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Don't Rock The Inbox's avatar

thank you as ever for reading! and i also love whiskey and you :) - nw

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Angus Batey's avatar

Thanks for this, as always. Your perspective is fascinating, coming from the inside of the mechanics of the country industry, never mind inside the U.S. and all that that necessitates and implies whenever any artist blurs lines that it sadly benefits certain powers to continue to draw and redraw around things that really ought never to be separated. When I listen to his records I hear echoes of Al Green as often as I hear echoes of Waylon Jennings, and it's should be a cause of celebration that these inspirations can come together in one place and for the person doing that to be as successful as he clearly is. The only division that matters is whether it's true or not, I suppose. Some people you can just instantly tell that they mean it and live it and they can bring all that to their art, and then there's everyone else.

I'm old enough to remember the "New Country" marketing campaign of the 1980s, mounted by the UK record industry during one of its valiant if perennially doomed attempts to get the music as a whole to take off over here. It was effective in some respects in that the line that the people behind it decided to draw was between what had become (rightly or wrongly) seen and perceived to be a Nashville mainstream drowning in rhinestones and showbiz cliches, and a gaggle of musicians who drew inspiration from rootsier and older touchstones and tried to make records that combined the fizz and precision of the state-of-the-art recording technologies of the day with songs and stylistic approaches that were more in keeping with something that was perhaps redolent of the down-home and the supposedly "authentic". Some of those records were superb - the first couple of albums apiece from Dwight Yoakham and The Judds spring to mind - but there was another veteran Nashville songwriter being given a belated solo shot who got swept up in the middle of it and who was both an exemplar and an anomaly among the others being pushed at the same time. I definitely hear parallels between Stapleton and Steve Earle beyond the vaguely similar early-career back stories, in so far as both appear to have a healthy disregard for doing anything just because other people expect it of them; and both write songs that, even if they're portraying characters other than themselves, are clearly and indellibly drawn from the lives they've lived and the people they've known and an urgent if understated sense of active engagement with the world around them.

I can't really comment on the role of country radio in giving him a profile on these shores - I don't really listen to any radio, not sure there's anything that can be called "country radio" here anyway - nor am I sure that awards-show exposure makes any difference here either. (I've never been that excited about the Timberlake performance; my go-to clip whenever I try to persuade someone of the man's genius is the one at another country awards show where he performs Whiskey And You solo and largely in silhouette. It's almost as spine-tingling to watch and re-watch as Aretha at the Lincoln Center Awards. I'm ceaselessly amazed that he seems, as you outline, to be arguably best known for a song that not only is one he, surely well on the way to all-time-great writer status, didn't actually write; but that is not even the best song from the album it was released on which has "Whiskey" in its title. But I digress.) I first heard him when I was about to leave the cinema after watching Hell And High Water - Outlaw State of Mind kept me in my seat and never left my head. I've bought every album since, but you often have to do a bit of work to find them in record shops over here, and if he gets played on radio it can't be all that often. Yet the London date on his short UK tour this October is at the 20,000-capacity O2, and it sold out pretty much on the day the tickets went on sale. Whatever he and his team are doing, it's clearly working.

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