Anonymous wrote:i am a child myself and it completely horrifies me that i was the first of my friend and family to discover the true lyrics. i believe that it is trying to glorify columbine and it should be taken off the radio immediatly. i hear it every morning while driving to school and it sickens me that people listen to this terrible song and are completely ignorent about the message this song is sending my generation.
Anonymous wrote:i am a child myself and it completely horrifies me that i was the first of my friend and family to discover the true lyrics. i believe that it is trying to glorify columbine and it should be taken off the radio immediatly. i hear it every morning while driving to school and it sickens me that people listen to this terrible song and are completely ignorent about the message this song is sending my generation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a song. Since the dawn of music, songs have dealt with controversial topics. If you read comments by the artists, they talk about how the song was meant to get people thinking about the topic in general, not Columbine specifically and was never intended to glorify.
Have any of you listened to country music lately? That has some of the most violent and abusive lyrics I've ever heard.
Please name some violent country songs.
Um, have you ever listened to any Johnny Cash songs?
Please name a lyrically offensive Johnny Cash song?
And exactly what current country song is full of violent and abusive lyrics? I'm no countr fan, but seriously? Country is pretty sanitized considering their fan base is heavily located in the bible belt.
Early one mornin' while makin' the rounds
I took a shot of cocaine and I shot my woman down
I went right home and I went to bed I stuck that lovin' 44 beneath my head
Got up next mornin' and I grabbed that gun took a shot of cocaine and away I run
Made a good run but I run too slow they overtook me down in Juarez Mexico
Late in the hot joints takin' the pills in walked the sheriff from Jericho Hill
He said Willy Lee your name is not Jack Brown
You're the dirty hack that shot your woman down
Said yes oh yes my name is Willy Lee if you've got the warrant just aread it to me
Shot her down because she made me slow
I thought I was her daddy but she had five more
When I was arrested I was dressed in black
They put me on a train and they took me back
Had no friend for to go my bail they slapped my dried up carcass in that country jail
Early next mornin' bout a half past nine I spied the sheriff coming down the line
Talked and he coughed as he cleared his throat
He said come on you dirty heck into that district court
Into the courtroom my trial began where I was handled by twelve honest men
Just before the jury started out I saw the little judge commence to look about
In about five minutes in walked the man holding the verdict in his right hand
The verdict read in the first degree I hollered Lordy Lordy have a mercy on me
The judge he smiled as he picked up his pin 99 years in the Folsom pen
99 years underneath that ground I can't forget the day I shot that bad bitch down
Come on you've gotta listen unto me lay off that whiskey and let that cocaine be
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a song. Since the dawn of music, songs have dealt with controversial topics. If you read comments by the artists, they talk about how the song was meant to get people thinking about the topic in general, not Columbine specifically and was never intended to glorify.
Have any of you listened to country music lately? That has some of the most violent and abusive lyrics I've ever heard.
Please name some violent country songs.
Um, have you ever listened to any Johnny Cash songs?
Please name a lyrically offensive Johnny Cash song?
And exactly what current country song is full of violent and abusive lyrics? I'm no countr fan, but seriously? Country is pretty sanitized considering their fan base is heavily located in the bible belt.
Early one mornin' while makin' the rounds
I took a shot of cocaine and I shot my woman down
I went right home and I went to bed I stuck that lovin' 44 beneath my head
Got up next mornin' and I grabbed that gun took a shot of cocaine and away I run
Made a good run but I run too slow they overtook me down in Juarez Mexico
Late in the hot joints takin' the pills in walked the sheriff from Jericho Hill
He said Willy Lee your name is not Jack Brown
You're the dirty hack that shot your woman down
Said yes oh yes my name is Willy Lee if you've got the warrant just aread it to me
Shot her down because she made me slow
I thought I was her daddy but she had five more
When I was arrested I was dressed in black
They put me on a train and they took me back
Had no friend for to go my bail they slapped my dried up carcass in that country jail
Early next mornin' bout a half past nine I spied the sheriff coming down the line
Talked and he coughed as he cleared his throat
He said come on you dirty heck into that district court
Into the courtroom my trial began where I was handled by twelve honest men
Just before the jury started out I saw the little judge commence to look about
In about five minutes in walked the man holding the verdict in his right hand
The verdict read in the first degree I hollered Lordy Lordy have a mercy on me
The judge he smiled as he picked up his pin 99 years in the Folsom pen
99 years underneath that ground I can't forget the day I shot that bad bitch down
Come on you've gotta listen unto me lay off that whiskey and let that cocaine be
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:But WHITE folks since country music. It's totally different when white people do it!
What? What you wrote made no sense. White folds since country music. What is that suppose to mean?
"But I shot a man in Reno / just to watch him die." For starters.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is a song. Since the dawn of music, songs have dealt with controversial topics. If you read comments by the artists, they talk about how the song was meant to get people thinking about the topic in general, not Columbine specifically and was never intended to glorify.
Have any of you listened to country music lately? That has some of the most violent and abusive lyrics I've ever heard.
Please name some violent country songs.
Um, have you ever listened to any Johnny Cash songs?
Please name a lyrically offensive Johnny Cash song?
And exactly what current country song is full of violent and abusive lyrics? I'm no countr fan, but seriously? Country is pretty sanitized considering their fan base is heavily located in the bible belt.
See-now that's art.Anonymous wrote:Here's another classic.
Sixty-minute man, sixty-minute man
Look a here girls I'm telling you now
They call me "Lovin' Dan"
I rock 'em, roll 'em all night long
I'm a sixty-minute man
If you don't believe I'mm all that I say
Come up and take my hand
When I let you go you'll cry "Oh yes,"
"He's a sixty-minute man
There'll be 15 minutes of kissing
Then you'll holler "please don't stop"
There'll be 15 minutes of teasing
And 15 minutes of squeezing
And 15 minutes of blowing my top
If your man ain't treating you right
Come up and see ol' Dan
I rock 'em, roll 'em all night long
I'm a sixty-minute man
Sixty-minute man
They call me Lovin' Dan
I rock 'em, roll 'em all night long
I'm a sixty-minute man
Sixty-minute man
They call me Lovin' Dan
I rock 'em, roll 'em all night long
I'm a sixty-minute man
There'll be 15 minutes of kissing
Then you'll holler "please don't stop"
There'll be 15 minutes of teasing
And 15 minutes of squeezing
And 15 minutes of blowing my top
If your man ain't treating you right
Come up and see ol' Dan
I rock 'em, roll 'em all night long
I'm a sixty-minute man, oh yeah
SIXTY-MINUTE MAN
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:not as bad as them singing along to rihannas Rude Boy
Yes, songs about sex are much worse than songs about murder.