Controversy can be a double-edged sword in country music. On the one hand, some spirited conversation about a song or album can elevate an artistâs profile, particularly in our present on-demand world. On the other, thereâs a real risk of being banished from radio.
Here are 10 of country musicâs most controversial tunes, in order of their release date.
10. âGirl Crushâ
Little Big Town
2014
The latest controversial tune, Little Big Townâs âGirl Crushâ entered public consciousness at a time when the discourse over culture and equality was particularly strident. Structured like a lost pop classic, the slow-burning ballad written by Lori McKenna, Hillary Lindsey and Liz Rose begins with a reverb-heavy guitar arpeggio and Karen Fairchild emoting the line, Iâve got a girl crush. That was all some people needed to hear to infer that it was about a lesbian relationship. Truthfully, itâs a song about loss and envy, as the character embodied by Karen sees her ex with a new woman that apparently offers something she herself cannot. I want to drown myself in a bottle of her perfume, Karen sings, supported by the perfect harmonies of her bandmates. Itâs a devastating, vivid portrait of a woman shattered and paralyzed by a breakup.
But the conversation dwelled more on the provocative aspects of the songâof which LBT was surely aware when they recorded itâand its spectral suggestion of same-sex love. Some listeners reportedly complained to radio but the song didnât lose any steam on the charts and won two Grammys and two CMA Awards. And perhaps thatâs because, in the larger scheme, itâs a great song no matter how you interpret it.
9. âFollow Your Arrowâ
Kacey Musgraves
2013
Cookie-cutter country music about dirt roads and tailgates? Keep driving because Kaceyâs 2013 song âFollow Your Arrow,â which she wrote with Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally, was aiming at another target. And it hit the bullâs-eye, bucking conservative country trends by alluding to sex, drugs and same sex relationships in a message that championed personal choices with lyrics like Make lots of noise / Kiss lots of boys / Or kiss lots of girls / If thatâs something youâre into / When the straight and narrow / Gets a little too straight / Roll up a joint, or donât / Just follow your arrow. Although ultra-right wingers got their undies twisted over it, the song received modest radio airplay, peaking at No. 43 on Billboardâs Country Airplay chart, but it reached No. 10 on Billboardâs Hot Country Songs chart, which factors in streaming and digital sales. The people had spoken. And CMA voters listened by naming âFollow Your Arrowâ Song of the Year in 2014. The song was also featured on the record, Same Trailer, Different Park, which earned Kacey a Grammy for Country Album of the Year. Howâs that for aim.
8. âGoodbye Earlâ
The Dixie Chicks
1999
When it came time to work on Fly, the follow-up to the Dixie Chicksâ multi-platinum release Wide Open Spaces, members Natalie Maines, Martie Maguire and Emily Robison mixed things up with Dennis Lindeâs song âGoodbye Earl.â The songâs upbeat lyrics feel like black comedy that Joel and Ethan Coen could have cooked up, as the female characters Wanda and Mary Ann plot the best way to get rid of an abusive ex-husband (Earl) who has walked right through that restraining order, putting Wanda in intensive care. They ultimately decide to dispatch Earl by poisoning his black-eyed peas. Even before its release, the song gained attention with unsolicited airplay in late 1999. After becoming the groupâs official single, âGoodbye Earlâ (along with the Chicks) was the topic of many headlines, but that didnât entirely stop the song from getting airplay. While it peaked at No. 13 on Billboardâs Hot Country Songs chart, âGoodbye Earlâ became one of the trioâs highest charting songs on the pop charts as well as one of the most popular tunes of their career.
7. âIndian Outlawâ
Tim McGraw
1994
Political correctness? We donât need no stinking political correctness in 1994. It may have seemed like a little hubbub over some cliched lyrics at first, but when radio stations stopped playing Tim McGrawâs âIndian Outlaw,â it was time to listen up. Riddled with references to wigwams, tomtoms, peace pipes and medicine men, the song was pulled from playlists for its offensive stereotyping of Native Americans. That gesture was enough to keep âIndian Outlawâ from becoming Timâs first No. 1 hit in 1994, but it went on to achieve gold sales success.
6. âThe Thunder Rollsâ
Garth Brooks
1991
Heâs driving home from somewhere that he never should have been. She sits at the house waiting, hoping that itâs only the stormy weather thatâs delayed him. The story builds to a tempestuous climax, clearly explaining that the âthunderâ in the title no longer refers to the weather conditions but instead the personal clash inside the home. âThe Thunder Rolls,â written by Garth and Pat Alger, dared to address a domestic situation in graphic terms, particularly in the second verse when the woman smells the perfume on her cheating husband. But the added-on third verse, which fans can find on his Double Live album, got tongues wagging and controversy brewing like a literal tempest. The woman retrieves a pistol and vows that heâll not wander on her again. âCause tonight will be the last night / Sheâll wonder where heâs been, the song concludes. Citing issues of gratuitous violence, cable stations TNN and CMT ultimately pulled the video from their rotations. But Garth had the last word: the single hit No. 1 in 1991 and the video went on to win the Country Music Association award for Music Video of the Year.
5. âThe Pillâ
Loretta Lynn
1975
In a different time in our countryâs history, people were up in arms over women assuming authority over their reproductive ability by electing to use birth control. Loretta Lynn must have had a prophetic vision of how thorny things would be for women after her infamous single, âThe Pill,â was released in 1975. In the song, which was penned by Lorene Allen, Don McHan and T.D. Bayless, the narrator comically admonishes her husband for having all the fun while sheâs at home having baby after baby with no choice in the matter. But with the titular medication, theyâre on equal footing and sheâs considerably happier about her situation. Radio, however, was none too pleased with the subject matter and many stations dropped the song entirely, causing it to stall at No. 5. Nonetheless, the controversy also helped Loretta achieve more attention outside country music than ever before. And as a side effect, women from rural areas like Lorettaâs Butcher Holler, Ky., became aware that they too could choose for themselves.
4. âYouâve Never Been This Far Beforeâ
Conway Twitty
1973
Country music has been talking about falling in love, being in love and, to some degree, making love pretty much since the beginning. But those oh-so clever songwriters have always found ways to dance around the specifics of sex to make it seem innocent. Maybe it was the tumultuous time in the late 1960s and early â70s, but things began to change and country edged ever nearer the cultural mainstream. Whatever the case, Conway Twitty was compelled to push the envelope when he wrote âYouâve Never Been This Far Before.â Combined with his low rumbling baritone, Conwayâs no-detail-spared lyrics took listeners step-by-step through a night of passionate lovemaking that proved to be a rapturous event even in commercial terms. The song enjoyed a sustained visit on top of the chart for three weeks in 1973.
3. âSunday Morning Coming Downâ
Johnny Cash
1970
Rhodes Scholar. U.S. Army Ranger. Janitor. Aspiring singer/songwriter. That was Kris Kristofferson in a nutshell in 1969 when he wrote âSunday Morning Coming Downâ in his dilapidated apartment shortly after his wife had left him. So itâs no wonder he composed a tune about a downtrodden, hungover man drinking beer for breakfast and wandering aimlessly wishing, Lord, that I was stoned. Ray Stevens recorded the song in 1969 and it reached No. 55, but it wasnât until Johnny Cash put his deep-bass baritone on it in 1970 that it went to No. 1. However, when Johnny was set to perform the song live on his 1971 television show, Johnny Cash and Friends, network suits demanded that Johnny change the lyrics to wishing, Lord, that I was home, in order not to offend family audiences. The Man in Black would not be bogarted, and he performed the song live without excising âstoned,â which helped brand Johnny as a player in countryâs Outlaw movement, while earmarking Kris as a force to be reckoned with in the industry.
2.âOkie From Muskogeeâ
Merle Haggard
1969
Merle got liberals and hippie-types riled up with this anthem told from the point of view of a small-town man who stood for good old American values. Written by Merle and his drummer Roy Edward Burris, the song looks at the activities one wouldnât find folks in Muskogee [a city in Oklahoma] taking part in, such as smoking marijuana, burning their draft cards or challenging any sort of authority in general.
Against the tide of mounting protests against the Vietnam War and civil unrest of the 1960s, Merleâs 1969 single might have seemed archaic and out of step. But through âOkie,â Merle became a voice for Middle America, for those who couldnât quite comprehend the sweeping societal changes in the country. The song surely reflected the cultural divide that separated young and old, liberal and conservative. Merle has often commented that the views expressed in âOkieâ werenât necessarily his. But whatever the aim, it worked. âOkie From Muskogeeâ hit No. 1 in 1969 and became one of Merleâs most popular tunes.
1. âIt Wasnât God Who Made Honky Tonk Angelsâ
Kitty Wells
1952
When Hank Thompson released âThe Wild Side of Lifeâ in 1952, singing about his bride-to-be leaving him for another man, one line in particular struck a chord: I didnât know that God made honky tonk angels. Songwriter J.D. âJayâ Miller took that and ran with it, quickly writing the answer song âIt Wasnât God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels.â The lyrics blame unfaithful men for creating unfaithful women, saying too many times married men think theyâre still single, that has caused many a good girl to go wrong. Kitty Wells took a stand for women by recording and releasing the song, a controversial move for a female artist at the time. Some radio stations banned the song and prohibited Kitty from performing it on the Grand Ole Opry. Still, âIt Wasnât God Who Made Honky Tonk Angelsâ launched Kittyâs career and became the first No. 1 country hit for a solo female artist. It also helped break down the walls for many female voices to follow, including Dolly Parton, Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn and Tammy Wynette.