Singer Maren Morris says she's quitting country music because of 'Trump years,' claims 'Try That in a Small Town' is only popular to 'own the libs'



Singer Maren Morris said she's quitting country music because "it's burning itself down" thanks in part to the "Trump years."

Morris declared that she is no longer a country music singer this week. Maren's newest album, "The Bridge," is her first on Columbia Records, where previously she was on the label's Nashville division.

The Los Angeles Times noted, "Rather, she says she’s leaving because of what she views as the country music industry’s unwillingness to honestly reckon with its history of racism and misogyny and to open its gates to more women and queer people and people of color."

However, she admitted that "as a white woman, she’s benefited from the system as it is."

The Grammy-winning singer claimed that because she is a female country music star, she is "scrutinized more" than her male peers, "even when you’re doing well."

Morris said that she's "always been an asker of questions and a status quo challenger just by being a woman."

Morris feels that the presidency of Donald Trump exposed how horrible Americans are.

"After the Trump years, people’s biases were on full display," Morris declared. "It just revealed who people really were and that they were proud to be misogynistic and racist and homophobic and transphobic. All these things were being celebrated, and it was weirdly dovetailing with this hyper-masculine branch of country music. I call it butt rock."

Maren said she doesn't think of herself as a "political artist."

"I just wrote songs about real life through a lens of deep respect for my country heroes," she said. "But the further you get into the country music business, that’s when you start to see the cracks. And once you see it, you can’t un-see it. So you start doing everything you can with the little power you have to make things better."

In the music video for her new song "The Tree," homes have signs in the front yard that read: "Go Woke Go Broke" and "Don't Treat On Me."

Morris, 33, was asked about the popularity of Jason Aldean's anti-riot anthem "Try That in a Small Town."

"But I think it’s a last bastion. People are streaming these songs out of spite. It’s not out of true joy or love of the music. It’s to own the libs. And that’s so not what music is intended for," Maren declared. "Music is supposed to be the voice of the oppressed — the actual oppressed. And now it’s being used as this really toxic weapon in culture wars."

Last year, Morris had a feud with Jason Aldean and his wife. Brittany Aldean questioned the legitimacy of transgender surgeries and treatment for children. Morris called Brittany a "scumbag human" and "Insurrection Barbie."

Maren said her new music exemplifies "the aftermath of walking away from something that was really important to you and the betrayal that you felt very righteously."

The former country music singer explained that one of her new songs is "about disarming that trauma and saying, 'I can’t bail water out of this sinking ship anymore. It’s so futile. I choose happiness.'"

Morris said when she performed at a recent Taylor Swift concert in Chicago that she had "never felt so safe at a live show before" because the crowd was "90% women and 10% gays and dads."

"No one’s hammered or puking in the aisles or getting into a fight or anything," she said. "It’s just so joyful."

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Black comedian from same town as Jason Aldean reveals the real motive behind leftist outrage: 'A very patriotic song'



Comedian David Lucas hit back on Monday at critics who complain that country music star Jason Aldean's newest song, "Try That In a Small Town," is racist.

Lucas — who grew up in the same town where Aldean was born, Macon, Georgia — said in a new video that he cannot understand how the song is being painted as racist.

"This is a very patriotic song," he said. "I think this is just another way that people are trying to continue the racial divide between the races."

"There may be a small, minute amount of racism [in the U.S.]. But the racism that they try to paint in the mainstream media is not accurate," Lucas continued. "I go across the whole country. I travel the world, and I've yet to experience all this racism that people try to say happens. I'm a black guy with dreadlocks and tattoos. My shows are 90–95% white. If that's what racism looks like, give me more of it."

Jason Aldean is from the same 'small town' as me... www.youtube.com

Regarding the content of the song itself, Lucas explained that he would not expect lifelong city-dwellers to understand its message.

"City people who did not grow up in small towns don't understand," he said. "A lot of stuff that people can do in Atlanta, they cannot get away with that in Macon."

Lucas went on to bash cancel culture, saying it diminishes hard work and the American dream, and said the outrage in this case is misplaced. Other music genres contain songs more worthy of outrage, he said, citing rap songs that threatened violence against Donald Trump when he was president and songs that over-sexualize women, citing Cardi B's "WAP."

"Think about that when you try to scrutinize Jason Aldean's song," Lucas advised. "Like I always say: we're just lucky to even be in a country where you can have an opinion."

Lucas ended his video foreshadowing that he may decide to make Aldean's song his new "walk-up" music.

Predictably, backlash against Aldean's song has backfired. The song debuted in the No. 2 position on Billboard's Hot 100, having amassed nearly a quarter-million digital sales and nearly 12 million streams — an impressive 999% increase over the week before the controversy.

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Jason Aldean refuses to back down over song backlash, and his newest response leaves crowd chanting 'USA!'



Country music star Jason Aldean is not backing down in the face of controversy over his song, "Try That in a Small Town."

At a concert in Cincinnati on Friday, Aldean addressed backlash about the song, telling the crowd that he believes "everybody's entitled to their opinion" before offering up one of his own: Cancel culture is "bulls**t."

"You guys know how it is this day and age, cancel culture is a thing. That's something that, if people don't like what you say, they try and make sure that they can cancel you, which means try and ruin your life, ruin everything," Aldean said.

"One thing I saw this week was a bunch of country music fans that can see through a lot of the bulls**t," he added.

Jason Aldean addresses song controversy on July 21 2023 www.youtube.com

Critics claim Aldean's song is racist and glorifies violence. But Aldean fiercely denies those charges and instead has explained the song is about tight-knit communities across the country. Those towns, as the song points out, do not tolerate the type of violence that became commonplace in major cities over the last several years.

To that point, Aldean also addressed his critics: "You can think something all you want to — it doesn't mean it's true."

"I love our country. I want to see it restored to what it once was before all this bulls**t started happening to us," he said. "I love my country. I love my family, and I will do anything to protect that — I can tell you that right now."

The crowd responded by chanting, "USA! USA! USA!"

If Aldean's critics were trying to cancel him or his new song, they certainly have failed. Not only has the backlash brought more attention to the song than it probably otherwise would have received, but the attention has made the song a hit.

Music industry experts, in fact, predict that "Try That in a Small Town" will compete for the No. 1 spot on Billboard's Hot 100.

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Jason Aldean accused of promoting LYNCHING and RACISM in a song with ZERO race-related lyrics



CMT removed Jason Aldean’s recent release “Try That in a Small Town” after the song sparked mass controversy because of its alleged promotion of lynching and racism.

Granted the lyrics have zero mention of race and the music video focuses almost exclusively on white people committing crimes, how are the wokeists justifying their accusations?

“Apparently the video was filmed in front of a courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee, where a white mob lynched a young black man, Henry Choate, from the building in 1927,” Sara Gonzales explains.

Aldean “must be a history expert,” she adds sarcastically.

A closer analysis of the lyrics and music video will reveal that the song actually speaks out against left-wing rioting, violence against law enforcement, gun control, and soft-on-crime approaches.

“There is not a single lyric in the song that references race or points to it – and there isn’t a single video clip that isn’t real news footage – and while I can try and respect others to have their own interpretation of a song with music – this one goes too far,” Aldean said in a statement following the scrutiny.

While Sara thinks Aldean’s defense of his song is certainly justified, Jason Buttrill thinks that the only thing the country star owes to the people vilifying his song is a big “suck it.”

“They want you to capitulate in front of the entire world stage” Jason says, “and it doesn’t matter if you do, because they won’t accept your capitulation” anyway.

Regardless, it appears that millions of non-woke fans are rallying to support Aldean and his song. Despite being pulled by CMT, “Try That in a Small Town” has hit #1 on the iTunes charts, surpassing Taylor Swift and K-pop stars alike.

Perhaps Aldean owes a thank you to all his critics, then?

“The appropriate response [is] ‘thanks for making me a ton of money and making me #1 on the charts,'” Rob Eno says.


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