Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happy for her, but her OG performance was infinitely better!
I get such an ick feeling from the fact that this needed to covered a white dude. The original is so much better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happy for her, but her OG performance was infinitely better!
I get such an ick feeling from the fact that this needed to covered a white dude. The original is so much better.
Not everything is about race people.
I think people are upset that a white dude is topping the charts with a song written by a black, lgbt woman. Country music and its fans don’t exactly have a history of supporting black people.
Anonymous wrote:Happy for her, but her OG performance was infinitely better!
Anonymous wrote:Get paid, Tracy Chapman!! She is incredible. Such a unique voice and beautiful sound.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happy for her, but her OG performance was infinitely better!
I get such an ick feeling from the fact that this needed to covered a white dude. The original is so much better.
Not everything is about race people.
Anonymous wrote:She is now the first African-American woman to write a #1 country song.
https://www.billboard.com/music/country/tracy-chapman-first-black-woman-sole-writer-no-1-on-country-airplay-1235366302/amp/
Here’s Luke Combs’ recent cover of her 1988 hit “Fast Car”—which has rocketed up the country music charts:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happy for her, but her OG performance was infinitely better!
I get such an ick feeling from the fact that this needed to covered a white dude. The original is so much better.
Anonymous wrote:Happy for her, but her OG performance was infinitely better!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really interesting that he didn’t change any of the lyrics to reflect he is singing. He sings about being a “check out girl”. I like that he kept the original lyrics, but Chapman’s version is so much better. I listened to her version freshman year at Berkeley over and over and over again.
Me too. It was right up there with Springsteen's "Thunder Road" on my playlist of anthems.
Enjoying retirement? Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See, here’s the thing. You’re all just a bunch of a$$holes. Yea, the original version is better. They usually are. And she’s an amazing artist. But here you have a country star, a guy no less, who’s paying homage to her by singing the song as similar to the original as he can, without even attempting to do the bullshit like change the gender from him to her etc. And she’s a liberal, lesbian, African American woman singing about the black experience. It’s very brave in a real way for him to have taken this on considering his audience. I applaud him.
Nah, it’s just a lazy hit for Combs. He writes most of his stuff so maybe he just wanted an easy #1 from another writer — see Luke Bryan, Blake Shelton, Jason Aldean and their automatic hits from other songwriters. To Combs’s credit, he didn’t pretend he wrote it.
Lol ok except for the part where it’s an “easy” number one when history suggests that it wasn’t.
Every single Luke Combs puts out goes to #1. That’s how country fans & radio work. If he sang the ABC’s as a radio single, it would go to #1. That’s why it’s an easy #1 for Luke. He didn’t need to bother to write, arrange, or barely produce a song.
No, that’s not how “country fans & radio work.” It’s how it works for HIM. He’s doing something right and he’s choosing right. That counts for something. It’s not like every country singer has his string of hits.
I am not a country fan but c’mon - stop being a shrew and give credit where credit is due.