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“Got a little southern drawl in my talk, little pickup truck on my highway,” the song says before naming off Merle, Willie, and George Strait. It’s very similar to Chris Young’s latest single “Raised on Country,” which basically does the same thing. Country music’s most notorious act is out there professing the new album will be their most country yet, yet that’s not a very hard bar to meet, and their current single “Talk You Out Of It” is just about the antithesis of country music.īut it’s not a song about how country they are at least, like Easton Corbin’s brand new single “Somebody’s Gotta Be Country.” “I still chew a little Red Man, hit the lake and cast a line,” the song starts off, and goes on from there to list off one country qualifier after another, and name drop Alan Jackson.
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But if it ends up being a true country song, it will be the first from the duo. Whether the title track from the album will be released to radio or not is yet to be determined. We all got a good chuckle when Florida Georgia Line recently announced the name of their new album coming in February called Can’t Say I Ain’t Country. It happens to be that the title track from Luke Bryan’s What Makes You Country is the single from the album that is climbing the charts as we speak, and just as copycats are beginning to come in hard and heavy. In the monkey see, monkey do echo chamber that is Music Row in Nashville, this was the genesis point to what has become the latest alarming trend in country music, which is songs from performers braying on and on about how country they are, perhaps in an effort to push back against all the criticism of not being country enough … in songs that still struggle to actually sound country. It seemed to be a preemptive strike to the criticism that Luke Bryan and artists like him often face for not being country music at all, but some version of Southern pop. We knew something was amiss when Luke Bryan named his most recent album What Makes You Country.