every other hilljack concerned about their double chin and masculinity, will go up in flames. HOW D’YA LIKE ME NOW? That you’re on fire.
To hell with the state for ruining a fine art form and for becoming the landing pad for spent hair-band rockers desperate to sell their second-rate midlife efforts to an audience with lower standards–namely, country music fans. (See: Bon Jovi. Who says you can’t go home? Oh, only about half the population of New Orleans.)
They lap this stuff up like so much gravy soup at the Golden Corral. They made Patsy Cline go pop, dammit, as unpardonable a sin as has ever been committed in popular music. A populace who aids and abets in the production of such shit needs no pity when their football team bleeds out by thirty points on national television, and deserves none.









1
Tater Salad says:
HOW D’YA LIKE ME NOW? That you’re on fire.
Guffaw.
And here I thought Nashville was the saving grace of that shitstain with borders to the north.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:32 am
2
Seth says:
That sum fine hatin’ thar.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:33 am
3
hlh says:
re: Orson and Patsy Cline
“I faaall tooo pieeeeeces”
September 18th, 2008 at 10:33 am
4
DC Domer says:
I am neutral in this rivalry, but at some point this week, commentary is due on all those damn bars on Beale Street that use those tin measuring cups for shots and mixed drinks
September 18th, 2008 at 10:33 am
5
scalz1 says:
Thank you.
The bastardization of a true American art form has grown to epic proportions. Country music in the 50’s and 60’s parallels punk rock in the late 70’s and early 80’s. Now look what they’ve both become.
Shame.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:35 am
6
scalz1 says:
Furthermore:
Hank Williams SENIOR, FTW !!!
September 18th, 2008 at 10:37 am
7
Bobby Decatur says:
Memphis, sir, is no Nashville.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:38 am
8
hlh says:
DC, get your watering holes correct.
Beale….Memphis
Bourbon…N.O.
Ybor…Tampa
Printers alley….Nashville
/professional drunk
September 18th, 2008 at 10:39 am
9
ChasingMizzou says:
What’s wrong with gravy soup?
September 18th, 2008 at 10:43 am
10
Dirty Steve says:
Nice work, Orson. Nice work.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:43 am
11
WhiteSpeedReceiver says:
Much better. This is the hateratin I’ve come to expect this week. Now…MORE!
September 18th, 2008 at 10:44 am
12
Allahver Fist says:
Honky Tonk Badonkadonk and the Buffettization of Country.
Nashville deserves a righteous skull fucking.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:45 am
13
CincySooner says:
you don’t get a lot of hilljack these days.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:45 am
14
blon says:
Did you know that Jessica Simpson has the number one song in country music right now? An absolute low.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:47 am
15
Beauford Bixel says:
That, as always, was an impressive shotgunning. Or RPG’ing. Whichever, really.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:50 am
16
Tom says:
Orson, although I love the state of Tennessee and particularly Middle Tennessee (re: Tennessee Walking Horses, and I’ll take “hilljacks” over gelled-hair Florida yo-boys any day), that was an excellent piece. In my eyes, Nashville committed an unforgivable error by rejecting a young and upcoming Dwight Yoakam. Dwight is, without a doubt, one of the greatest men in the history of country music, and Nashville’s preference for Kenny “The Hypocrite” Chesney and Toby “The War Profiteer” Keith is repulsive. Good job, sir.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:50 am
17
PW says:
Re: 7
Along those same lines, if the entire state of Tennessee is fair game, this opens us up to Miami, Tampa, Orlando, and Jacksonville-based attacked. We might want to tread lightly here.
Although, in fairness, the culture of Tenessee is more homogeneous throughout than Florida’s.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:51 am
18
Sniffer says:
Orson, why so tense? Too much caffeine?
September 18th, 2008 at 10:52 am
19
PW says:
*attacks
September 18th, 2008 at 10:53 am
20
sonofsamford says:
It’s all soup but the gravy.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:55 am
21
blon says:
Tom,
You have issues with songs like, She Thinks My Tractor’s Sexy? Not real country music? I’m shocked.
Actually, I hate the music. I was born and raised in Texas, which probably explains my aversion to the stuff. Way too much of it.
Since I live in Austin I get to see people like Willie Nelson at the 7-11 stoned so the industry has its entertaining aspects.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:56 am
22
Jim Ryan says:
Good country songs about creepy rural murders:
The Road Goes on Forever, Robert Earl Keen
Loving County, Charlie Robison
The Governor, James McMurtry
Of course, those guys are all from Texas. Nashville country does, in fact, suck.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:56 am
23
Not You says:
re: 14
“More homogeneous”? That’s like saying nitromethane is ‘more flammable’ than water.
I’m still not convinced Miami and Jacksonville are on the same PLANET.
September 18th, 2008 at 10:59 am
24
cajunInExile says:
There’s a lot of good music coming out of Nashville that bypasses the big record company processing. There are some talented folks that make their living there, out of necessity, it seems, cause I guess country music fans are slower than other music buyers in figuring out how to rip CDs. I’m partial to good musicians that get together and say fuck the record companies, let’s just start a website and sell direct:
http://www.steeldrivers.net/
September 18th, 2008 at 11:02 am
25
sandman227 says:
Amen, sir….amen.
As further illustration: the only modern “country” music artist worth a damn, Dwight Yokam, hones his craft in LA. Coincidence? I think not…
Oh and ol’ Dwight is the fucking MAN, by the way.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:04 am
26
Mr. Pelican Pants says:
Walk Hard is a fine tribute to the insanity of country music…..”In my mind, you’re blowing me……………
some kisses”……………….
Ya know what I hate worse than that? Some old drunk always singing the Karaoke version of “You never even called me by my NAAAAAMMMEEEEE” which I am sure that song is taught in Kindergarten in TN as an anthem, right after the Pledge of Allegiance….
But country music does have some of the purdiest women I have yet to see nekkid–Faith Hill, Jessica Simpson, Faith Hill, Dolly Parton,Faith Hill, Carrie Underwood, Faith Hill….
September 18th, 2008 at 11:04 am
27
DC Trojan says:
Why do you hate America, Orson? Toby Keith is one of us. Well, since Toby Keith probably doesn’t think I’m a real American (and he may have a point), one of us minus me.
If the speakers aren’t bleeding and you aren’t weeping, it’s not real country.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:04 am
28
Tom says:
Blon, I think Corey Smith’s lyrics describe my feelings towards Kenny and his music:
“I don’t watch CMT
Naw that shit makes me sick.
And that ole Kenny Chesney,
What a hypocrite.
He’ll swear he’s country,
But he lives in the Caribbean.
Sings all about the islands now,
What happened to the Tennessean”
September 18th, 2008 at 11:05 am
29
Vol says:
Ok listen here (you know I have something profound to say when I start a post with that)…no one with any taste whatsoever disputes that the Nashville music industry produces a brand of tripe never before thrust upon human ears. However, please direct me to any musical genre currently in mainstream media which is not complete garbage. Is pop music just blowing your doors off these days? Say what you want about Nashville, but you can’t dispute that they are smart. Face it…our society has been dumbed down to a degree that music consumers are gobbling that shit up and those producing it are getting loaded. However, it’s no different than the pop industry shoveling total crap at New Jersey guidos who have different yet equally horrific taste in everything. The only difference is that they move to Gainsville, don their favorite wife-beaters and gold chains (I remember, I’m not allowed to mention jorts here–you’re obviously a little sensitive about that) and head for the Swamp for the game. The association is no less ridiculous than yours. GO VOLS…LET YOUR HATE CONSUME YOU, YOUNG SKYWALKER!!
September 18th, 2008 at 11:05 am
30
John Coctostan says:
So, Orson, you hate country music and have applied this hatred to the Volunteers. Let me see if I can follow along –
Country music did not orginate in Tennessee, nor is it enjoyed solely in Tennessee. On the contrary, you can find large numbers of fans everywhere, especially in areas that are closer to farming communities than high-density cities. This includes Indiana, Oklahoma, Califorina, and, yes, Florida. So, if you hate country music or, if you prefer, what country music has become, then you’re hating a good portion of your fellow fanbase for supporting what you hate.
But you’ve dubiously placed the blame for all this on Nashville. Setting aside the fact that to really hate the Nashville music industry you will have to destroy all your Ryan Adams CDs (don’t pretend they’re not there), it’s fallacious to place the blame for an entire nation’s music consumption on one city, however much music is produced there.
Then to finish up, you entwine this bad logic with your UT hate. “One of the reasons I hate the UT Volunteers is because country music sucks.”
Is that how it works? Well, you know what? I hate boy bands. They are a disgusting amalgam of greed, cynicism, and commerce-driven garbage. Everything about them is fake. Even though millions of little girls all over the country ate it up, Orlando has ultimate responsibility. I blame the Gators for all this. To love the Gators is to be in love with the Backstreet Boys.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:06 am
31
GamecockTony says:
“You know real country singers because they are either now all dead or semi-retarded from years of excessive alcohol and drug abuse.”
You can pretty much say the same thing about SEC fans, ya know.
I’ll throw a plug in for a good friend of mine who is currently in Nashville writing and recording:
http://www.jamesdunnmusic.com
September 18th, 2008 at 11:06 am
32
meatybob says:
Yeah, btw, all music produced nowadays pretty much sucks. Saying otherwise is living in a psychosomatic wonderland with a gum drop house on lollipop lane.
On my ipod, nothing but podcasts, Spinal Tap, and 40 or so school fight songs. BTW, Penn State, gayest fight song ever .
September 18th, 2008 at 11:07 am
33
Tom says:
Sandman, no truer words have ever been written. But it’s Yoakam, not Yokam. And he is, in fact, THE MAN.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:10 am
34
Tater Salad says:
Orson:
I believe what Mr. Coctostan means is that you can do what you want to UT, but he’s not going to sit here and listen to you badmouth the United States of America.
Gentlemen…
September 18th, 2008 at 11:10 am
35
beckett929 says:
As if I didnt hate country music enough.. I feel like we as a society are at a crossroads…. our greatest asset, football, is littered with bullshit country songs to open the games and programs…
At least on ESPN they’ve gone to AC/DC… but still yet, Big & Rich, Rascal Flatts, Faith Hill, and whoever else the networks trot out there for some overproduced highlight montage of action you likely wont be seeing in the game being shown, is absurd. Thats like the chance to go grab another beer before the show starts.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:13 am
36
sb says:
Not You @ #23…re: Miami and Jacksonville…they’re not.
As a rule I do not consider myself a fan of country music, however I do enjoy some aspects of the genre…namely some of the song titles such as “I hate every bone in her body but mine” and some of the lyrics are pure gold like “I lifted her keys, stole her fuckin’ car, crashed that piece of shit and walked away”. It sometimes takes a song to elevate such complex feelings of angst and idiocy to a communicable level.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:15 am
37
Brian O'Blivion says:
I still love Hank Jr. and never get tired of his music.
Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound is one of his greatest.
Sure enough about closing time, (I’m) about stoned out of my mind
And I end up with some honky-tonk special I found
Rip the rest of country music all you want and I’ll agree, but not Hank.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:16 am
38
Doug says:
There are not enough cocktails currently in existence, nor will there be enough cocktails mixed throughout the remainder of human existence, to adequately congratulate you for that. Bra-vo, sir.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:17 am
39
LineNoise says:
Try some Drive By Truckers, Orson. It’s not country, but it’s got plenty of spooky rural murders.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:19 am
40
Orson Swindle says:
Setting aside the fact that to really hate the Nashville music industry you will have to destroy all your Ryan Adams CDs (don’t pretend they’re not there),
HAVE YOU LEFT NO SENSE OF DECENCY AT ALL, SIR? Seriously, not a Ryan Adams CD or mp3 in the collection. Not. One. We are ruthless electro-cold hipster, not crunchy-indie hipster, thank you very much.
Go ahead and blame us for the following, though: Creed, Sister Hazel, and any and all boy bands.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:20 am
41
Vandy J says:
Ah, three lovely years in Redneck Hollywood, waiting to see what drunken big wheel would stagger out of the Sunset Grill at 1 AM as I was weaving home from two pitchers of Iguana margaritas so I could go make out with the toilet. Sigh. I remember well the battle over what major label would win the right to sign BR-549 and promptly sodomize their music out of existence.
The greatness of country has always come from the people who told the industry to shit in their bonnet and tie it tight, from Hank Sr. (pray for us) to the Outlaws to St. Johnny Cash. I sort of half-hoped it was time for another insurgency, but the 21st century “rebels” are…Big & Rich and Gretchen Wilson??
Before I crawl back in my 2-Tone bunker, I commend to your ears “Murder on Music Row,” which is basically Orson’s post set to music with steel guitars and etc.
Oh, and UT sucks. But you could have guessed I thought that already. ;]
September 18th, 2008 at 11:21 am
42
Mr.Pelican Pants says:
Wayne Mills Band FTW!!!! Not really country, not really Pink Floyd
September 18th, 2008 at 11:22 am
43
Holly says:
We would kill someone for a good song about spooky rural murder.
Which is just one of many reasons that the best bluegrass I’ve heard in YEARS comes from Australia. That’s Australia, the country, and this girl does “Caleb Meyer” better than Gillian Welch.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:23 am
44
Tom says:
Pelican, you’ve spent too much time at Gallette’s. However, they are a pretty good fraternity house band. I’ll give them that.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:25 am
45
Orson Swindle says:
The only difference is that they move to Gainsville, don their favorite wife-beaters and gold chains (I remember, I’m not allowed to mention jorts here–you’re obviously a little sensitive about that) and head for the Swamp for the game. The association is no less ridiculous than yours. GO VOLS…LET YOUR HATE CONSUME YOU, YOUNG SKYWALKER!!
Rome here. Strong, Vol. Strong.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:26 am
46
Vols says:
Orson you also seem to have an affinity for really angry speed metal songs about death, WITH ACCOMPANYING CARTOONS ROCK ON YEAH!!!! I guess that’s somehow better than country? As for Ryan Adams, I liked him a lot until i read that Elton John called him a genius. Now I’m torn.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:26 am
47
RaginCajun says:
I cannot take credit for this but it is not country music it is white southern pop music…
September 18th, 2008 at 11:30 am
48
John says:
I always find it interesting that the only real country music on the radio anymore is on blue-state NPR.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:31 am
49
EffinDane says:
*clap clap clap clap clap*
With that said, I’ll let it be known that I own Gary Allan albums. Don’t fucking judge me.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:31 am
50
Vol says:
John, try Cross Country on XM12. That about the only place you can find country worth listening to anymore. It’s all about the “Alt Country” thing. Which is an entirely different tirade.
September 18th, 2008 at 11:33 am