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Why Are the Grammys Shutting Country Out of the Big Four Categories?
TV & Streaming

Why Are the Grammys Shutting Country Out of the Big Four Categories?

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

When it comes to the Grammys and the CMA Awards, the twain used to meet, at least sometimes. As in: Once upon a time, Shania Twain — and others of her ilk — could earn top nominations for both shows. But those days seem to be gone for country music, when it comes to Grammy recognition in the categories that are generally referred to as the Big Four. As a genre, country appears to be getting ghosted by Grammy voters.

For 2025, there are a total of 32 nominations spread across those top four categories. The amount of recognition for country or country-adjacent artists among those 32 nods: zero.

Now, country is not alone in failing to earn a seat at the big kids’ table. Rock could sidle up next to country at the bar, drink sloshing in hand, and slur, “Welcome to the club.” There’s a difference, of course: Not even the most diehard defender would argue that rock ‘n’ roll, however popular its oldies are, has experienced a major commercial renaisance since the turn of the century, whereas both anecdotal evidence and hard data make it clear that country is an already massive genre that is experiencing significant growth spurts every year, thanks to infusions of fresh blood among both the artists and audience.

So maybe it’s the quality, then? Grammy voters are just becoming more discerning, in quietly deciding nothing Nashville had to offer met the impossibly high standard of an “Ordinary” or a “Swag”?

Some will surely make that argument. But for the sake of arguing, let’s take a look at the field for next week’s CMA Awards. Most country-savvy commentators who’ve looked at the slate of nominees for the CMAs have remarked on the cred factor uniting the top nomineet. Tied for the most nominations with six each are three powerful and almost universally acclaimed young figures — Lainey Wilson, Megan Moroney and Ella Langley — who are together establishing that what women in the genre lack (regrettably) in sheer numbers, they’re making up for in sheer quality. Close behind this mini-murderer’s row of female artists with four nods is Zach Top, a neotraditionalist who’s found favor across basically all country quadrants.

Moroney, Langley and Top were all eligible for best new artist, and even considered frontrunners for some of those eight slots. But, faced with all that critically acclaimed, commercially hot talent, what could the Recording Academy do but take a quick look and conclude:

“Nah, thanks… we’re good.”

You might be able to write this shutout off as an aberration. After all, it’s happened twice before, in the 21st century, in 2018 and 2004, that no projects with even a tenuous connection to country got a nomination in the top four. But it would be easier to believe that it’s just a passing, cyclical thing if the representation hadn’t been growing noticeably worse in recent years in key categories.

Consider that even Lainey Wilson, who may well stand as country’s greatest ambassador to the world for a generation to come, was never able to land a best new artist nomination, let along album, record or song of the year. She would have first been a contender in 2022, when both the CMAs and ACMs gave her their new artist prize. She was more seriously considered a frontrunner in the years 2023 and 2024, only to again come up MIA in BNA. In 2024, she did win a country Grammy, rendering her ineligible for best new artist after that and sparing us the embarrassment of seeing her passed over for the BNA category for a fourth year.

All the other issues we could raise may have arguments or counterarguments about merit, but if you have several shots at nominating Lainey Wilson for best new artist and whiff at that repeatedly, there may be an institutional problem.

And best new artist is the category that was most likely to field at least one country candidate among the Big Four, in the last couple of decades, up until this year. The dearth of Nashville has been more noticeable in the other three. In record of the year, for instance, there has only been one country song nominated since Lady Antebellum’s “Need You Now” won in 2011, and that was Lil Nas X’s and Billy Ray Cyrus’ rather aberrational “Old Town Road” in 2020.

In album of the year, the pickins have been nearly as slim. Beyonce’s “Cowboy Carter” did win in 2025, if you consider that a country album. (I definitely did, even if she didn’t —having officially declared that it was “a ‘Beyoncé’ album, not a country album,” a statement that probably let the CMAs off the hook for not nominating it, even if that piece of rhetoric shouldn’t have been taken at face value.) Prior to that, we also had a 2019 win for Kacey Musgraves’ “Golden Hour,” which some consider her first post-mainstream-country album, preceded by a 2017 nomination for Sturgill Simpson’s “A Sailor’s Guide to Earth,” his first not-really-country-at-all album. You may notice a pattern there: The last time someone who considers himself a straight-on country artist was nominated for a straight-on country album was 10 years ago, with Chris Stapleton’s “Traveller.” And listen, it’s fine, even commendable, maybe, that the Grammys would favor stuff on the very edges of country rather than conventional radio fare. But, as it turns out, in these top categories it’s just been a very short trip from favoring alt-country to favoring no country.

But here’s an opposing thought, for a second: Downballot, in the actual country categories and the adjacent ones like American roots, Americana, folk and bluegrass, the Recording Academy tends to do just fine, or close enough to fine. That was true when there were committee picks figuring into the mix, and true since those were done away with. The country Grammy categories have had their own peculiarities — like Willie Nelson’s seeming inability to not get nominated for every semiannual album he puts out — but there’s rarely anything nominated in those divisions that doesn’t represent something close to a standard of excellence.

And the Academy actually made a great institutional choice this year, by splitting what was previously a single country category in two. Best country album has now been subdivided into best contemporary country album and best traditional country album, which is only catching up with what already exists over in the R&B field. (There were some cynics who believed the Grammys were creating the traditional country category just to have a place where Beyonce couldn’t win, after some upset that she bested country’s in-the-pocket contenders last year. History lends itself to those kinds of suspicions, regardless of what is actually happening in board meetings. In any case, ironically, the lone artist-of-color in either country album division was Charley Crockett… in traditional country.)

That kind of move is an indication that the Nashville wing of the Recording Academy is taken seriously by toppers at the overall org, and that the Grammys’ leaders want to do right by country. No doubt there are conversations going on about how to get at least some token representation in the top categories for one of music’s hottest genres.

Are the problems intractible, though? Country is in an odd situation where it can claim the hottest star in music who is not named Taylor Swift, Morgan Wallen, yet he declared this year that he is not submitting himself at all for the Grammys, implicitly suggesting that he believes his brand of country is never going to find the favor of voters he probably considers elitist. So it’s mostly country at the sub-blockbuster level that voters will have to be considering — thus making it theoretically easier for genre acts to slip in to best new artist … although it’s not exactly like Lainey Wilson is too obscure or underperforming to make it in for record or album.

Then there’s the question of how much more voter expansion is possible, if Nashville has already come close to maxing out in its signup efforts. The growth is coming most of all in the outreach to the Latin music world, with everyone who is a voter for the Latin Grammys having been invited to come aboard the mothership as well. That’s been an important development (here’s to Bad Bunny, restored to the Big Four after a couple of years off) and will continue to inspire a lot more passion, understandably, than any notion that the Academy needs to scour the corners of Music City to sign up more of the types of people who were favored by the system when nods were plentiful in past decades. (Which is not to say that country isn’t far more diverse than generally represented, especially in its fan base and in its working population in Nashville, but the demographic perception is not altogether divorced from the reality.)

Part of the problem may be a lack of passion about the Grammys in some Music Row circles themselves, because of lingering hurt feelings over past shutouts of established artists in the country categories, or — perhaps more importantly — because of the CMAs and ACMs being their real focus of attention. No other genre has its own awards show with an impact rivaling either of those, so it’s easy to understand why there’s no flood of outrage if country comes up short at the Grammys when that’s not their main yardstick anyway. Pop and R&B stars are just always going to take a Grammy snub more personally than folks in country, who may have been trained to look at the Grammys overlooking them and shrug, “It’s Chinatown, Jake.”

So it may be more important to the Grammys than it is to the country community that country gets a fairer shot, if only to reflect reality in hoping that one of the biggest and fastest-growing genres would get at least one token nomination out of 32. If the average Academy voter is going to be too disinterested in country to even check out some of its brighter stars, as we can guess might be the case, there may still be some room to add to the rolls a few more members who’ve heard and can vouch for a Lainey Wilson, at some point in her career, in the Big Four.

And there is an important demographic development happening in country that the Grammys should be finding a way to applaud: the reemergence of women as a dominant creative force in the field. If you’ve been to anything like a recent sold-out Megan Moroney concert and seen thousands of women screaming their lungs out, despite having been given every sign over the years that their voices aren’t as important, you’d know this is no small breakthrough, creatively, commercially or culturally. It shouldn’t be the CMAs alone recognizing that Moroney, Langley and Wilson are killing it right now, amid a deck that has been stacked against them. Don’t fence them out.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Trina Braxton Faces Backlash for Supporting K. Michelle's Country Album Amid Tamar Braxton Feud
Celebrity News

Trina Braxton Faces Backlash for Supporting K. Michelle’s Country Album Amid Tamar Braxton Feud

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Trina Braxton Faces Backlash for Supporting K. Michelle’s Country Album Amid Tamar Braxton Feud

Trina Braxton found herself at the center of online debate this week after publicly supporting singer K. Michelle’s upcoming country album — with some fans calling her move “messy” given K. Michelle’s long history of conflict with Trina’s sister, Tamar Braxton.

The exchange began when Trina commented under K. Michelle’s post promoting her “Bringing Nashville to Atlanta” private listening event, writing, “You know I love country music!” K. Michelle warmly replied, “Come see me Trina ?? DM me, I’ll set it up. The album is great.”

While the interaction seemed harmless, social media users quickly reacted — many suggesting Trina’s comment was ill-timed considering Tamar and K. Michelle’s past public feud. The pair’s disputes have spanned years, including multiple heated exchanges on social media and television, most notably when K. Michelle called Tamar a “muppet” during a viral 2014 interview (Billboard).

On X (formerly Twitter), fans speculated about Trina’s motives. One user wrote, “If you’re my sister’s opp, you’re now my opp… this is shady!” Another added, “You don’t have to be their opp, just don’t fraternize with people who clearly dislike your sister. Toni would never do that.”

Others defended Trina, noting her interest in country music and her history of supporting other artists. Still, many commenters interpreted her gesture as subtle shade following recent family tension involving Tamar and the Braxton sisters — including Tamar’s own claim that her siblings have been distant.

Under K. Michelle’s post, several Instagram users directly called Trina out, with comments like “You are messy,” “trifling,” and “please don’t do it… she is your sister.”

Despite the criticism, neither Trina nor Tamar has addressed the backlash publicly. K. Michelle’s country project, part of her musical pivot announced earlier this year, is scheduled for release on November 8.


November 7, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | The Forest Lodge move is because Princess Kate ‘wants & needs a country life’
Celebrity News

bitchy | The Forest Lodge move is because Princess Kate ‘wants & needs a country life’

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Where is the Princess of Wales’s “Autumn” video? You know, the video from her Mother Nature/Four Seasons series, one of the dumbest “projects” to ever come out of Kensington Palace’s Keen Busywork Department. We didn’t get the “summer” video until pretty late in the season, which makes me believe that we’ll probably get the new video in mid-November, down to the wire! Anyway, just a reminder that we haven’t actually seen Prince William in two weeks and we haven’t seen Kate in more than two weeks. William will be in Rio next week, and I assume that means Kate will still be doing f–k all publicly. Because don’t you know, she’s in charge of the big move to Forest Lodge! They’re still struggling to put a bow on this latest “forever home” move, which is why Ingrid C-Word got sent out to wax rhapsodic about Kate’s love of being a simple country wife.

Kate Middleton and Prince William are signaling a different kind of life in their move to Windsor. As they prepare to settle into their new eight-bedroom home at Forest Lodge with their children, Prince George, 12, Princess Charlotte, 10, and Prince Louis, 7, it is clearly the leafy, country surroundings that they want for their family rather than city life. Forest Lodge is being called the family’s “forever home,” and they are set to live there even when William accedes to the throne.

There is a sense that the family’s three-year stay at Adelaide Cottage enabled them to test the waters and see if they could envisage living in the area for longer. That is certainly the case, palace insiders have told PEOPLE. Forest Lodge is a distinct upgrade from Adelaide and shows they are really putting down roots in the estate and parklands close to Windsor Castle.

“They like it around Windsor, and they’ve established themselves there,” Ingrid Seward, author of My Mother & I, says.

In a break from the practice of senior royals in the past, they don’t have live-in staff (it’s believed that the children’s nanny, Maria Turrion Borrallo, who has been with the family since George was a baby, and the housekeeper live at other smaller properties on the estate). They will also be paying the market rent for the property.

As well as renovations in the magnificent home, new trees have been planted and a security cordon has been created surrounding the house with about 150 acres.

Kate, 43, has stressed how important being out in nature has been for her recovery from cancer treatment – and the well-being it brings for young and old alike.

Seward believes that the royals have felt they were “prisoners” in Kensington Palace. The author, who is editor-in-chief of Majesty magazine, points to the fact that Kate used to like the walk the dogs in the park that bounded the palace. However, in practice, there was only the field where the helicopters landed behind the palace to do so, which is backed up to embassies.

“In London, there was a lack of the kind of life that Kate has decided she wants and needs. She wants a country life,” Seward says.

Now, as they look towards the end of the year, Princess Kate is planning her annual Christmas carol service at Westminster Abbey, where they will celebrate some of the people, causes and charities that they have encountered during the last 12 months. Before then, William heads off solo to Brazil for a week around his innovative environmental awards, the Earthshot Prize. There, he will be supported by celebrities Kylie Minogue and Shawn Mendes in a star-studded show.

“They seem to have their lives very well under control, more than organized,” Seward adds. “It feels to me that they’re they themselves are holding the reins of their life and not letting anyone else do it. But I feel that William and Kate really are holding their own reins which is great.”

[From People]

“There was a lack of the kind of life that Kate has decided she wants and needs. She wants a country life…” I’m reminded of the Middleton PR around Pippa Middleton’s wedding back in 2017, when Carole basically sounded like a mother from a Jane Austen novel, treating her daughters as the “local beauties” of Bucklebury who simply wanted to be “married at home” and have simple, country lives. For Kate, it’s less about “being in the country” and more about living the kind of lifestyle she wants: that of a wealthy stay-at-home mother without a job. Little to no work, little to no expectations, just a vast, empty schedule which can be filled with tennis, school runs and drinking. Which would be fine if Kate, like Pippa, had just married some terribly moderately wealthy guy. But Kate is going to be queen consort! A work-from-home queen consort who does f–k all and lives grandly on her makeshift 150-acre estate.

Top 10 stories about the Waleses’ controversial move to Forest Lodge

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Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.

Catherine, the Princess of Wales, Royal Honorary Air Commodore, visits RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire for her first official engagement at the station. During the visit, Her Royal Highness learned about the station’s operational role, met Quick Reaction Alert personnel, viewed a Typhoon aircraft, and toured the new Typhoon Future Synthetic Training facility. She also met families of personnel serving at the base. 02/10/2025,Image: 1042772054, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: *** NO UK USE FOR 48 HRS ***, Model Release: no, Credit line: James Glossop/Avalon
The Princess of Wales during a visit to Home-Start in Oxford, as Home-Start UK prepares to roll out training to their 9000-strong network of volunteers based on The Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood’s Explainer Series. Picture date: Thursday October 9, 2025.,Image: 1044351733, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: – Fee Payable Upon reproduction – For queries contact Avalon [email protected] London +44 20 7421 6000 Los Angeles +1 310 822 0419 Berlin +49 30 76 212 251 Madrid +34 91 533 42 89, *** NO UK USE FOR 48 HRS ***, Model Release: no, Credit line: Avalon.red/Avalon
The Princess of Wales gestures as she speaks volunteers during a visit to Home-Start in Oxford, as Home-Start UK prepares to roll out training to their 9000-strong network of volunteers based on The Royal Foundation Centre for Early Childhood’s Explainer Series. Picture date: Thursday October 9, 2025.,Image: 1044351792, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: – Fee Payable Upon reproduction – For queries contact Avalon [email protected] London +44 20 7421 6000 Los Angeles +1 310 822 0419 Berlin +49 30 76 212 251 Madrid +34 91 533 42 89, *** NO UK USE FOR 48 HRS ***, Model Release: no, Credit line: Avalon.red/Avalon


14/10/2025. Cookstown, UK. The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to Mallon Farm in Cookstown, Northern Ireland.,Image: 1045448367, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image is free for use but may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner, Model Release: no, Credit line: Pete Maclaine/Avalon
14/10/2025. Portadown, Craigavon, UK. The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to Long Meadow Cider in Portadown, Craigavon, Northern Ireland.,Image: 1045486849, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner or form whatsoever., Model Release: no, Credit line: Pete Maclaine/Avalon
14/10/2025. Portadown, Craigavon, UK. The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to Long Meadow Cider in Portadown, Craigavon, Northern Ireland.,Image: 1045486875, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner or form whatsoever., Model Release: no, Credit line: Pete Maclaine/Avalon


14/10/2025. Portadown, Craigavon, UK. The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to Long Meadow Cider in Portadown, Craigavon, Northern Ireland.,Image: 1045500310, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner or form whatsoever., Model Release: no, Credit line: Pete Maclaine/Avalon
14/10/2025. Portadown, Craigavon, UK. The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to Long Meadow Cider in Portadown, Craigavon, Northern Ireland.,Image: 1045519134, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner or form whatsoever., Model Release: no, Credit line: Pete Maclaine/Avalon
14/10/2025. Northern Ireland, UK. The Prince and Princess of Wales visit Northern Ireland.,Image: 1045519138, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner or form whatsoever., Model Release: no, Credit line: Pete Maclaine/Avalon


Prince William, Prince of Wales and Catherine, Princess of Wales meet with farm owner Charlie Mallon (R) and his family during their visit to Mallon Farm, a flax farm in County Tyrone that is spearheading the revival of flax growing for linen, as a blueprint for sustainable farming systems on October 14, 2025 in Cookstown, Northern Ireland.

During their visit, the Prince and Princess of Wales are visiting organisations providing creative and entrepreneurial opportunities for young people in rural areas of Northern Ireland

Featuring: William, Prince of Wales, Catherine, Princess of Wales
Where: Cookstown, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
When: 14 Oct 2025
Credit: Cover Images

Prince William, Prince of Wales and Catherine, Princess of Wales meet with farm owner Charlie Mallon (R) and his family during their visit to Mallon Farm, a flax farm in County Tyrone that is spearheading the revival of flax growing for linen, as a blueprint for sustainable farming systems on October 14, 2025 in Cookstown, Northern Ireland.

During their visit, the Prince and Princess of Wales are visiting organisations providing creative and entrepreneurial opportunities for young people in rural areas of Northern Ireland

Featuring: William, Prince of Wales, Catherine, Princess of Wales
Where: Cookstown, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
When: 14 Oct 2025
Credit: Cover Images

Catherine, Princess of Wales and Prince William, Prince of Wales visit Long Meadow Cider on October 14, 2025 in Craigavon, Northern Ireland.

Long Meadow has been owned by the McKeever family for three generations and has been cultivating premium-quality apples since 1968.

The Prince and Princess of Wales are visiting organisations providing creative and entrepreneurial opportunities for young people in rural areas of Northern Ireland

Featuring: Catherine, Princess of Wales, William, Prince of Wales
Where: Craigavon, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
When: 14 Oct 2025
Credit: Cover Images


November 1, 2025 0 comments
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William Prince Moves 'Further From the Country' » PopMatters
Music

William Prince Moves ‘Further From the Country’ » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Folk-rocker William Prince has never been more on the move and never sounded more at home. After albums exploring faith and gratitude, he takes a look at change and distance on Further From the Country. While not a concept album, the record offers a steady look at some big questions about where we come from and where we’re headed, the mix of happy ties and itchy restraints that maintain our connections to places, even if sometimes only emotionally. Prince’s mix of character studies and thoughtful meditations combines for an album with staying power.

The core of the record appears on its titular opening track. Above a driving beat and a sharp fiddle, Prince sings of his move to the big city, indicative of his success as a storytelling artist. The transition isn’t uncomplicated. He asks, “And if I go, is the home that raised me no longer my own? / And if I stay, would I leave here anyway?” He knows the value of leaving on, but also the cost of leaving something behind. It’s a price worth paying, though, as he acknowledges in “Damn” that “Things won’t change until I finally get the will to do something else with myself.” Prince feels the need to move to avoid getting stuck.

The sedentary pitfall comes through clearly on the melancholy country number “All the Same”, in which life drones by on the reservation; the same friends, the same squabbles, the same suicidal exits. Prince captures the unacknowledged desperation when he sings of a friendly woman who was “saving all her money for a holiday that would never come”. That sort of sharp detail fills Further From the Country. Prince gives his characters complexity with just a few lines.

On the pure Nashville “Flowers on the Dash”, he captures the entirety of the relationship in the chorus, a man’s trip to win back a lover turned to nothing but a rejected bouquet for the drive home. Southern rocker “On Rolls the Wheel” develops the sadness of a truck driver, while “For the First Time” sums up blue-collar struggle in a quick couplet: “Feels like God don’t give a damn / When you’re waking up at 4 a.m.”

With all this motion and worry about getting stuck, William Prince could easily, like his fictional truck driver, get lost on the road. Instead, he pauses to find his moments of growth and places of stability. “For the First Time” looks at the process of moving through and beyond grief’s immediacy. Prince especially considers the loss of his father (an integral figure throughout these songs), whom he addresses explicitly on “The Charmer.” On this track, he takes the shine off and tries to give an honest portrait of a complex man. Prince sees him clearly, and honors him appropriately: “Now every chorus, every verse / The charmer rides again.”

By the time Further From the Country reaches “The Charmer”, Prince’s musical tradition becomes a little clearer. He’s always drawn on folk, country, and rock. On one hand, it makes sense to find him as an offshoot of outlaw country. He might be a more natural successor to John Prine, with his particular sense of character and choice of people to study. It doesn’t hurt that “The Charmer’s” melody would sit perfectly on Prine’s The Missing Years. Prince uses his varied influence to paint careful pictures of regular life, while thinking deeply about what it means and how he’s made a life.

That life, throughout much of Further From the Country, has a sense of restlessness, but William Prince draws a critical point in the closer “More of the Same”. Unlike in “All the Same,” the singer now finds repetition not damaging, but edifying. He’s found love, and he can work on lessening his anxiety and need to compare himself with others. “How could I complain / With more of the same?” he sings.

Through both his peregrinations and his examinations, Prince has reached important conclusions. He might not have all the answers, but he’s starting to see how leaving can be part of finding home. He might be rolling on, further from where he began, but it sounds like he’s always been moving toward the center.

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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Japan Set As 2026 Country Of Honor At Cannes Marché Du Film
TV & Streaming

Japan Set As 2026 Country Of Honor At Cannes Marché Du Film

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

The Cannes Film Festival’s Marché du Film has unveiled Japan as the Country of Honour for its 2026 edition next May.

The Marché du Film’s Executive Director Guillaume Esmiol officially announced the choice at the Tokyo International Film Festival (TIFF) on Tuesday, alongside Junichi Sakomoto, Chair of the Executive Committee for Japan, Country of Honour 2026.

News of the focus was teased at Tokyo’s opening night, with a promise of more details during the festival.

As Country of Honour, Japan will open the 2026 edition by co-hosting the Marché du Film’s Opening Night and then have a special place in Marché du Film’s programs, including its panels, networking events and project showcases putting the spotlight on Japanese animation and genre cinema.

Other key initiatives include a summit on Japan’s film industry to foster collaboration and innovation, and a special screening day dedicated to Japanese cinema.

Through its participation, Japan aims to build strong professional networks with the international film community and promote its film and content industries for future success in global markets.

With over 120 years of filmmaking history, Japan stands as one of the world’s most influential film nations.

Its legacy spans legendary names such as Kenji Mizoguchi, Yasujirō Ozu and 1980 Cannes Palme d’Or winner Akira Kurosawa to contemporary auteurs such as Hirokazu Kore-eda, Kiyoshi Kurosawa and Naomi Kawase and emerging names such as Chie Hayakawa, who continue to fly the flag in Cannes’ Official Selection to this day.

The Marché du Film pointed to the country’s robust film industry which it said produced around 1,200 films annually.

It also highlighted the health of its theatrical sector drawing 150 million cinemagoers each year, representing an overall gross of $1.3, suggesting this demonstrated resilience in an era defined by digitalization and an ever-growing range of entertainment choices.

The 2026 focus will build on Japan’s close relationship with the Marché du Film, where Japanese sales companies are among the most established in the Palais des Festivals, while the Japan Pavilion, coordinated by UniJapan, has been a long-standing fixture at the Village International.

““We are truly delighted and proud that Japan has been selected as the Country of Honour. It presents a wonderful opportunity to showcase the appeal of Japanese cinema on a global stage. We look forward to seeing Japan’s rich film culture, along with its emerging talents and technologies, shine even brighter internationally and contribute to the advancement of cinema both in Japan and around the world,” said Sakomoto.

Esmiol added: “Japan holds a unique place in international cinema, and its creative legacy continues to inspire generations of filmmakers. It also holds a unique place at the Marché du Film, as one of the most represented and dynamic countries, with highly active sales companies and producers. On a more personal note: as someone with Japanese roots, it’s a beautiful opportunity to pay tribute to my cultural heritage.”

Japan’s participation will be organized by the Executive Committee for Japan, Country of Honour 2026, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) and Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO). Specific program details and participating institutions will be announced in early 2026.

Japan follows Brazil (2025), Switzerland (2024), Spain (2023) and India (2022) as the fifth Country of Honour, an initiative launched by the Marché du Film to recognize nations for their outstanding contributions to the global film industry and to foster international exchange and collaboration.

The 2026 Marché du Film will open May 12 and run until May 20, while the Cannes Film Festival will run until May 23.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Biggest No. 1 Country Albums Ever
Music

Biggest No. 1 Country Albums Ever

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Male solo artists dominate, though three female solo artists and two groups have also achieved the feat.


10/27/2025

Top Country Albums

Designed by Lyanne Natividad

Morgan Wallen’s I’m the Problem leads Billboard‘s Top Country Albums chart (dated Nov. 1) for the 23rd consecutive week. This ups Wallen’s career tally of weeks at No. 1 to 209, allowing him to extend his lead as the artist with the most weeks at No. 1 in the chart’s 61-year history.

Wallen’s achievement is especially impressive because he has amassed this hefty total of weeks at No. 1 in such a short amount of time. He first topped the chart on Aug. 15, 2020.

Top Country Albums originated as Hot Country Albums in the Jan. 11, 1964 issue of Billboard. Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire (The Best of Johnny Cash) headed the inaugural chart. The compilation was well-timed: “Ring of Fire” had headed Hot Country Songs for seven weeks the previous summer and had crossed over to reach the top 20 on the Billboard Hot 100.

The chart was named Hot Country LP’s from 1968 to 1984, when vinyl LPs were king.

Twenty-one artists have logged 50 or more weeks at No. 1 on Top Country Albums. Male solo artists dominate, as you might expect, though three female solo artists have achieved the feat, as have two groups. (One of those groups is an all-female group.) Only one Black artist has amassed 50 or more weeks at No. 1, though that may change as country becomes more inclusive.

Here’s a look at all artists who have topped Top Country Albums for 50 or more weeks.

  • Kenny Chesney (50 weeks)

    Kenny ChesneyKenny Chesney
    Image Credit: J.Sciulli/WireImage for CMT: Country Music Television/Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: Oct. 14, 2000

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 16, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: When the Sun Goes Down (14 weeks in 2004)

    Notes: Chesney’s tally of No. 1 albums includes two live albums, LIVE: Live Those Songs Again (2006) and Live in No Shoes Nation (2017).

  • LeAnn Rimes (50 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: July 27, 1996

    Most recent week at No. 1: Feb. 17, 2001

    Longest-running No. 1: Blue (28 weeks in 1996-97)

    Notes: Rimes’ total includes a 1997 compilation of early recordings, Unchained Melody: The Early Years. Rimes was just 14 in February 1997 when she won a Grammy for best new artist. She remains the youngest winner ever in that category.

  • Eddy Arnold (51 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 14, 1965

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 4, 1968

    Longest-running No. 1: My World (17 weeks in 1965-66)

    Notes: My World was the first country album to receive a Grammy nod for album of the year. The album included the crossover hit “Make the World Go Away,” which all but defined the “countrypolitan” sound.

  • Glen Campbell (51 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Feb. 10, 1968

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 7, 1977

    Longest-running No. 1: Wichita Lineman (20 weeks in 1968-69)

    Notes: Wichita Lineman is tied with Johnny Cash at San Quentin for the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1960s. Campbell’s tally of No. 1 albums also includes Bobbie Gentry & Glen Campbell, a collab with the singer of “Ode to Billie Joe.” The 1968 album was the first collaborative album to reach No. 1 on the chart.

  • Merle Haggard (51 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Dec. 10, 1966

    Most recent week at No. 1: June 20, 2015

    Longest-running No. 1: Pancho & Lefty (with Willie Nelson) (eight weeks in 1983)

    Notes: Haggard’s tally of No. 1s includes eight albums on which his backing group, The Strangers, was also credited. Hag’s tally includes three live albums, Okie From Muskogee (1970), The Fightin’ Side of Me (1970)and I Love Dixie Blues … So I Recorded ‘Live’ in New Orleans (1973). It also includes two collabs with Willie Nelson, Pancho & Lefty and Django and Jimmie (2015).

  • Johnny Cash (57 weeks)

    Johnny Cash poses for a portrait in circa 1969.Johnny Cash poses for a portrait in circa 1969.
    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: Jan. 11, 1964

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 12, 2014

    Longest-running No. 1: Johnny Cash at San Quentin (20 weeks in 1969)

    Notes: Cash’s No. 1 albums spanned more than 50 years. Johnny Cash at San Quentin (which received a Grammy nod for album of the year) has had the longest run at No. 1 of any live album. It is also tied with Glen Campbell’s Wichita Lineman as the longest-running No. 1 album of the 1960s. Cash also reached No. 1 with two other live albums – Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison (1968) and The Johnny Cash Show (1970), which was recorded at the Grand Ole Opry. He also topped the chart with a 1985 collab LP with Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson and with two posthumous albums – American V: A Hundred Highways (2006) and Out Among the Stars (2014).

  • Buck Owens (60 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Jan. 25, 1964

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 20, 1968

    Longest-running No. 1: I’ve Got a Tiger by the Tail (15 weeks in 1965)

    Notes: Owens’ first No. 1 album, Buck Owens Sings Tommy Collins (1964), was a tribute album to the singer/songwriter whose biggest hits included “You Better Not Do That” and “If You Can’t Bite, Don’t Growl.” Owens’ tally of No. 1 albums includes two live albums, Carnegie Hall Concert (1966) and Buck Owens and His Buckaroos in Japan! (1967).

  • George Strait (61 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Feb. 18, 1984

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 13, 2019

    Longest-running No. 1s: Ocean Front Property (six weeks in 1987) and Carrying Your Love With Me (six weeks in 1997)

    Notes: Strait made this list the hard way – without a single album that logged more than six weeks at No. 1. Strait’s tally of No. 1 albums includes the 1992 soundtrack to Pure Country, in which he starred.

  • The Chicks (73 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Jan. 30, 1999

    Most recent week at No. 1: Aug. 8, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: Fly (36 weeks in 1999-2000)

    Notes: The Chicks, formerly Dixie Chicks, are the second-highest ranking group on this list. Three of the group’s No. 1 albums – Fly, Home and Taking the Long Way – received Grammy nods for album of the year. The latter album won the award. The group’s most recent No. 1 album, Gaslighter, was bumped from the top spot by the debut album by a promising newcomer named Morgan Wallen.

  • Waylon Jennings (76 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Sept. 6, 1975

    Most recent week at No. 1: June 14, 1986

    Longest-running No. 1: Greatest Hits (16 weeks in 1979)

    Notes: Jennings’ tally of No. 1 albums includes three collabs with Nelson – one just with Nelson; one that also included Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser; and one that included Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson as well. His tally also includes a 1976 live album, Waylon Live.

  • Tim McGraw (76 weeks)

    Tim McGrawTim McGraw
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    First week at No. 1: April 9, 1994

    Most recent week at No. 1: Sept. 5, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: Not a Moment Too Soon (29 weeks in 1994)

    Notes: McGraw’s tally includes a 2017 collab with his wife, Faith Hill, The Rest of Our Life. That title should probably be The Rest of Our Lives, but we’re not going to correct the grammar of someone who has logged 76 weeks at No. 1.

  • Randy Travis (80 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 9, 1986

    Most recent week at No. 1: Nov. 24, 1990

    Longest-running No. 1: Always & Forever (43 weeks in 1987-88)

    Notes: Always & Forever had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1980s.

  • Charley Pride (85 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: May 18, 1968

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 17, 1980

    Longest-running No. 1s: Charley Pride Sings Heart Songs (16 weeks in 1972) and The Best of Charley Pride, Volume 2 (16 weeks in 1972).

    Notes:  The albums referenced above were No. 1 back-to-back and spent a combined total of 32 consecutive weeks at No. 1. Now, that’s what you call dominating a chart. Both albums contained Pride’s signature song, “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin.’” Pride’s final No. 1 album, There’s a Little Bit of Hank in Me (1980), was a tribute to Hank Williams. Pride is the only Black artist on this list so far.

  • Luke Combs (89 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: June 24, 2017

    Most recent week at No. 1: July 9, 2022

    Longest-running No. 1: This One’s for You (50 weeks in 2017-18)

    Notes: This One’s for You had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 2010s.

  • Shania Twain (97 weeks)     

    Shania TwainShania Twain
    Image Credit: Margaret Norton/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: July 22, 1995

    Most recent week at No. 1: Oct. 21, 2017

    Longest-running No. 1: Come on Over (50 weeks in 1997-2000)

    Notes: Twain is the second-highest ranking female solo artist on this list. Come on Over had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1990s. The hit-studded blockbuster spent time at No. 1 in four consecutive years – 1997 through 2000. It received a Grammy nod for album of the year, and spawned two song of the year nominees, “You’re Still the One” and “You’ve Got a Way.”

  • Kenny Rogers (99 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: May 21, 1977

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 4, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: Kenny (25 weeks in 1979-80)

    Notes: Kenny, which housed the hit “You Decorated My Life,” had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1970s. Rogers’ tally includes a 1978 collab with Dottie West, Every Time Two Fools Collide, and a 2018 compilation, The Best of Kenny Rogers: Through the Years, which hit No. 1 following his death in March 2020.

  • Taylor Swift (101 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 4, 2007

    Most recent week at No. 1: July 29, 2023?

    Longest-running No. 1: Fearless (35 weeks in 2008-09)

    Notes:  Swift is the highest-charting female solo artist on this list, which is especially impressive given her mid-career pivot to pop. Her tally includes both the original and Taylor’s Version’s editions of Fearless, Speak Now and Red. With Fearless, Swift became the youngest Grammy winner for album of the year to that point, a title now held by Billie Eilish.

  • Willie Nelson (107 weeks)    

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    First week at No. 1: Oct. 4, 1975

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 20, 2017

    Longest-running No. 1: Always on My Mind (22 weeks in 1982)

    Notes: Nelson’s tally includes a collab with Waylon Jennings, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser; another with Jennings, Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson; another with just Jennings, and two with Haggard. It also includes two live albums, Willie and Family Live (1979) and the Honeysuckle Rose soundtrack (1980).

  • Alabama (125 weeks)           

    AlabamaAlabama
    Image Credit: CBS via Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: May 23, 1981

    Most recent week at No. 1: Nov. 11, 2006

    Longest-running No. 1s: Feels So Right (28 weeks in 1981-82) and Mountain Music (28 weeks in 1982-83).

    Notes: Alabama is the highest-ranking group on this list. Feels So Right (in May 1981) was the first No. 1 by a group that wasn’t named after its leader. (So, we’re discounting Merle Haggard and the Strangers, Sonny James and the Southern Gentlemen and The Charlie Daniels Band.) Alabama’s tally of No. 1 albums includes a 1988 live album, Alabama Live.

  • Garth Brooks (173 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Oct. 13, 1990

    Most recent week at No. 1: Dec. 23, 2017

    Longest-running No. 1: No Fences (41 weeks in 1990-91)

    Notes: Brooks’ tally of No. 1 albums includes a double-disc live album, Double Live (1998); a pair of Christmas albums, Garth Brooks & the Magic of Christmas (1999) and Christmas Together (2016), the latter a collab with his wife, Trisha Yearwood; and a remarkable four box sets – The Limited Series (1998), Blame It All on My Roots: Five Decades of Influences (2013), The Ultimate Collection (2016) and The Anthology Part I: The First Five Years (2017).

  • Morgan Wallen (209 weeks)

    Trending on Billboard

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 15, 2020

    Most recent week at No. 1: Nov. 1, 2025

    Longest-running No. 1: Dangerous: The Double Album (97 weeks in 2021-23)

    Notes: Dangerous: The Double Album had the longest run at No. 1 in the chart’s history. One Thing at a Time, which spent 87 weeks at No. 1, is in second place.

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October 27, 2025 0 comments
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The Droptines on Hard Work, TikTok, and Texas Country Music
Music

The Droptines on Hard Work, TikTok, and Texas Country Music

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Droptines were used to playing simple dive bars and rock rooms. Their worldview changed this summer when they went on an amphitheater tour with Whiskey Myers.

By the time the Texas roots-rock band’s opening run for Whiskey Myers ended with a sold-out show in Nashville earlier this summer, the five-piece — named after a deer’s antler that, through genetics or injury, grows downward — nearly had whiplash over how far they had come.

“It feels like an acid trip,” Conner Arthur, the band’s singer, tells Rolling Stone. “There will be a lot to unpack after it’s all done. I need to start journaling, because I feel like I’ve forgotten a lot already.”

The Droptines are Arthur, bassist Dillon Sampson, drummer Johnny Sheets, pedal steel player Tony Rincon, and guitarist Donny Parkinson. Collectively, they are a group of veteran musicians from the Texas Hill Country, heavy on Texas and Red Dirt, with a wildly prolific catalog they are hell-bent on sharing at every concert.

“If you look at our setlist, there’s a shitload of songs on there,” Arthur says. “We’re not dragging out a song that should be three minutes and making it nine minutes, relying on every lick our guitar player has. We punch in, and we punch out. We’re trying to sell the songs.”

A native of Concan, Texas, Arthur grew up “at the foot of the state” at House Pasture Co., a major venue in the Texas music scene, run by Arthur’s parents. He started taking music seriously as a teenager, leaving home at 18 and busking around the country for the better part of a year. He formed the Droptines in 2019 and released an EP, but the pandemic shelved any real growth until 2021.

The first few years of the band were “filled with dumb shit” as Arthur recalls now. The band took nearly any gig it was offered, even when travel costs outweighed the pay. Their approach, he says, was grassroots, aiming to win over fans one-by-one. The first place he recalls it taking hold was in Lubbock, Texas. The band celebrated the release of a single, “Bill of Sale,” at the Blue Light — a music room on Buddy Holly Ave. — in 2023, and were greeted with a full house.

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“The biggest chapter turn was in Lubbock,” Arthur recalls. “We walked in the damn door and it was sold out. That’s when I went, ‘God almighty, this is working.’ People started paying attention after they saw that.”

“Bill of Sale” made it onto the band’s self-titled 2024 album, one which raised the group’s profile significantly. Once impressive shows — such as an afternoon set at the 2024 Jackalope Jamboree in Pendleton, Oregon, to an overflow crowd — became routine. This year, the group landed a slot at Bonnaroo as well as a pair of afterparties at Lollapalooza (one with Luke Combs and one with Wyatt Flores), plus runs with Dwight Yoakam and American Aquarium.

The Lollapalooza show, the group says, was apparently manifested by the guitarist Parkinson.

“We got the news we were gonna play Lollapalooza, and Donny was still asleep,” Sampson says. “I go upstairs, and I wake him up and say, ‘Donny! We’re gonna play Lollapalooza!’ and he opens his eyes and says, ‘I always knew I’d play Lollapalooza,’ and rolls back over and goes back to sleep.”

Such confidence did not extend across the group. Ahead of their show at Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater, Arthur admitted he wasn’t “used to this type of shit.” Success, he said, felt “like I stole something.” In the wake of the Droptines’ self-titled record, the calls from record labels began. Major outfits like Warner Records felt too big, but when representatives from Big Loud Texas showed up to a bar show in College Station, the group found its match.

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Big Loud Texas was co-founded by Miranda Lambert and Jon Randall in 2023, and, a year later, the imprint named Brendon Anthony, then director of the Texas Music Office, as vice-president. Immediately, Anthony and Randall realized they both had the Droptines on their radars.

“Conner is a special songwriter and frontman,” Anthony tells Rolling Stone. “That comes across to me on the releases and onstage. His mind and interests and talents — beyond music as well — are so unique. The band behind him is tightly in tune and gets more locked in as they tour.”

The group announced their signing by the label at their Nashville show, which coincided with the release of the single “Take Too Much.” The song combines love at first sight, drugs, and death. Arthur’s initial delivery of, “I met a girl and it’s too soon to talk about her,” over heavy electric guitar, is a chilling tone-setter.

At the end of September, the Droptines released the follow-up “Calling All Cars,” a cover of a Mike McClure (The Great Divide) song about an alcohol-fueled fatal car crash and its impact on the first responders. The group will spend the rest of 2025 alternating between a headlining tour of theaters, along with more of those high-profile opening slots, including dates with the Turnpike Troubadours, plus another show with Whiskey Myers at the rockers’ annual Moon Crush festival in Miramar Beach, Florida, on Nov. 7.

For the Droptines, it’s all the result of their on-the-grind mentality.

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“Hard work is hard for a reason. I’m not mad at anybody who went from TikTok to a tour bus right away,” Arthur says, “but I feel like what we’re doing has a little bit more dignity.”

Josh Crutchmer is a journalist and author whose latest books, Never Say Never and Red Dirt Unplugged are available via Back Lounge Publishing.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Trump country music dancing
Music

Trump Country Music’s March of the Cowboy Boots » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Donald Trump’s political base has been regularly fortified by a demographic raised on this century’s country music. Moreover, country music has grown so big that pop stars are now gravitating to it in the same way country stars once gravitated to pop in the 2010s. Just listen to recent material by Beyoncé, Post Malone, Ed Sheeran, Lana Del Rey, and Sabrina Carpenter. Inadvertently, their cachet has helped normalize and mainstream the ethos of both country music and Trump.

Bro-country still lingers, too, its testosterone-fueled songs now sounding like manifestos for the stereotypical Trumpian male. Despite “backlash” subgenres like neo-traditional and boyfriend country emerging, the industry sees little reason to deviate too far from bro’s macho imagery, now marketed and manifested throughout the nation. The more politicized male acts have been given particular attention, coalescing into a sub-subgenre one might call “Trump country”.

Like Merle Haggard for Richard Nixon and Toby Keith for George Bush Jr., Trump has his own country music star representative in Jason Aldean. Now an old-school bro with a John Wayne image and demeanor, Aldean measured and manipulated the rising tide and temperature of Trumpism with “Try That In a Small Town” (2023).

Trump Country Music’s March

Calculated to create controversy and clicks by its co-writers, Kelley Lovelace, Neil Thrasher, Tully Kennedy, and Kurt Allison, the song’s anti-liberal message was framed as a vigilante fantasy of small-town (code: white conservative) America responding to urban protesters (code: Black Lives Matter). Its effect was far-reaching, helping stir and rally the Republican base just in time for the 2024 presidential election.

The contentious aspects of the song, though, had less to do with the lyrics—which differed little from any number of songs by Charlie Daniels, Hank Williams Jr., and Kid Rock—than the video, which propelled the song from a minor to a major hit. Against a backdrop of rioters that suggests lawless American cities, Aldean threatens the similarly inclined with “try that in a small town”, inferring that calling the police would not be his first line of response.

Other scenes show the singer and band performing in front of the Maury County Courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee, the infamous site of 18-year-old Henry Choate’s lynching in 1927, and the Columbia Uprising in 1947.

Reactions to the video from within country music culture were immediate, with Jason Isbell, Sheryl Crow, and Margo Price condemning its endorsement of vigilante justice, and Travis Tritt, Cody Johnson, and Brantley Gilbert defending the clip for its law and order message. Released at the same time various Republican presidential candidates were vying for their party’s nomination, co-option fever broke out. Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley both used the song at campaign rallies.

A product built to exploit emotions of fear and anger, Aldean’s song was ideal for politicians seeking to outflank Trump on the right. When Country Music Television and other outlets pulled the video from rotation, this enabled the far right’s cherished victim role to be played. Then South Dakota governor Kristi Noem feigned shock that anyone would want to “cancel” the song, while her Arkansas comrade-in-performative outrage, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, argued that the urban left should spend less time trying to ban songs and more time trying to stop criminals and looters.

Trump soon added to the chorus, posting on his Truth Social account, “Jason Aldean is a fantastic guy who just came out with a great new song. Support Jason all the way. MAGA!!!”

Trump, of course, went on to win the nomination and the 2024 election, supported by appearances along the campaign trail by Aldean. The atmosphere of anger and outrage the singer had helped create across red America perhaps helped the president-elect even more. Aldean got what he asked for, too, as Trump’s regime now applies the kind of unconstitutional treatment of civil protesters the singer would no doubt welcome.

Another song co-opted relentlessly by the far right in the same year, 2023, was “Rich Men North of Richmond”, by Oliver Anthony. Sounding more like Appalachian folk than bro-country, Anthony’s song came out of left field but soon landed on the political right’s plate. Bypassing the Nashville superstructure, “Rich Men North of Richmond” signaled a return to roots music after decades of country rock and pop dominance. It also evoked the same feelings of anger, grievance, and nostalgia Aldean had in “Try That in a Small Town”.

Like that song, Anthony’s struck a chord with heartland America, and it, too, shot to the top of the national Trump country music charts. Both songs tapped into populist appeals, and both spoke to and stoked working-class resentments by targeting perceived elites.

Early in the song, the populism appears to come from the left as the singer rages against low pay and greedy politicians in Washington. Then, though, the lyrics take a rightward turn as Anthony shifts the blame to a section of the poor by calling out “the obese milking welfare”, an update of Reagan’s “welfare queen” scapegoat. 

By the time of the Republican primaries in 2023, Anthony’s song had gone viral, becoming a topic of national discussion. It was brought up in the first question of the primary debate on August 23rd when moderator Martha MacCallum of Fox News said, “As we sit here tonight, the number one song on the Billboard chart is called ‘Rich Men North of Richmond.’ It is by a singer from Farmville, Virginia, named Oliver Anthony. His lyrics speak of alienation, of deep frustration with the state of government and of this country.”

MacCallum then asked why the song was resonating so strongly, noting that Washington, D.C. is approximately 100 miles north of Richmond. This set up the participants to co-opt the song by aligning it with their own proposals for less government and less welfare spending.

Georgia U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene later jumped on the bandwagon, giving the song a nationalistic spin by calling it “the anthem of the forgotten Americans who truly support this nation.” In the ensuing weeks, it seemed that “Rich Men North of Richmond” was embraced by as many far-right influencers as MAGA voters.

Dismayed by the political exploitation of his song, Anthony’s protestations of misinterpretation and misappropriation were ultimately drowned out by the tsunami of far-right voices—as right-wing political strategist Steve Bannon would say, flooding the zone. Progressive country songwriter Nick Shoulders summarized, “It’s a song about the people who were trying to present [Anthony] as one of them, and it shows how insidious and intense the far right is when it attempts to co-opt country music and rural grievances.”

When co-opting country artists as their own, the far right gives them protected status. Thus, just as Trump is always pardoned for his “sins” and his indiscretions rationalized, so country singer Morgan Wallen was treated similarly when TMZ posted footage of him shouting out racial slurs. Although initially condemned within the industry, the singer was soon cast as a victim of the “gotcha” left.

Furthermore, Trump’s America rallied around the country star such that sales of his music shot up 339% the day after the incident. As with Aldean’s song, purchasing became part of the protest against cancel culture, a way of showing which side you are on. Trump country music, like Trump himself, essentially means that as long as your hurtful words or actions provoke or “own” the liberals, you will not face negative consequences for them. In fact, those moral failings can boost your career and make you a hero of the MAGA masses.

Hick-Hop’s Bro Country Beat

One subgenre of Trump country music that has made divisive resentment politics its primary appeal is country rap, or “hick-hop”. As both rap and country music have gradually drifted to the right in recent years, each increasingly driven by a monetary incentive, it was inevitable that they would cross paths despite their historic antipathy to one another. Bro-country integrated elements of rap and introduced some unlikely collaborations, Ludacris teaming up with Aldean for the remix of “Dirt Road Anthem” (2011) and Florida Georgia Line featuring Nelly on the “Cruise” (2012) remix. All concerned benefited commercially from the mergers.

Country rap departs from these past ventures by going all-in on both genres, giving full recognition to the reality that most young people raised on country music this century were also raised on rap. Colt Ford is a key figure in this subgenre, producing his own country rap in the late 2000s while introducing others via his Average Joes Entertainment label. His tentacles of influence reached into bro-country, too; it was he who first penned and performed “Dirt Road Anthem” in 2008. Bubba Sparxxx was also an early innovator, his Deliverance (2003) album drawing attention to Georgia as the hub of country rap activity.

Common to this subculture is a hard-right bent that takes the topics of bro-country—trucks, mudding, drinking, and pretty girls in boots ‘n’ jorts—then adds images with a more political identity: guns, “rednecks”, and Confederate flags. Without support from Nashville’s Music Row or country radio, country rap operates much like Ku Klux Klan-funded country did during the 1960s; in the shadows and on the periphery of society.

There, greater space and autonomy enable an extreme and full-throated version of conservative country, one more appealing to militia types than mainstream Republicans. Among the ranks of these rap warriors are the Lacs, who host their own annual festival in Blackshear, Georgia, where bro-country fantasies are lived out and Trump is branded on shirts and hats. Their song, “Let Your Country Hang Out” (2012), advocates flying the Confederate flag in your front yard, a gesture that posse member “Uncle Snap” Sharpe justifies as satiating fans that identify with this symbol of southern pride and liberal trolling.

Other acts include Big Smo, who channels his inner Hank Jr. with “Rednecks Got It Right” (2015), and Upchurch, a comedian turned social media star who has maximized his profits by playing to hard-right white supporters who care little for rap but a lot for the messaging. In “Bloodshed” (2018), Upchurch offers a Trumpian take on the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally with the lines, “Hate groups throwin’ piss ‘cause they’re mad at a monument / …You fuckin’ degenerate, get your lazy ass off the grass / This ain’t a statue of slavery.”

MAGA rapper Forgiato Blow survives through the online sale of Trump-loving and liberal-hating music and merchandise. As a committed activist rapper, he serves an important role for his political hero, keeping his followers in a perpetually elevated state of anger and aggression, in the process herding them into a de facto private army ready and prepared to intimidate or attack any dissenters or detractors.

Trump Country Music’s Tuning Fork

All authoritarians seek to legitimize their regimes by establishing a subservient cultural wing. With its vast majority of fans voting Republican, Trump country music is a genre suited for the current administration to court, cultivate, and co-opt. As sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom recently noted, “Our nation’s politics…have gone white nationalist. That makes country music, and Nashville, a good fit for the moment.” ( She continues, “Trumpist power brokers want to turn Nashville into the right wing’s Hollywood. They want Nashville for the same reason they want universities and the Kennedy Center.”

To achieve this goal requires willing participants and alliances, artists and industries prepared to accept, express, and promote the requisite politics. In Trump country music, the far right has found that those involved are either drawn in by ideology or incentivized by the financial rewards available. Today’s country music culture has become a quid pro quo zone in which all involved parties are rewarded for their graft and exploitation.

For this to flourish, a network of communications is needed, an echo chamber where the voices of far-right country bounce into far-right media, which bounce into far-right politics, all ultimately bouncing back to the country fans that finance them all. Those consumers are (unwitting) contributors, prompted with values-based propaganda by their cultural representatives to buy the ideologically right music (e.g., Aldean) and to boycott dissenters (e.g., the Chicks).

For this circular flow of Trump country music to run smoothly, all artists are obliged to tow the party line. Thus, when country superstar Zach Bryan recently had the audacity to include lyrics in a song that critique the activities of ICE, he immediately incurred the wrath of both Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, and its secretary, Kristi Noem.  Surveying what is currently happening elsewhere across America’s cultural landscape, one might ask: Will country music be next to experience the threats, bribes, and shakedowns necessary to create a Trump-friendly world of entertainment?


Works Cited [underway]

Barnette, Emma and Egwuonwu, Nnamdi. “Haley and Ramaswamy play Jason Aldean song ‘Try That In A Small Town’ at campaign events”. NBC News. 20 July 2023.

Cox, Bradley. “Shooter Jennings Says ‘Try That In A Small Town” Shouldn’t Be Considered For A Grammy Because It’s A Crappy Song’”. WhiskeyRiff. 3 November 2023.

Sforza, Lauren. “Noem ‘shocked’ over attempts to ‘cancel’ Jason Aldean, his song and beliefs”. The Hill. 19 July 2023.

Zemler, Emily. “Sheryl Crow Slams Jason Aldean’s ‘Try That in a Small Town’: ‘It’s Just Lame’”. Rolling Stone. 19 July 2023.

(https://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/4110225-republicans-rush-to-defend-jason-aldean-and-try-that-in-a-small-town/)

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFIBpVMoxWs)

(https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/newly-released-country-song-rich-men-north-of-richmond-from-unknown-artist-instantly-becomes-right-wing-anthem/)

(https://jacobin.com/2023/09/country-music-white-rural-working-class-south-civil-rights-challenge-injustice) 

(https://www.businessinsider.com/morgan-wallens-music-sales-skyrocketed-racial-slur-controversy-2021-2)

(https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/rhymes-from-the-backwoods-the-rise-of-country-rap-205828/)  

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/18/opinion/country-music-beyonce-lana.html)

(https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/08/arts/music/zach-bryan-song-kristi-noem.htm

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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The Free Press
TV & Streaming

CBS News’ Bari Weiss Shocks ’60 Minutes’ Staff With Question About Why Country Thinks They’re ‘Biased’

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Just days after taking over as editor-in-chief of CBS News, Bari Weiss has reportedly already rocked the boat with some of her staffers. The New York Times published a report on Sunday, October 19, about alleged tension between Weiss and the staff of 60 Minutes following a meeting on Tuesday, October 14.

Weiss reportedly asked the staff, “Why does the country think you’re biased?”

“The inquiry was met with stunned awkwardness, according to three people who recounted details from the private session in Midtown Manhattan,” Michael M. Grynbaum and Benjamin Mullin wrote in the New York Times piece. “The staff of 60 Minutes, the nation’s most-watched news program, view their coverage as firmly nonpartisan and reject criticism from President [Donald] Trump and his allies who argue that it has a liberal slant.”

President Trump sued CBS News’ parent company, Paramount Global, in 2024, claiming 60 Minutes deceptively edited an interview with Kamala Harris in her favor. Trump and Paramount Global reached a $16 million settlement earlier this year, which has brought the media company under much scrutiny.

Weiss just became the editor-in-chief of CBS News on October 6, but has wasted no time making waves. According to the NYT report, there has been a mixed reaction among CBS News staff to their new leader.

“Some staff members are hopeful that Ms. Weiss will bring some needed energy and ideas to a news division that has struggled to adapt to the digital age,” Grynbaum and Mullin added. “Her interest in big interviews and bigger audiences has buoyed some CBS journalists, who think their network, which has cycled through five presidents in five years, needs a shake-up.”

The journalists also reported that Weiss is “impressing” some top executives at CBS, while “confounding” others. Plus, they noted, she has already been personally involved in some interview bookings with subjects who are right-leaning.

“Ms. Weiss, an ardent supporter of Israel … helped book an interview with Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister,” the report said. “She later worked with 60 Minutes producers to land Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, the architects of President Trump’s Middle East peace plan, for this Sunday’s episode.”

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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How Country Singer Ashley Cooke Copes With Life-Threatening Diagnosis
Celebrity News

How Country Singer Ashley Cooke Copes With Life-Threatening Diagnosis

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84


Ashley Cooke gets by with a little help from her friends.
While the rising country star has had a banner year since achieving her first No. 1 song on country radio in June 2024 with “your place,”…

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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