This is, bar none, the hardest I have ever worked on a video, and I hope it's entertaining and that it helps drive forward the conversation about country music! Love all y'all little back road truckers. YEAH.
You did a great job with the video! It was fun and fascinating to watch! :) Are you going to make a video about the ACM's? I thought it was a great show. My favorite part was Carrie Underwood's tribute to female classic country singers! 😊
As a country songwiter myself this helped me alot, but im still not sure wether it shows me what to or what not to write either way i'll be looking back on it during sessions, nice work Grady :)
From a data perspective this was a great video on country lyric "performance" over time. The question "are country lyric stereotypes accurate?" was well tested. "Yeah" is not surprising given the popularity of the Millennial whoop in the 2010's. What would be interesting from a song writer's perspective is a predictive analysis of country music lyrics. i.e. What lyrics are trending up and is it possible to loosely predict what they'll look like in the coming year? Great stuff Grady.
@@dare3244 1st of all, It's usually counted in the lyrics as an adlib (the ones that are usually bracketed when you read the lyrics), so technically speaking, since it's on the lyrics, it'll make it in the analysis, thus counts as a word in the lyrics 2nd of all, my comment was purely satire, so there's a bit of wooshing going on there.
I knew ‘girl’ was one of the most common words. My friends and I played a game where we try to find a country song WITHOUT the word ‘girl’. It’s almost impossible.
As someone from Kentucky, I can tell you with absolute certainty that it is extremely fake and exaggerated by most people. Especially boys between the ages of 13-18.
I remember someone saying you could take the less gratuitous r&b lyrics and make them gospel songs and vice versa if you switch jesus christ/god with baby/girl lol
I'm gonna give you a little yeah tonight Girl I'm gonna yeah you right When I see your face imma let out a little yeah I wont even have to ask your critical dad Little yeah
Thomas Rhett seemed to have some neotraditional songs on Center Point Road like Beer Can't Fix. He should do a whole album on neotraditional sound. Some of his songs sounded like songs from the 60s like Crash and Burn and the 70s like Make Me Wanna with that disco beat. As for Dustin? He should have stuck to songs like Cowboys and Angels.
My family plays this game called the “country song game” because we believe that you can make a country song up with any three given words. So we go around in a circle and the person who will go next gives us three words and we have to make a song up on the spot. It’s stupid and hilarious. Many times of us busting a gut laughing so hard.
"This is not the perfect country and western song because he hadn't said anything at all about mama, or trains, or trucks, or prison, or getting drunk."
Charlie Daniels: "the devil went down to Georgia he was looking for a soul to steal" Johnny Cash: "I hear the train a coming, its rolling around the bend" Modern country: "I'm in my truck with the lift kit, got my beer, going to party with the country girls"
@@GirishManjunathMusic "My trucker girl, little-town baby", yeah I got her with me, pourin' us some whiskey, In the back of my truck with the with the windows rolled up, AC on, while I strum a little country song (*guitar solo intensifies*)
@@chronofactor2037 yeah I got her ridin' shotgun, radio blaring country songs, speeding down the dirt roads with our windows rolled all the way down, and when I leave the farmlands for the city, I'll miss my little-town baby, my trucker girl who's riding with me all day long.
“A Little Yeah” features everything that Grady has trained his viewers to hate. Plus it only has maybe 5 different notes and a melody that goes nowhere. I am simultaneously annoyed and impressed.
I told him it was not the perfect country & western song Because he hadn't said anything at all about mama Or trains, or trucks, or prison, or getting' drunk Well, he sat down and wrote another verse to the song and he sent it to me And after reading it I realized that my friend had written the perfect country & western song And I felt obliged to include it on this album The last verse goes like this here Well, I was drunk the day my mom got out of prison And I went to pick her up in the rain But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck She got run over by a damned old train it was a stereotype in the 70s
"Yeah girl, my little girl. Lets crack a ice cold beer in my red truck as we drive down a red dirt road, lets pour that whiskey in my red solo cup. Lets put some time aside and watch the night sky as we fall in love under the starry night sky. Get up at 6 am as i put on my blue jeans and she put on her blue jeans. Plowing through the corn fields with country music playing."
@@dawsoniezen I am surprise nobody mentioned the word truck have been around since the 60. Red Sovine's Teddy Bear, CW McCall's Convoy and Jerry Reed's East Bound And Down from Smokey And The Bandit soundtrack all used trucks, but in this case semis.
“Long tan legs, I couldn’t help my self” sounds like a rape confession. Honestly, country died in 2003 with Johnny Cash, maybe there are some exemptions but it’s honestly become awful. Folk music is different, I like a lot of anais Mitchell and people like the Oh Hellos and The Crane Wives. Some country mixed with other genres are good, Barns Courtney comes to mind, and obviously Lil Nas X who blended country and rap perfectly
@@arco4936I don't know why I said it was funny because it wasn't even a joke, it was more of like a shower thought, but here goes: *"Five minutes of late 1940's early 1950's nostalgia" If RUclips existed in 1970.* It was on a video titled, "Five minutes of late 2000's early 2010's nostlgia" Yeahh... I'm a little boring.
I think the "trucks" word group was missing words like "drive," "driving," "windows," "back road," and any other peripherally-related vehicle terminology. Probably would have skewed those numbers a smidge higher.
The word groups were all missing fairly typical words too. For example, the image he puts up to represent trucks is a ram/dodge which wasn't included but Tacoma was.. Similarly, alcohol includes margarita and cocktail but not bourbon or any beer brands.
As a college student currently working on a research thesis, WOW! The effort and time put into a 20 minute video is insane. Major respect for the dedication.
I'd be willing to bet that "yeah" tops most genres. I would love to see an analysis like this on other music genres. I admit I'm not the biggest fan of country music, but I really enjoyed this video. Thank you.
I seriously thought the most popular word was “blue” I hear it to often in songs blue jeans,blue eyes,blue skies 😂 sounds like an elementary teacher giving a lesson, but I tell you Grady you make me wanna listen to country music even more now.
People making these jokes about country songs clearly haven't heard David Coe's "You Never Even Called Me By My Name". It's a famous country song where he literally has a whole section making fun about country songs It's brilliant and it's beautiful. An excerpt from some of the lyrics: "Well, a friend of mine named Steve Goodman wrote that song And he told me it was the perfect country & western song I wrote him back a letter and I told him it was not the perfect country & western song Because he hadn't said anything at all about mama Or trains, or trucks, or prison, or getting' drunk Well, he sat down and wrote another verse to the song and he sent it to me And after reading it I realized that my friend had written the perfect country & western song And I felt obliged to include it on this album The last verse goes like this here Well, I was drunk the day my mom got out of prison And I went to pick her up in the rain But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck She got run over by a damned old train"
For years every time I've heard one of these awful derivative songs I ask "Is this that new song Dirt Road Truck Beer?" And to prove this video's point, most people think that's actually the name of the song.
OMG this reminds me of when I was in High School and I would go up to random kids who thought they were cool and indie and ask if they were going to the "dead baby fetus" show that night and they'd say hell yeah I love them! Or whatever made up punk/metal/indie sounding made up name. 😂😂😂
George could make a song using all these stereotypical words and I’d still listen because it would sound fabulous. He’ll, he could even sing ‘Little Yeah’ and I’d listen too it
@@bnbcraft6666 I wasn't around for the OGs of country music but whoever is the best would have to have had significant commercial success across several years, a wide variety of material and texture in his music, a respectable command of a musical instrument, elements from his own life that are relatable with his audience, a song you'd want to listen to with your dad, a song your mom likes to hear, a song you'd like to dance to with your wife and a clean image. For me that's George Strait. Don Williams Tom T Hall Bobby Bare Hoyt Axton Charlie Daniels Chris Ledoux Mark Chesnutt Randy Travis Tracy Lawrence Clint Black Alan Jackson Brad Paisley David Nail Gary Allen Kenny Chesney Tim Mcgraw Garth Brooks All have some portion of that lofty ideal but the artist who most wholly rounds out those ideas for me is George Strait.
in my opinion tim mcgraw will always be the king of country with faith hill as the queen of country, but if it wasn't faith hill as queen i would choose carrie underwood
Grady. This was fantastic on so many levels. I really can’t believe you’ve kept this project going for 5 years 😂 That’s basically the equivalent of a college degree in country lyrics! Well done.
as someone who lives in kentucky, it’s almost impossible to not know someone who regularly listens to country. I know some country songs by heart when I don’t even like the music itself, that goes out to my parents anyways.
I’m in Maryland and years ago in High School bus rides we would listen to the same 3 country songs on repeat, i don’t like country at all and I don’t know the names, but I can still say each and every lyric of the songs. It hurts.
Inspired by this video I wrote these lyrics: It was a hot summers night At a downtown bar Round seven o’clock When she burst through the doors With her skinny jeans on And my heart began to drop Cause I knew that girl was the prettiest sight That I ever did see She would never be mine But I was gonna take a chance I said hey lovey lady Would you let me have this dance When you’re with me, I’ll be a gentleman Do what ever you ask I’m sure there’s a million more men Who would promise you the world So why don’t you take a chance With a small town boy
The fact that Florida Georgia Line is still considered country after saying “Mix tape’s got a little Hank, little Drake” honestly disgusts me. No hate to FGL but I cringe every time I hear that song.
Like both Hank Williams and Drake would want to be anywhere near those nerds... the best they can get is hanging out with Nelly who isn't even that relevant to today's rap game... probably better off trying to start Twitter beef with Soulja Boy
That happens to be from my favorite song. Not because I listen to country but because it's the only country song I can recite almost by memory. That's probably because it was in WWE 2k15 back when I played those games and it was the only song I had on.
Perfect algorithm timing. Gonna start writing "Dad Country" where the guy has no money and no time to do everything mainstream country writes about because he has kids and a wife. Way back up in the hollar, we raise our kids on Family Dollar. Under the soft glow of a WaHo. My buddies truck/house/grill/pool cause I don't have the money for any of em.
How to be a Country Pop Star in 5 easy steps: 1) Be a good looking (preferably Caucasian) male age 20-35 2) Buy Cowboy boots, a cowboy hat, blue jeans, and plaid shirts 3) Learn how to play basic acoustic guitar chords and learn decent voice pitch 4) Watch this video and base your entire songwriting on what is mentioned the most 5) Move to Nashville and get signed by a major label That's all there is to it!
You are correct sir....unfortunately. Very little country pop is even halfway decent, in my opinion. The more traditional acts like Randall King, Charley Crockett, Dave Fenley among numerous others take more time to develop a following it seems.
As a Canadian who hardly knows country music...I only know three country singers. Dolly Parton, Johnny Cash and Reba McEntire. Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash through their songs and Reba McEntire through her sitcom. Lol. So hearing these songs are weird for me.
I recently got an advert for a song where some bloke was going on about how he'd rather drink hot beer, burn his fishing equipment and go hunting without a gun rather than get back together with his girl. The sheer number of stereotypes was on a level where I actually sat through more of the ad than I usually would because I was so disbelieving that it could be an actual song. I thought it must be a parody or designed to be humorous to sell a product 😅
“Well I was drunk the day my mom got outta prison. And I went to pick her up in the rain. But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck. She got runned over by a damned old train.” Perfect country and western song
Songs are usually about emotions; love, possessions (truck, outfit), work, memories, sometimes events like holidays or social gatherings (wedding, funeral, anniversary) all in hopes to relate the shared memory you have in your life to that same memory attached to the song. The same with R&B, Rock, Country, Gospel, all competing for the mood you relate to.
I don’t normally comment.. but this was an incredibly well thought out video and I appreciate all of the work put into it, especially as a former market research major. I love me some good data points! You and Dana did an amazing job on this!
Rap and other genres have normal phrases and stuff they use as well. Rap is either flexing, murder or drugs (dont get me wrong I like rap lol). The artists arent dumb. They know what audience they are wanting to connect to. Country artists arent trying to pander to people who've never been to the country. They are going to make music that's similar to their lifestyle and others who lived the same way. TBH If youre gonna be fake with your lyrics you might as well just not make music. People can sense if you are fake. (Most mainstream country artists are just pretty boys that labels try to pass off as country). Great video man!!!!
I never realized the bro country was happening. I only listened to country up until that 2013 era and I remember being repelled so much by the country at the time I flew back all the way into electronic music where I reside today
The cliche that Country music is "Christian" is only because it's predominately from the South/bible belt not because of the lyrics or any real association. I'd imagine one new Kanye song mentions Jesus more than the top 40 country hits of the last 20 years combined. There's not a market for 'Family and Christian values' country save the one joking song Mark Schultz did and a loose interpretation of Tim Hawkins covers.
There's nothing *un*Christian about drinking, so long as it's done in moderation and doesn't lead you to harm others (including harm done through neglecting your responsibility to your husband/wife and kids). Jesus made great wine for a party; Paul told Timothy to take a little wine for his stomach; Jewish culture celebrates festivals with drinking, and my pastor pointed out that there's a bit where if your neighbor is too poor to buy some alcohol, you buy it for him so he can celebrate as well. The idea that drinking is somehow wrong is not a Bible-based idea; Blue Laws are not Christian laws and should be done away with. The Bible's position on alcohol is "stop getting drunk all the time" (according to my pastor, it's not even "never get drunk," just "guys, c'mon, we have important things to do with our lives and giving yourself over to too much alcohol all the time is getting in the way of that"). Don't let alcohol control your life, or ruin your life, or ruin the lives of others. That song "Walk a Little Straighter, Daddy" seems to hit at the right issues: If you've got people who depend on you, you cannot let alcohol become more important than they are, you cannot let alcohol become the reason that they get hurt or neglected. And you should be careful not to hurt yourself, either: blackout drinking, for example, is a direct cause of brain damage, and one of my friends who drank a lot as a teen has lifelong memory issues because of it.
@@Arkylie ...they (mostly) drank wine in those days due to the very high possibility of sickness from untreated water... This continued through to the 1800s.
I think to be fair, you can do this with most popular music in general and come up with similar results. Songs singing about women's bodies are probably pretty typical in nearly every genre. If you dig deeper to try and find the genre-specific trends like you did here, it would be interesting to compare. I am curious about metal music, I feel like the popular lyrics in those songs tend to be quite different from Pop and Country, though I wonder if it's anymore different than genres like Rap, R&B, Show-tune, or even more international styles. J-Pop would be an interesting thing to research, because they love to throw in English words to emphasize certain parts, so I wonder which English words are most common in J-Pop?
Yeah anything love/party/drink related is just modern pop music. Make no mistake bro country was 100% pop, it's why it is good. It's the last stronghold of guitar based music. It's stylistic conservatism is why it's the only thing left in 2023, guitar based music is dead outside of nashville. The one that I think is slightly greasy is reference to rural living, as it is often written/listened to by people who live in cities/suburbs etc. Going to a suburb golf course isn't "rural living", neither is "driving to the lake".
Tbh, I’d guess J-pop would probably be one, two, three, four, five etc. if that doesn’t count, I’m actually not sure. A lot of “English” words in Japanese are technically just that word. Look up “gairaigo” and “wasei - eigo” if you wanna know more, but some examples are idol/aidoru/アイドル and love/rabu/ラブ which I’d say are the 2 most used English words, but they’re technically Japanese words
Noticed your "alcohol/drink" category did not include specific Beer Brands. I have a feeling it would tick up some if you added "PBR", "Bud" etc. :) Also, "pop top". Great video!
I'm not sure why the algorithm led me here other than that I am a cultural anthropologist. You are delightful and I never knew country music was so... flirty.
@Turquoise Cheetah while I didn't get an anthropology degree. I don't think getting one is useless. Also I did get everything off, but I'm has happened twice again since.
idk when Justin Biebers Baby came out but many people started hating the word after his song so might be a reason why the word baby fell out of favor so much 🤔
As I listen to the first of the segments: TRUCK, I'm surprised you haven't *already* mentioned the spoken interlude to David Allen Coe's "You Never Even Called Me By My Name", probably the first *song* to address these tropes... in 1975. Steve Goodman wrote the song in 71, but I don't think he wrote the Mysterious Missing Third Verse that early.
i feel like some of the bro country stereotypes of “trucks, girls, jeans and beer” probably comes not from the lyrics but music videos and maybe even concert performances
I also think a large part of it has to do with the songs that make it onto music videos and top 40 are the ones that have these lyrics the most. Even if artists have lots of other songs that don't quite fit the stereotype, it's the generic ones like these that end up getting the most airplay.
I didn’t know this was country music. I thought country music was about loneliness, sorrow, misery, heartaches, broken love, tears and pain. Johnny Cash George Jones Hank Williams Ray Price Faron Young Webb Pierce. I have no idea who these people in this video are.
When it comes to 'truck' references, I've noticed that even as lyrics about trucks make a bit of a comeback (If It Wasn't For Trucks, Truck (Hardy), Unapologetically Country As Hell, Sand In My Boots, etc.), the focus tends to be more on the singer's own connection with their truck, whereas in the 'bro-country' era there was more focus on the truck as a medium for getting a hookup (i.e. Cruise). Not a firm rule at all of course (i.e. Broke Boy, Silverado For Sale), and then there's just songs that reference trucks without it providing any sort of framing for the song itself (i.e. Cowboy Hat by Jon Pardi), but I've been getting that impression more and more.
I'd love to see this analysis comparing the lyrics to "top 40" songs, just to see if country really overuses these terms compared to other genres or if all songs seem to use them
Does anyone know if there is a breakdown of other genres that take a similar statistical approach as this video? I’d love to watch other genres broken down.
here you go, there are a few songs spotify doesn't have, like all of Garth Brooks. In most cases I was able to find an alternate version but I think there are three songs not on here at all. open.spotify.com/playlist/3asSuEFmMgTgnFntbb09C3?si=LJXSALZ2TZan6tsYXh2Bhw
Bravo! You just created a data driven approach to lyrics that make it on a top 30 chart. Please consider patenting your application here and consider using it for every other genre! As someone who looks at data every day for one of the USA's largest retailers, I can tell you that this is very impressive and something that you can and should sell. Congratulations! This is incredible work and I hope you get rewarded handsomely for it!
Music of all genres nowadays seems to be made with the same cookie-cutter production techniques. It's why I prefer the older music, they had a more original sound to them.
You're right. I actually received something in my You Tube feed a few months ago about how popular music has developed less intelligent lyrics, uses less different types of instruments, and has less musical complexity than it did when these qualities peaked in the 1960s and 1970s. These were actually analyses of the music. (Yes, you goddamn kids get off my lawn!!! Old guy and proud of it.) In those times, music producers were willing to take chances on unusual acts; today, they are much less likely to gamble and more likely to go with familiar sounds only. I'm sure (as HeyZeus says) that there is still good music out there, but not the mass-produced stuff.
I don't listen to country as an adult, but this showed up in my recommended (probably because I love data) and it's a really well done project. I might even go back to some of the country songs I listened to as a kid for old time's sake :)
I remember having this conversation a long time ago with a friend. We determined based on our own experiences that Love (we roped in mentions of girls and boys into this) or partying, vehicles (more leaning on trucks, but we both admitted cars did get mentioned), and alcohol made up all of "current" country music. I put quotes around current because the conversation is old. Like, 2007 old. So I clicked on this video out of interest. Not because I like country music, I don't, but because I wanted to see if me and him were correct. I am almost disappointed at how correct we were. I wanted to be wrong, but this data really kind of proves us right.
This is, bar none, the hardest I have ever worked on a video, and I hope it's entertaining and that it helps drive forward the conversation about country music! Love all y'all little back road truckers. YEAH.
The song is the greatest thing I’ve ever seen
You did a great job with the video! It was fun and fascinating to watch! :) Are you going to make a video about the ACM's? I thought it was a great show. My favorite part was Carrie Underwood's tribute to female classic country singers! 😊
As a country songwiter myself this helped me alot, but im still not sure wether it shows me what to or what not to write either way i'll be looking back on it during sessions, nice work Grady :)
From a data perspective this was a great video on country lyric "performance" over time. The question "are country lyric stereotypes accurate?" was well tested.
"Yeah" is not surprising given the popularity of the Millennial whoop in the 2010's.
What would be interesting from a song writer's perspective is a predictive analysis of country music lyrics. i.e. What lyrics are trending up and is it possible to loosely predict what they'll look like in the coming year?
Great stuff Grady.
Loved all the data analysis! Really cool video!!
This still goes to show that Bo Burnham's "rural nouns, simple adjectives" line holds true.
was looking for this.
My favorite country song
🎶I could sing in Mandarin, you'd still know I'm pandering, huntin deer, chasin trout, a bud light with the logo facing out🎶
Could you explain that? i never got that.
@@halflife103 It means that all country songs start by listing random nouns and adjectives.
“Hey girl, you make me wanna write an unoriginal song about a cliche girl” -Country songs of the past decade
Axis of Awesome did this in their song...Cliche Love Song
And cruuuuuuuuiiiiiise
🤣🤣🤣
ruclips.net/video/pUJMuwaAgQY/видео.html here is this to make you feel better
Hey I love that song though.😅
Most used word in Country Music: "Yeah"
Most used word in One Direction: "Nanana"
Nost used word in modern trap, "yuh, skrrt, ayy"
@@LycanixMusic not words
@@dare3244 1st of all, It's usually counted in the lyrics as an adlib (the ones that are usually bracketed when you read the lyrics), so technically speaking, since it's on the lyrics, it'll make it in the analysis, thus counts as a word in the lyrics
2nd of all, my comment was purely satire, so there's a bit of wooshing going on there.
Fire
Nanananananana
If anyone doesn’t get it it’s referencing The Promised Neverland
Hey Jude intensifies
I knew ‘girl’ was one of the most common words. My friends and I played a game where we try to find a country song WITHOUT the word ‘girl’. It’s almost impossible.
Not until you play “God’s Country” 😎
In less than 10 seconds i came up with one. It's colorado Rocky mountain high, by john denver
If she ever leaves me by The Highwomen
try kacey musgraves
Miranda lambert
Unlike Shania, this does impress me much.
😂😂😂
I’m dead. This comment lol 😂
He’s got the look, but does Grady have the touch?
What's wrong with Shania? She was the last artist to do country music proud. After her it all went downhill0
So you’re a data scientist!
I'm not even American. But I can feel it in my long tan legs.
XD
_wheeze_
Why is this comment so underrated?
@虎ツバサ lol.
Lol
Still the most original country song of 2020.
In the categories of RUclipsrs that I watch that I didn't expect to see commenting on this video. Love your work.
Go listen to Eric Church's and Chris Stapleton's new singles haha, there's still hope!
Colter Wall. Trust me.
Midland, Chris Stapleton, Jon Pardi like Jackal said there is still hope!
@@NegroZ71 Yeah! Starting Over is out now and Chief's new album is dropping soon. It may drop within the next few days, either that or a new song!
I’m going to write a country song with just these lyrics
“Talkin bout Whiskey, and girls in trucks, yeah”
Total bop man, I listen to it on the radio everyday
I'm the 69th like, that is all 😆
Blake Shelton already did this: “talking bout girls, talking bout trucks”
And I’m parked down by the lake...
Pretty accurate
The most off putting thing about country for me is the country voice, like I’ve seen artists sing normally, then in country voice.
Its a very processed and artificial southern accent.
As someone from Kentucky, I can tell you with absolute certainty that it is extremely fake and exaggerated by most people. Especially boys between the ages of 13-18.
ok but like. i come from a place where people talk like that. maybe a little over exaggerated but pretty similar-
@@m_artroom that’s who they are pretending to be
@Martina Smith No joke, bluegrass freaking slaps
“You have become the very thing you swore to destroy”
Lol, love the reference
Hello there
General Kenobi
You have underestimated my power!
@@dragonkfg Don't try it
I feel this analysis could be applied to the Christian music industry too lol 😂
I remember someone saying you could take the less gratuitous r&b lyrics and make them gospel songs and vice versa if you switch jesus christ/god with baby/girl lol
Yessss
I think I have seen a video somewhere on the internet about that though (it might have been John Crist)
As a Christian I definitely agree it’s to repetitive and all the songs sound the same
@@marleee.2174 ruclips.net/video/bwwhkKPEieE/видео.html
Sometimes I wonder how different a country song would sound if it didn’t have a country accent
It would be the same old cheesy pop we all know
Have someone just sing it
Most of what is on country FM radio today is just pop music sung by artists with southern accents.
Then it would sound good
Listen to “ in case you didn’t know - maoli”
If Thomas Rhett or Dustin Lynch sees this they’ll pay big bucks for Little Yeah
I'm gonna give you a little yeah tonight
Girl I'm gonna yeah you right
When I see your face imma let out a little yeah
I wont even have to ask your critical dad
Little yeah
Don’t forget Chase Rice
Chris Jansen will be in there too lol
Maybe Dustin would rhyme “little yeah” with “little yeah”
Thomas Rhett seemed to have some neotraditional songs on Center Point Road like Beer Can't Fix. He should do a whole album on neotraditional sound. Some of his songs sounded like songs from the 60s like Crash and Burn and the 70s like Make Me Wanna with that disco beat. As for Dustin? He should have stuck to songs like Cowboys and Angels.
You forgot to include the innuendos for beer, like “good stuff”, “keg”, & “cold one”. It would easily blow all other words away
My family plays this game called the “country song game” because we believe that you can make a country song up with any three given words. So we go around in a circle and the person who will go next gives us three words and we have to make a song up on the spot. It’s stupid and hilarious. Many times of us busting a gut laughing so hard.
Haha that sounds like a great game,I wanna play!!
@@ramona3840 try this then: chair, sun and maths.
Lmao 🤣
I’m glad I have introduced you all to my whacky family ways. 😂
@@ramona3840 Here: Trucks, beer, jeans
"This is not the perfect country and western song because he hadn't said anything at all about mama, or trains, or trucks, or prison, or getting drunk."
D.A.C. Now that’s country music 👌🏼
Well I was drunk the day my mom got out of prison
And I went to pick her up in the rain
But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck
She got ran over by a damned ol train!
Country music AND data spreadsheets? It just doesn't get better than this
Right!!! I feel so seen!
When the Venn diagram of country and Excel is just a little yeah
Charlie Daniels: "the devil went down to Georgia he was looking for a soul to steal"
Johnny Cash: "I hear the train a coming, its rolling around the bend"
Modern country: "I'm in my truck with the lift kit, got my beer, going to party with the country girls"
I’d say hip hop has had a similar ‘evolution’
@@Oilincoolhouse "guns, drugs, sex, bitches, crime, les go! aight"
@@shuriken2505 more like cars, drugs, girls, party, luxury, designer brands etc..
BIG IRON, rose garden, gambler
"16 tons and what do you get"
“Truck, town, little, baby” sounds like a country sound
My trucker girl, little-town baby...
Girish Manjunath lol
"little truck, little town, little baby" boom top 10 country song
@@GirishManjunathMusic "My trucker girl, little-town baby", yeah I got her with me, pourin' us some whiskey, In the back of my truck with the with the windows rolled up, AC on, while I strum a little country song (*guitar solo intensifies*)
@@chronofactor2037 yeah I got her ridin' shotgun, radio blaring country songs, speeding down the dirt roads with our windows rolled all the way down, and when I leave the farmlands for the city, I'll miss my little-town baby, my trucker girl who's riding with me all day long.
“A Little Yeah” features everything that Grady has trained his viewers to hate. Plus it only has maybe 5 different notes and a melody that goes nowhere. I am simultaneously annoyed and impressed.
With a little higher production values though it could chart
I noticed “cold one” wasn’t on your beer word list. I feel that’d skew your data much further into beer territory.
yeah
@@largebaguettevr8035 little yeah
@@Aerxis a yeah with gigantism
@@killerbug05 and necrophilia
It even sucking on a whiteclaw is beer
I told him it was not the perfect country & western song
Because he hadn't said anything at all about mama
Or trains, or trucks, or prison, or getting' drunk
Well, he sat down and wrote another verse to the song and he sent it to me
And after reading it I realized that my friend had written the perfect country & western song
And I felt obliged to include it on this album
The last verse goes like this here
Well, I was drunk the day my mom got out of prison
And I went to pick her up in the rain
But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck
She got run over by a damned old train
it was a stereotype in the 70s
I LOVE THAT SONG!!!
My man DAC!
Best beer drinking song next to pop a top
@@furrycircuitry2378 cant forget think ill just stay here and drink by merle haggard
yessss i thought about that when i saw the video 😂
"Beer may never break your heart but it broke my brain" aa meetings in Texas
Currently working on my next big country radio hit, "Yeah, Little Baby Girl."
"Yeah girl, my little girl. Lets crack a ice cold beer in my red truck as we drive down a red dirt road, lets pour that whiskey in my red solo cup. Lets put some time aside and watch the night sky as we fall in love under the starry night sky. Get up at 6 am as i put on my blue jeans and she put on her blue jeans. Plowing through the corn fields with country music playing."
@@lunahetfield Hello you may not know me but my names chris hansen did u know that ur singing about a 7 year old girl 😆☠💀.
Chantl Mcclary 0_0
That sounds a lil bit pedophile
My favorite “truck” song without a doubt has to be Lee Brice’s “I Drive Your Truck.” Makes me cry every single time
Yeah that song gets a pass from the truck criticisms
@@dawsoniezen I am surprise nobody mentioned the word truck have been around since the 60. Red Sovine's Teddy Bear, CW McCall's Convoy and Jerry Reed's East Bound And Down from Smokey And The Bandit soundtrack all used trucks, but in this case semis.
talks about actual emotion, immediately disqualified from Bro Country
Great song
That song isn't about the truck. just a good metaphor
“Long tan legs, I couldn’t help my self” sounds like a rape confession. Honestly, country died in 2003 with Johnny Cash, maybe there are some exemptions but it’s honestly become awful. Folk music is different, I like a lot of anais Mitchell and people like the Oh Hellos and The Crane Wives. Some country mixed with other genres are good, Barns Courtney comes to mind, and obviously Lil Nas X who blended country and rap perfectly
well said
Im with you. Honestly can't stand country music nowadays, but folk há to be my favorite genre
Folk, folk punk and bluegrass are so good
"Mr. Lonely" - Midland
Yeah girl.
country music: "yeah"
ariana grande: "yuh"
This killed me
You aren't wrong
Loved this analysis of country music !!! And the song clips you used were great
I have never gotten that many likes on a compliment. My most liked comment ever only had like 50 likes and it was a _very funny_ joke.
@@Willybean08 whats the joke
@@arco4936I don't know why I said it was funny because it wasn't even a joke, it was more of like a shower thought, but here goes:
*"Five minutes of late 1940's early 1950's nostalgia" If RUclips existed in 1970.*
It was on a video titled, "Five minutes of late 2000's early 2010's nostlgia"
Yeahh... I'm a little boring.
@@Willybean08 yeahhhh okkkk
@@arco4936 sorry :/
I think the "trucks" word group was missing words like "drive," "driving," "windows," "back road," and any other peripherally-related vehicle terminology. Probably would have skewed those numbers a smidge higher.
The word groups were all missing fairly typical words too. For example, the image he puts up to represent trucks is a ram/dodge which wasn't included but Tacoma was..
Similarly, alcohol includes margarita and cocktail but not bourbon or any beer brands.
As a college student currently working on a research thesis, WOW! The effort and time put into a 20 minute video is insane. Major respect for the dedication.
I'd be willing to bet that "yeah" tops most genres. I would love to see an analysis like this on other music genres. I admit I'm not the biggest fan of country music, but I really enjoyed this video. Thank you.
especially rap music and loves songs
Yeah. :P
I seriously thought the most popular word was “blue” I hear it to often in songs blue jeans,blue eyes,blue skies 😂 sounds like an elementary teacher giving a lesson, but I tell you Grady you make me wanna listen to country music even more now.
“Yeah baby, I’m gonna love you a little” just used the top 5 words so easily and kinda sounds like a country song lyric!
Ima write a song with these 😂😂
Already platinum 😆
“WELCOME TO TRUCK TOWN, LITTLE BABY GIRL...”
Now are two trucks. Oh no my muscles, they are flexing.
@@howaboutnow1895 Oh no, my muscles flex involuntarily!!!
Yeah
"little baby girl"
uhh ok buddy i got the feds on my line
FBI OPEN THE FUCK UP
People making these jokes about country songs clearly haven't heard David Coe's "You Never Even Called Me By My Name".
It's a famous country song where he literally has a whole section making fun about country songs It's brilliant and it's beautiful.
An excerpt from some of the lyrics:
"Well, a friend of mine named Steve Goodman wrote that song
And he told me it was the perfect country & western song
I wrote him back a letter and I told him it was not the perfect country & western song
Because he hadn't said anything at all about mama
Or trains, or trucks, or prison, or getting' drunk
Well, he sat down and wrote another verse to the song and he sent it to me
And after reading it I realized that my friend had written the perfect country & western song
And I felt obliged to include it on this album
The last verse goes like this here
Well, I was drunk the day my mom got out of prison
And I went to pick her up in the rain
But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck
She got run over by a damned old train"
And that was 1975
I think the best part is that aside from that wild last verse, it's a pretty normal country song.
trucks trains prison and mama!
She got isekaid out of this realm.
One or a few songs don't make up for it.
Grady, 2013 called, they want their lyrics back
Like literally, he stole them. They belong to him now 😂
Not gonna lie, that wouldn’t sound all that out of place on the radio.
For years every time I've heard one of these awful derivative songs I ask "Is this that new song Dirt Road Truck Beer?" And to prove this video's point, most people think that's actually the name of the song.
OMG this reminds me of when I was in High School and I would go up to random kids who thought they were cool and indie and ask if they were going to the "dead baby fetus" show that night and they'd say hell yeah I love them! Or whatever made up punk/metal/indie sounding made up name. 😂😂😂
George Strait can use whatever word(s) he wants to. He’s still the king.
And it's because he doesn't, he makes good music
George could make a song using all these stereotypical words and I’d still listen because it would sound fabulous. He’ll, he could even sing ‘Little Yeah’ and I’d listen too it
I'd say Hank Williams Sr or Johnny Cash is the king of country music
@@bnbcraft6666 I wasn't around for the OGs of country music but whoever is the best would have to have had significant commercial success across several years, a wide variety of material and texture in his music, a respectable command of a musical instrument, elements from his own life that are relatable with his audience, a song you'd want to listen to with your dad, a song your mom likes to hear, a song you'd like to dance to with your wife and a clean image. For me that's George Strait.
Don Williams
Tom T Hall
Bobby Bare
Hoyt Axton
Charlie Daniels
Chris Ledoux
Mark Chesnutt
Randy Travis
Tracy Lawrence
Clint Black
Alan Jackson
Brad Paisley
David Nail
Gary Allen
Kenny Chesney
Tim Mcgraw
Garth Brooks
All have some portion of that lofty ideal but the artist who most wholly rounds out those ideas for me is George Strait.
in my opinion tim mcgraw will always be the king of country with faith hill as the queen of country, but if it wasn't faith hill as queen i would choose carrie underwood
Grady. This was fantastic on so many levels. I really can’t believe you’ve kept this project going for 5 years 😂 That’s basically the equivalent of a college degree in country lyrics! Well done.
as someone who lives in kentucky, it’s almost impossible to not know someone who regularly listens to country. I know some country songs by heart when I don’t even like the music itself, that goes out to my parents anyways.
I need you to know i read your comment with a progressively more exaggerated generic southern accent
@@ahhh4117 yknow, fair enough.
Same here
@@ahhh4117 did it begin to snowball once u hit "kentucky" bc that was my experience
I’m in Maryland and years ago in High School bus rides we would listen to the same 3 country songs on repeat, i don’t like country at all and I don’t know the names, but I can still say each and every lyric of the songs. It hurts.
The thing is saying girls and trucks and jeans whatever isn’t bad by itself. It just when it’s presented in a really annoying way. Like Dustin lynch
Cowboys and Angel's is probably his only good song
Colt ford has the most annoying songs
I think Georgia Florida Line are super annoying.
Someday someone will make a song called “Yeah Little Baby Girl”
Haven't they ?? 🤔
Inspired by this video I wrote these lyrics:
It was a hot summers night
At a downtown bar
Round seven o’clock
When she burst through the doors
With her skinny jeans on
And my heart began to drop
Cause I knew that girl was the prettiest sight
That I ever did see
She would never be mine
But I was gonna take a chance
I said hey lovey lady
Would you let me have this dance
When you’re with me, I’ll be a gentleman
Do what ever you ask
I’m sure there’s a million more men
Who would promise you the world
So why don’t you take a chance
With a small town boy
Congrats. You two have made a country song.
You should release this
12:18 man rhymed "Tacoma" with "California" and I have to respect that.
!!
the only reason to mention tacoma, no other songs did lol
Nothing more country than a Japanese light truck in California
@@thejusmar I mean yeah it make sense, rural parts of California exist, and Japanese trucks are popular, especially there
That stock footage of that elderly lady texting on her phone was A+
The fact that Florida Georgia Line is still considered country after saying “Mix tape’s got a little Hank, little Drake” honestly disgusts me. No hate to FGL but I cringe every time I hear that song.
They also mention to “play that Travis Tritt above the Tupac” in May We All
Like both Hank Williams and Drake would want to be anywhere near those nerds... the best they can get is hanging out with Nelly who isn't even that relevant to today's rap game... probably better off trying to start Twitter beef with Soulja Boy
i mean Tim McGraw had a similar line in "Truck Yeah" - 'Got Lil' Wayne Pumpin on my iPod ..'
That happens to be from my favorite song. Not because I listen to country but because it's the only country song I can recite almost by memory. That's probably because it was in WWE 2k15 back when I played those games and it was the only song I had on.
@@greattitan371 sorry to offend you
Perfect algorithm timing. Gonna start writing "Dad Country" where the guy has no money and no time to do everything mainstream country writes about because he has kids and a wife. Way back up in the hollar, we raise our kids on Family Dollar. Under the soft glow of a WaHo. My buddies truck/house/grill/pool cause I don't have the money for any of em.
⬆ This guy for president!
The thinking y
How to be a Country Pop Star in 5 easy steps:
1) Be a good looking (preferably Caucasian) male age 20-35
2) Buy Cowboy boots, a cowboy hat, blue jeans, and plaid shirts
3) Learn how to play basic acoustic guitar chords and learn decent voice pitch
4) Watch this video and base your entire songwriting on what is mentioned the most
5) Move to Nashville and get signed by a major label
That's all there is to it!
It's true. :)
That's why aside from Luke Combs and a few other people, I only listen to traditional country and bluegrass
Nowadays, just a cap will do the trick 😒 sadly
You are correct sir....unfortunately. Very little country pop is even halfway decent, in my opinion. The more traditional acts like Randall King, Charley Crockett, Dave Fenley among numerous others take more time to develop a following it seems.
You don't need step 4 . If you look the part and can sing someone will write your songs for you.
Meanwhile me being 60 years behind:
*I fell into a burning ring of fire*
Cuz it burrnsss burns burrrrns
@@impastabowl2328 That ring of fiiiireeee
thats alot of girls trucks and towns i tell ya what
That’s a classic song.
@@Howitgoes799 that’s the point
6:57 Does that make Usher's "Yeah!" a country song? 😂
YEAH
YEAH
YEAH
YEAH
YEAH
Video: Cuts to a snippet of a stereotype song
Me: *bobs head to music and realizes I’m part of the problem
I mean there's nothing wrong with liking that kind of music
It be like that
i felt that on a personal level
I actually used to like Country. Well I still kinda do but prefer a lot of the older stuff though.
“I took my little baby girl into town in my truck for diapers.”
Dad country.
Grady Smith: "The body parts mentioned really aren't especially crass, they're pretty innocent."
Wheeler Walker Jr: "DROP 'EM OUT LEMME SEE THEM..."
Family tree is wonderful.
@@hollybritt5225 A personal fave.
Gonna take a long look at those....
Starving else to remember Is not just dress, but a “little black dress” to be exact. And maybe that’s just 90’s country but it’s still here prevalent
As a Canadian who hardly knows country music...I only know three country singers. Dolly Parton, Johnny Cash and Reba McEntire.
Dolly Parton and Johnny Cash through their songs and Reba McEntire through her sitcom. Lol. So hearing these songs are weird for me.
I’m only commenting just so the algorithm is like “yes, this video”
"Yeah, this video"
Yuh
I seriously would LOVE to see the metal genre version of this.
It would be interesting, as metal is a broader genre but also has many similar themes across those genres. Like, how would Gojira compare to Slipknot?
I want that to, just to see what’s gonna happen when they get to groups like Babymetal, Saint Snow, and Roselia
“Yeah, baby girl, I love you more than a little”
Grady why is there a file of billy currington’s mugshot on your computer
Billy Currington must be doin’ something wrong.
@@aaroncharlie9058 I've never seen a better reply than this. Well done.
Aaron Charlie he needs some good directions to get em back on track, eh?
Came here for this. 👏🏽
@@aaroncharlie9058 I almost spit my tea out, wasn't prepared for that reply LOL
I love how the thumbnail is just Luke Bryan looking apprehensive like "oh yeah, those are all my songs, aren't they"
I recently got an advert for a song where some bloke was going on about how he'd rather drink hot beer, burn his fishing equipment and go hunting without a gun rather than get back together with his girl. The sheer number of stereotypes was on a level where I actually sat through more of the ad than I usually would because I was so disbelieving that it could be an actual song. I thought it must be a parody or designed to be humorous to sell a product 😅
Irony is a strong seller
“Well I was drunk the day my mom got outta prison. And I went to pick her up in the rain. But before I could get to the station in my pickup truck. She got runned over by a damned old train.” Perfect country and western song
Came to comments specifically looking for a reference to this
Songs are usually about emotions; love, possessions (truck, outfit), work, memories, sometimes events like holidays or social gatherings (wedding, funeral, anniversary) all in hopes to relate the shared memory you have in your life to that same memory attached to the song. The same with R&B, Rock, Country, Gospel, all competing for the mood you relate to.
This is fantastic. There's nothing quite like proving a living stereotype with science
I don’t normally comment.. but this was an incredibly well thought out video and I appreciate all of the work put into it, especially as a former market research major. I love me some good data points! You and Dana did an amazing job on this!
Dude!! This is my favorite video of yours by far!!! This video and its editing is purely incredible. Great job Grady. 💯
Rap and other genres have normal phrases and stuff they use as well. Rap is either flexing, murder or drugs (dont get me wrong I like rap lol). The artists arent dumb. They know what audience they are wanting to connect to. Country artists arent trying to pander to people who've never been to the country. They are going to make music that's similar to their lifestyle and others who lived the same way. TBH If youre gonna be fake with your lyrics you might as well just not make music. People can sense if you are fake. (Most mainstream country artists are just pretty boys that labels try to pass off as country). Great video man!!!!
Is "A Little Yeah" on Spotify? I could groove out to it!
Agreed
The snap track will make it #1.
I knew whiskey would be the winner for alcohol because I hate it so every time I hear the word in a song it bugs me haha.
I never realized the bro country was happening. I only listened to country up until that 2013 era and I remember being repelled so much by the country at the time I flew back all the way into electronic music where I reside today
And drinking’... Family and Christian values, ya know.
The cliche that Country music is "Christian" is only because it's predominately from the South/bible belt not because of the lyrics or any real association. I'd imagine one new Kanye song mentions Jesus more than the top 40 country hits of the last 20 years combined. There's not a market for 'Family and Christian values' country save the one joking song Mark Schultz did and a loose interpretation of Tim Hawkins covers.
@@pro-seriesfabrication3810 not wrong 😂 being from the Bible belt is the only Christian thing about those songs
@@logan9305 a lot of them country stars don’t live like true Christians. Always talking about girls partying and the videos aren’t Christ like.
There's nothing *un*Christian about drinking, so long as it's done in moderation and doesn't lead you to harm others (including harm done through neglecting your responsibility to your husband/wife and kids). Jesus made great wine for a party; Paul told Timothy to take a little wine for his stomach; Jewish culture celebrates festivals with drinking, and my pastor pointed out that there's a bit where if your neighbor is too poor to buy some alcohol, you buy it for him so he can celebrate as well.
The idea that drinking is somehow wrong is not a Bible-based idea; Blue Laws are not Christian laws and should be done away with.
The Bible's position on alcohol is "stop getting drunk all the time" (according to my pastor, it's not even "never get drunk," just "guys, c'mon, we have important things to do with our lives and giving yourself over to too much alcohol all the time is getting in the way of that"). Don't let alcohol control your life, or ruin your life, or ruin the lives of others. That song "Walk a Little Straighter, Daddy" seems to hit at the right issues: If you've got people who depend on you, you cannot let alcohol become more important than they are, you cannot let alcohol become the reason that they get hurt or neglected. And you should be careful not to hurt yourself, either: blackout drinking, for example, is a direct cause of brain damage, and one of my friends who drank a lot as a teen has lifelong memory issues because of it.
@@Arkylie ...they (mostly) drank wine in those days due to the very high possibility of sickness from untreated water... This continued through to the 1800s.
As a lover of language, this is my kind of content 😂
I think to be fair, you can do this with most popular music in general and come up with similar results. Songs singing about women's bodies are probably pretty typical in nearly every genre. If you dig deeper to try and find the genre-specific trends like you did here, it would be interesting to compare. I am curious about metal music, I feel like the popular lyrics in those songs tend to be quite different from Pop and Country, though I wonder if it's anymore different than genres like Rap, R&B, Show-tune, or even more international styles. J-Pop would be an interesting thing to research, because they love to throw in English words to emphasize certain parts, so I wonder which English words are most common in J-Pop?
Yeah anything love/party/drink related is just modern pop music. Make no mistake bro country was 100% pop, it's why it is good. It's the last stronghold of guitar based music. It's stylistic conservatism is why it's the only thing left in 2023, guitar based music is dead outside of nashville. The one that I think is slightly greasy is reference to rural living, as it is often written/listened to by people who live in cities/suburbs etc. Going to a suburb golf course isn't "rural living", neither is "driving to the lake".
Tbh, I’d guess J-pop would probably be one, two, three, four, five etc. if that doesn’t count, I’m actually not sure. A lot of “English” words in Japanese are technically just that word. Look up “gairaigo” and “wasei - eigo” if you wanna know more, but some examples are idol/aidoru/アイドル and love/rabu/ラブ which I’d say are the 2 most used English words, but they’re technically Japanese words
Noticed your "alcohol/drink" category did not include specific Beer Brands. I have a feeling it would tick up some if you added "PBR", "Bud" etc. :)
Also, "pop top".
Great video!
I was thinking they say “bar” a lot too
If it had bud light it would so be higher
Miller light, a couple buds
I'm not sure why the algorithm led me here other than that I am a cultural anthropologist. You are delightful and I never knew country music was so... flirty.
I was dropping a huge shit while reading this, and some water splashed my ass
@Turquoise Cheetah while I didn't get an anthropology degree. I don't think getting one is useless. Also I did get everything off, but I'm has happened twice again since.
I love country music. I cannot get enough of it. Repetitive or not I’m still digging it
For a relief, I hope you listen to Tyler Childer's surprise album to give your ears a break.
Wait, he has a new album? I’m going to Spotify now
Edit: It’s all instrumental but I love it so far!
YO WHAT
@@buttercupup3687 its not. The last song is essentially the album. The instrumentals were supposed to divert your attention
this made me nostalgic and rly hit me in the feels but 100% in the best way. Well done, everything about this was top notch
Would be interesting to have this level of analysis with other genres.
idk when Justin Biebers Baby came out but many people started hating the word after his song so might be a reason why the word baby fell out of favor so much 🤔
The last verse of David Allen Coe’s song “You Never Even Called Me By My Name” will forever be the best representation of REAL country!
Only the greatest country-western song in the world. I was very disappointed it didn't get brought up.
Written by the late Steve Goodman.
Love that song but personally, I think, “The Ride” is just as good of a representation of true and blue country
I miss when country music was all about guns, trains, mama, and getting drunk
As I listen to the first of the segments: TRUCK, I'm surprised you haven't *already* mentioned the spoken interlude to David Allen Coe's "You Never Even Called Me By My Name", probably the first *song* to address these tropes... in 1975.
Steve Goodman wrote the song in 71, but I don't think he wrote the Mysterious Missing Third Verse that early.
i feel like some of the bro country stereotypes of “trucks, girls, jeans and beer” probably comes not from the lyrics but music videos and maybe even concert performances
I also think a large part of it has to do with the songs that make it onto music videos and top 40 are the ones that have these lyrics the most. Even if artists have lots of other songs that don't quite fit the stereotype, it's the generic ones like these that end up getting the most airplay.
I didn’t know this was country music. I thought country music was about loneliness, sorrow, misery, heartaches, broken love, tears and pain. Johnny Cash George Jones Hank Williams Ray Price Faron Young Webb Pierce. I have no idea who these people in this video are.
We are gonna need a "little yeah" merch 🤣
This is brilliant Grady. That's dedication mate. I bet some real high flyers are using this data and you're putting it out there for free 👌👍
When it comes to 'truck' references, I've noticed that even as lyrics about trucks make a bit of a comeback (If It Wasn't For Trucks, Truck (Hardy), Unapologetically Country As Hell, Sand In My Boots, etc.), the focus tends to be more on the singer's own connection with their truck, whereas in the 'bro-country' era there was more focus on the truck as a medium for getting a hookup (i.e. Cruise). Not a firm rule at all of course (i.e. Broke Boy, Silverado For Sale), and then there's just songs that reference trucks without it providing any sort of framing for the song itself (i.e. Cowboy Hat by Jon Pardi), but I've been getting that impression more and more.
I'd love to see this analysis comparing the lyrics to "top 40" songs, just to see if country really overuses these terms compared to other genres or if all songs seem to use them
Little Yeah is gonna give Six Feet Apart a run for it's money on quarantine country songs
Who wrote that song (little yeah) I can’t find it anywhere
Tyler Trinchini did you not watch the full video?
This was an outstanding amount of data analysis. I would love to see this same thing done for hip-hop, rock, and pop.
Does anyone know if there is a breakdown of other genres that take a similar statistical approach as this video? I’d love to watch other genres broken down.
Was just thinking this! He totally should. I dont even like country music but this video captured me. I would love to see grunge in the 90s
Someone make a spotify playlist of every one of the songs on the list that would be great
I’ll do it.
It's called "basic bro Country"
Busy doing it, lots of work 🤷🏽♂️
I’m about halfway done
here you go, there are a few songs spotify doesn't have, like all of Garth Brooks. In most cases I was able to find an alternate version but I think there are three songs not on here at all. open.spotify.com/playlist/3asSuEFmMgTgnFntbb09C3?si=LJXSALZ2TZan6tsYXh2Bhw
Bravo! You just created a data driven approach to lyrics that make it on a top 30 chart. Please consider patenting your application here and consider using it for every other genre! As someone who looks at data every day for one of the USA's largest retailers, I can tell you that this is very impressive and something that you can and should sell. Congratulations! This is incredible work and I hope you get rewarded handsomely for it!
Music of all genres nowadays seems to be made with the same cookie-cutter production techniques. It's why I prefer the older music, they had a more original sound to them.
Rather than older, go less popular. A lot of small labels and bands are doing some creative stuff.
You're right. I actually received something in my You Tube feed a few months ago about how popular music has developed less intelligent lyrics, uses less different types of instruments, and has less musical complexity than it did when these qualities peaked in the 1960s and 1970s. These were actually analyses of the music. (Yes, you goddamn kids get off my lawn!!! Old guy and proud of it.) In those times, music producers were willing to take chances on unusual acts; today, they are much less likely to gamble and more likely to go with familiar sounds only. I'm sure (as HeyZeus says) that there is still good music out there, but not the mass-produced stuff.
I don't listen to country as an adult, but this showed up in my recommended (probably because I love data) and it's a really well done project. I might even go back to some of the country songs I listened to as a kid for old time's sake :)
I remember having this conversation a long time ago with a friend. We determined based on our own experiences that Love (we roped in mentions of girls and boys into this) or partying, vehicles (more leaning on trucks, but we both admitted cars did get mentioned), and alcohol made up all of "current" country music. I put quotes around current because the conversation is old. Like, 2007 old. So I clicked on this video out of interest. Not because I like country music, I don't, but because I wanted to see if me and him were correct. I am almost disappointed at how correct we were. I wanted to be wrong, but this data really kind of proves us right.
I will never be able to unhear "yeah" I did not realize how many song have that word