The success of Chris Stapleton, who sold more than 650,000 copies of his solo debut Traveller, is even further proof. Stapleton was the top selling new country artist of the year, to pretty much everyone’s surprise. No one suspected that Stapleton would sweep the awards, top the chart for multiple weeks in a row and become country’s new critical darling, and that’s probably because he was playing to 40 people at City Tavern less than a year ago. It’s easy to come out of nowhere when no one is really looking for you, when they’re distracted by the sparkle of Florida-Georgia Line’s glistening abs.
The same could be said for Aaron Watson, who flew to the top of the Billboard charts with The Underdog, his independently released 2015 album. Watson’s success wasn’t quite as meteoric as Stapleton’s but it made an important statement: There is a real subset of the country audience that is keenly interested in hearing something better than what they’ve been served for the past five or six years. It’s just that now, finally, praise the Lord, someone with the power to make a real difference is actually paying attention.
In reality, country becoming smaller and less popular is actually a good thing. It means less playing to the middle and more quality. When country music is a niche genre as opposed to this watered-down, mediocre ooze that’s slimed it’s way all over EDM and hip-hop and pop before making its way back to country, it’s just better.
For comparison, consider the folk trend that swept pop music a few years ago. When you couldn’t hear anything but Mumford & Sons and other bearded men with guitars on the radio, everyone wanted to add a little twang into their sound, what TIME called the “banjo-ification” of pop music. Once that trend passed, it was country that rose into folk’s place in pop, thanks in large part to Swift and crossover successes like Kacey Musgraves.
Now that folk is out of vogue, Americana has settled into a nice, quiet little genre that produces incredible music that could’ve once been at home in pop or indie or, hell, even country once upon a time. The best artists get the recognition at the Americana Music Awards, not the most popular. That kind of treatment would be excellent for country. There would still be mainstream pop acts, but it could be much like the late 1980s and early-to-mid 1990s again, the time when artists like Dwight Yoakam and Keith Whitley and Alison Krauss ruled the charts. But maybe that’s being overly optimistic.
Country music still has plenty of lessons to learn, but hitting Nashville in the pocketbook has traditionally been the only way to get execs to pay any attention. More than anything, it means that country fans put their money where it should have been in 2015: in the pockets of Aaron Watson and Jason Isbell and Chris Stapleton. You know, artists who actually deserve it.
No comments :
Post a Comment