Beschreibung:
Walking the Line: Country Music Lyricists and American Culture examines how country songwriters engage with their nation’s religion, literature, and politics. Walking the line requires following strict codes, respecting territories, and, sometimes, yearning to break those bonds. This collection’s essays explore how iconic country lyricists such as Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, and Steve Earle have tested and expanded such boundaries, challenging musical, social, and political conventions, often reevaluating what “country” means in country music.
An insightful and wide-ranging look at one of America’s most popular genres of music, Walking the Line: Country Music Lyricists and American Culture examines how country songwriters engage with their nation’s religion, literature, and politics. Country fans have long encountered the concept of walking the line, from Johnny Cash’s “I Walk the Line” to Waylon Jennings’s “Only Daddy That’ll Walk the Line.” Walking the line requires following strict codes, respecting territories, and, sometimes, recognizing that only the slightest boundary separates conflicting allegiances. However, even as the term acknowledges control, it suggests rebellion, the consideration of what lies on the other side of the line, and perhaps the desire to violate that code. For lyricists, the line presents a moment of expression, an opportunity to relate an idea, image, or emotion. These lines represent boundaries of their kind as well, but as the chapters in this volume indicate, some of the more successful country lyricists have tested and expanded the boundaries as they have challenged musical, social, and political conventions, often reevaluating what “country” means in country music. From Jimmie Rodgers’s redefinitions of democracy, to revisions of Southern Christianity by Hank Williams and Willie Nelson, to feminist retellings by Loretta Lynn and Dolly Parton to masculine reconstructions by Merle Haggard and Cindy Walker, to Steve Earle’s reworking of American ideologies, this collection examines how country lyricists walk the line. In weighing the influence of the lyricists’ accomplishments, the contributing authors walk the line in turn, exploring iconic country lyrics that have tested and expanded boundaries, challenged musical, social, and political conventions, and reevaluated what “country” means in country music.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Credits
Introduction
Walking the Line: The Dixie Chicks and the Making of Country Lyricists
Thomas Alan Holmes
Roxanne Harde
Chapter 1
“Nobody knows but me”: Jimmie Rodgers and the Body Politic
Taylor Hagood
Chapter 2
Cindy Walker, Lyle Lovett, and the West
Thomas Alan Holmes
Chapter 3
“Help your brother along the way”: Hank Williams and the Humane Tradition
Howard Steve Goodson
Chapter 4
JC: Johnny Cash and Faith
Thomas Alan Holmes
Chapter 5
Religious Doctrine in the mid-1970s to 1980s Country Music Concept Albums of Willie Nelson
Blase S. Scarnati
Chapter 6
Grace to Catch a Falling Soul: Country, Gospel, and Evangelical Populism in the Music of Dottie Rambo
Douglas Harrison
Chapter 7
“Here’s the story of my life; listen and I’ll tell it twice”: The Appalachian Autobiography of Loretta Lynn
Laura Grace Pattillo
Chapter 8
“Branded” Man: Merle Haggard’s Romance of the Outlier
Thomas Alan Holmes
Chapter 9
Townes van Zandt: “Now here’s what this story’s told.”
Pete Falconer and James Zborowski
Chapter 10
Wildness, Eschatology, and Enclosure in the Songs of Townes Van Zandt
Michael B. MacDonald
Chapter 11
“Where it counts I’m real”: The Complexities of Dolly Parton’s Feminist Voice
Samantha Christensen
Chapter 12
“Sin City”: Gram Parsons and the “Christ-Haunted South”
Clay Motley
Chapter 13
Weeping Willows and Long Black Veils: The Country Roots of Rosanne Cash, from Scotland to Tennessee
June Skinner Sawyers
Chapter 14
“They draft the white trash first ‘round here anyway”: Steve Earle’s American Boys
Roxanne Harde
Index
About the Contributors