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Country music acts quietly abandon Confederate flag


In this June 14, 2015 file photo, Darius Rucker performs at the CMA Music Festival in Nashville, Tenn. Mainstream country music has been quietly distancing itself from the Confederate flag for years, but as the debate reignites following a massacre at a black church in South Carolina on June 17, country artists still struggle to articulate their feelings about the flag’s history and symbolism.
In this June 14, 2015 file photo, Darius Rucker performs at the CMA Music Festival in Nashville, Tenn. Mainstream country music has been quietly distancing itself from the Confederate flag for years, but as the debate reignites following a massacre at a black church in South Carolina on June 17, country artists still struggle to articulate their feelings about the flag’s history and symbolism. Al Wagner/Invision/AP

The Confederate flag was once a familiar symbol in country music, representing the rural South and the renegade spirit of artists such as David Allan Coe and Hank Williams Jr.

But the rebel banner that was removed from the grounds of the South Carolina Capitol has steadily faded from stage and song, with many country artists quietly distancing themselves from the emblem that used to feature prominently in merchandise, lyrics and concerts.

“You won’t find it being used by young country acts today, partly because it doesn’t mean the same thing to them,” said Robert K. Oermann, author and columnist for MusicRow magazine. “Partly because some of them aren’t Southern, and partly because if you want to appeal to a national audience, why would you do that?”

Many artists have adopted the American flag instead.

Only a small number of country artists have been willing to speak on the issue in the weeks since nine black churchgoers were fatally shot at a Bible study in Charleston, South Carolina.

Charlie Daniels wrote a long column on his website addressing the most recent controversy over the flag, which he called “a sign of defiance, a sign of pride, a declaration of a geographical area that you were proud to be from.”

“That’s all it is to me and all it ever has been to me,” Daniels wrote, explaining that he opposes racism and believes that every person deserves the same rights and advantages regardless of skin color.

“Unfortunately,” Daniels said on the site, “the Confederate battle flag has been adopted by hate groups – and individuals like Dylann Roof,” who is charged with murder in the church attack.

John Rich, of the duo Big and Rich, told Fox News’ Sean Hannity that he agreed with calls to remove the flag from its pole outside the Statehouse in Columbia.

The banner was not commonly used until the late 1960s, when it began to be adopted by some country and rock artists who identified as outlaw musicians appealing to blue-collar fans, Oermann said.

Coe and Williams, the country group Alabama and rockers like Lynyrd Skynyrd all used the flag on stage or in merchandise or referenced the flag or the Confederacy in their lyrics.

The flag continued to appear in some country acts through the 1970s and early 1980s, but it fell out of favor as the genre became more commercial and the industry sought to reach wider audiences in the suburbs and urban areas beyond the South.

Country artists take a big risk in addressing social and political issues. Just two years ago, Brad Paisley was criticized for recording a song called “Accidental Racist,” with rapper LL Cool J, that sought to explore racial tensions but came across as naive and ill-advised.

Diane Pecknold, an associate professor of women and gender studies at the University of Louisville who has written extensively about the history of country music, said country has a strong association with patriotism and with promoting inclusion of all races and cultures. She noted that Paisley, Tim McGraw and Garth Brooks all have songs that are explicitly anti-racist.

“You can criticize them for being naive or being post-racial in a way that ignores contemporary and institutionalized racism,” Pecknold said. “You can criticize them for failing to conceptualize it in a meaningful way, but you still have to say that they are talking about race and an ideal of America that is anti-racist.”

Darius Rucker, a black musician who hails from Charleston, chose to communicate directly to his fans on Twitter: “Incredibly proud of my city for handling this tragedy with love. Thankful to be a part of a community that can come together in a time of need.”

But his music speaks louder than words. In 1994, Rucker and Hootie & The Blowfish including a song called “Drowning,” in its mega seller, “Cracked Rear View.” It was a direct rebuke on the flag’s placement on the capitol dome.

Anti-Confederate flag songs

Not all mainstream artists support the rebel flag. Here are three musicians with Southern ties that have renounced the Confederate flag in their songs.

Hootie & the Blowfish: “Drowning”

University of South Carolina alums Hootie & the Blowfish spoke out early against the flag on their 1994 platinum debut album “Cracked Rear View.” In the song “Drowning,” Rucker sings,

“Why is there a rebel flag hanging from the State House walls? Tired of hearing this s*** about heritage not hate.”

Patrick Davis: “If It’s Love (Give Up the Hate)”

Davis, a native of Camden who lives in Nashville, wrote a song to his home state following the Charleston church shooting in June. In the emotion-fueled song he sings, “The thing about doing what’s right is you have to admit what’s wrong...We are the children of the South, and of that we should be proud. But it’s time to grow up now.”

Part of the refrain says it all: “If it’s love that you want, you gotta give up the hate.”

Jason Isbell: “Palmetto Rose”

There’s a South Carolina song on Isbell’s new album, “Something More Than Free,” called “Palmetto Rose.” The lyrics don’t specifically mention the Confederate flag, but they certainly fit in with the anti-flag ethos. He sings, “It’s the women I love and the law that I hate, Lord let me die in the Iodine State” and “Catch her coming out of a King Street store, with a bull***t story about the Civil War.” Hear the song for a limited time on NPR’s First Listen.

Luke Bryan: “What Country Is”

Bryan’s sings about living in the rural South and says that country life is sweet tea, buttered biscuits and homemade peach ice cream. But, he adds, “It ain’t a rebel flag you bought at the mall.”

This story was originally published July 9, 2015 at 7:40 PM.

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