Why Rolling Stone is TERRIFIED of Oliver Anthony: Former Mumford & Sons banjoist weighs in



If you spent any time on social media in the past week, then you probably scrolled by a video that has clearly captured the heart of America.

Country musician Oliver Anthony went from unknown to the top of the iTunes charts after his song, “Rich Men North of Richmond,” went viral overnight.

The song features lyrics like “Lord, we got folks in the street, ain’t got nothing to eat/And the obese milking welfare,” and “Well God, if you’re 5-foot-3 and you’re 300 pounds/Taxes ought not to pay for your bags of fudge rounds.”

Anthony also seems to hint at his disgust regarding Epstein and his associates with the line, “I wish politicians would look out for miners/And not just minors on an island somewhere.”

However, while the working class celebrated Anthony's truth-telling, the journalists got to work.

They attempted to paint Anthony as right-wing, despite the fact that he identifies as center and believes both sides have been ruined by corruption.

Winston Marshall, the former banjoist from Mumford & Sons, spoke to Glenn Beck about Anthony and his overnight success.

“The story of Oliver Anthony is absolutely wonderful. This is a kid, factory worker from Appalachian America, and he has currently got four songs in the top ten. Ten songs in the Top 25 iTunes chart, and all three of the top three.”

“This is a huge moment. These songs have been recorded on his phone. Just his beautiful voice and a guitar. It’s so authentic and it’s so real, and this blend is the counterculture that we’ve been looking for,” Marshall tells Glenn.

However, Marshall is much more excited than the journalists who are now trying to tear Anthony down.

“Instead of sharing in this excitement of a truly countercultural moment,” Marshall says that Rolling Stone and other outlets like it “look at who’s enjoying this music and they denigrate it accordingly.”


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Oliver Anthony reads from Bible to overflow crowd at farm market — his first show since 'Rich Men North of Richmond' launched him from obscurity in matter of days



Singer-songwriter Oliver Anthony on Sunday afternoon played his first concert since blue-collar anthem "Rich Men North of Richmond" launched him from obscurity into social media stardom in a matter of days last week.

Fittingly it was a free show at the Morris Farm Market on the northeastern edge of North Carolina. He told the overflow audience clamoring to see him that in June he played there for a crowd of "about 20 people."

But before things got under way, Anthony opened a Bible to Psalm 37 and began reading, "The wicked plot against the righteous and gnash their teeth at them; but the Lord laughs at the wicked, for he knows their day is coming ..." The crowd cheered as he concluded.

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Among the other memorable moments during the show was Anthony's rendition of "Rich Men North of Richmond," punctuated by a throng of folks who knew all the words and sang them right back at him. Content warning: Language:

OLIVER ANTHONY- Rich Men North of Richmond (Live From Morris Farm Market 8/13/23)youtu.be

However, Anthony's personal highlight was when country music star Jamey Johnson joined him onstage to sing "In Color" to the delight of the crowd:

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Founder of High Value Dad Jason Howerton — who's been getting the word out about Anthony and flew to North Carolina with a videographer to document Anthony's show Sunday — noted that the owner of the Morris Farm Market "just confirmed to me he had roughly 25 ACRES of parking filled for @AintGottaDollar’s show today. There were THOUSANDS. Too many to count."

After the gig, Anthony stuck around for quite a long time meeting folks who came to see him play:

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Anything else?

Even as "Rich Men North of Richmond" shot to the top of iTunes last week, the left-wing backlash commenced just as fast. Rolling Stone offered a story titled, "Right-Wing Influencers Just Found Their Favorite New Country Song," which says Anthony's tune features "Reagan-era talking points about welfare" and includes a "real head-turner" with "an apparent allusion to Jeffrey Epstein’s Caribbean island, where the billionaire and convicted sex offender allegedly introduced underage girls to powerful associates."

With that, how about another dose of the video that lit the viral fire? (And here's that Content warning: Language message again):

Oliver Anthony - Rich Men North Of Richmond youtu.be

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