Tennessee
Related: About this forumLouder than guns (can country music save America?)
https://www.belcourt.org/films/louder-than-guns/"LOUDER THAN GUNS begins with tragedy and becomes a story about how listening, empathy, and song can rise above the noise. In the wake of yet another horrific mass shooting, this time at the Covenant School in Nashville (in March 2023), Ketch Secor, lead singer of the popular country-bluegrass band Old Crow Medicine Show, decided it was time to speak out on gun reform. He felt compelled to write an op-ed in the New York Times entitled, Country Music Can Lead America Out of Its Obsession with Guns. This caught the attention of Ketchs friend, public radio journalist David Greene, and the two set out to kickstart productive and open dialogue about gun rights and gun violence in America. LOUDER THAN GUNS brings together the frustrations and hopes of citizens who are asked to listen to one another and try to find common ground on this profoundly American issue. Led by Secor and Greene, these emotional and inspiring discussions, in barbeque joints, barbershops, church pews, gun stores and concert halls prove that localized, community-led discourse has the power to move the needle on gun reform in ways that todays polarized media and politicians rarely achieve.
Mon, May 11 at 8:00pm: Pre-screening panel discussion with Ketch Secor of Old Crow Medicine Show; Katy Dieckhaus, mother of Covenant student Evelyn Dieckhaus and community engagement coordinator for Safer Tennessee; and Clay Stauffer, senior minister, Woodmont Christian Church and author of "What the World Needs Now: Virtue and Character in an Age of Chaos;" moderated by Blake Farmer, host of Nashville Public Radio's "This is Nashville." Doug Pray, LOUDER THAN GUNS director, and David Greene, host of KCRW's "Left, Right and Center" and former host of NPR's "Morning Edition," will also be in attendance." (BUY TICKETS at link)
Ocelot II
(131,135 posts)magicarpet
(19,343 posts)....responsible gun control and bring new ideas to the table. The last two brand new country songs I heard were liberal country singers,.. singing songs to primarily red necks and trying to soften their rigid religious and social outlooks.
Country music can be a heavy weight catalyst for social and cultural change. We should welcome their effort and help to bring needed political and policy transitions through their guitars and country music. The more people we reach the easier our job is to evoke change for a better tomorrow in mind.
Dr. T
(696 posts)I had to stop going to my preferred establishment when the new owner turned it into a redneck cowboy bar. The patronage flipped from middle of the road thinking people to glassy eyed, hate filled MAGA. Country music was the catalyst for this change.
Tanuki
(16,496 posts)Secor is best known for the country/ Americana standard "Wagon Wheel." He's trying to be the catalyst for a return to reason and decency. His NY Times Op-Ed is linked in the piece excerpted in the OP above , and says in part:
"https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/05/opinion/nashville-school-shooting-country-music-gun-violence.html?unlocked_article_code=1.bVA.GPQ-.-pOPkoxQ-UVM&smid=url-share
"....My band, Old Crow Medicine Show, which first struck up a tune in Nashville 25 years ago and was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 2013, has always played a fringe role on the country scene. Though we lean left politically, our signature song, Wagon Wheel, has become a mainstream anthem for audiences that consistently lean right. When I hear it blasting from a pickup truck, I often spy an N.R.A. sticker on the bumper. In my experience, country stars tend toward centrism. The right-wing groups we most often encounter are not our bandmates but our audiences.
What the South needs now is an anti-assault-weapons movement driven by voices from the center, by interdenominational faith leaders, by students Nashville is called the Athens of the South because it is teeming with scholars at its many colleges and by country singers who are tired of bending to the whims of fearmongers and who are ready to speak from their platforms to an impressionable audience.
Conservative musicians are always vocal when it comes to the culture wars, but stars with moderate views tend not to weigh in publicly. The motive is genuine: We dont want to offend anyone. But in times as dire as these, silence is complicity. Its time for country music makers to use their platforms to speak candidly to their conservative audiences. Our outrage needs to move from the green room to center stage.
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If conservative Christian gun enthusiasts need a calling to lay down assault rifles after the tragedy at Covenant School, they need look no further than Isaiah 2:3-4, the Scriptures peace crusader passage, in which swords are beaten to plowshares and spears to pruning hooks. If they need a soundtrack, they need only crank up Johnny Cashs Sunday Morning Coming Down, written by Kris Kristofferson, a sharpshooting veteran turned peace activist. In the song, a spiritual journey during a Sabbath-day hangover returns the singer to something that hed lost somehow somewhere along the way. The country community has lost its way if it thinks owning an AR-15 is more important than a childs right to safely attend school.".... (more)