Jason Aldean’s controversial track “Strive That In a Small City” is pulling in massive numbers.
Luminate, which tracks music gross sales and streams, says the track’s on-demand audio and video streams have elevated by 999 p.c — from 987,000 to 11.7 million — within the week after the chatter in regards to the track exploded on-line.
Gross sales for the track are up as properly: For the week earlier than the controversy, the monitor solely bought 1,000; final week it bought 228,000, in accordance with Luminate.
CMT pulled the track’s music video from its rotation from its lineup final Tuesday, when the music video solely had roughly 350,000 views on YouTube. Now, it’s been seen 16.6 million instances.
Aldean launched “Strive That in a Small City” in Could however its accompanying music video was launched on July 14. The clip options the burning of the American flag, protests, looting and extra, and a few have criticized it for selling gun violence and taking goal on the Black Lives Matter motion.
Within the video, Aldean performs in entrance of the Maury County Courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee — the positioning of the 1946 Columbia race riot and the 1927 mob lynching of Henry Choate, an 18-year-old Black teenager.
Aldean didn’t write the track, nevertheless it options the lyrics: “Cuss out a cop, spit in his face / Stomp on the flag and light-weight it up / Yeah, ya suppose you’re powerful / Effectively, strive that in a small city / See how far ya make it down the highway.” Aldean later sings on the track, “Acquired a gun that my granddad gave me / They are saying at some point they’re gonna spherical up / Effectively, that shit may fly within the metropolis, good luck.”
Responses to the track have been cut up; Sheryl Crow, Jason Isbell and Margo Worth have criticized the monitor and video, whereas Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Blanco Brown, Cody Johnson and Brantley Gilbert have voiced their help for Aldean.
Aldean, one among nation music’s high stars, defended the track in a prolonged assertion, calling claims made towards the monitor “not solely meritless, however harmful.” The singer additionally defended the track throughout a live performance this weekend in Cincinnati, the place he carried out the track and obtained cheers from the viewers in addition to chants of “U.S.A.”
“Previously 24 hours I’ve been accused of releasing a pro-lynching track … and was topic to the comparability that I (direct quote) was not too happy with the nationwide BLM protests. These references are usually not solely meritless, however harmful,” he wrote. “There may be not a single lyric within the track that references race or factors to it — and there isn’t a single video clip that isn’t actual information footage — and whereas I can try to respect others to have their very own interpretation of a track with music — this one goes too far.”
On social media, some customers have been offended by the lyrics, particularly since Aldean was performing onstage on the Route 91 Harvest Music Competition in Las Vegas in 2017 when a shooter opened fireplace and killed 60 concertgoers and injured a whole lot extra. In his tweet, the Grammy-nominated star referenced the tragedy: “NO ONE, together with me, desires to proceed to see mindless headlines or households ripped aside.”
Throughout his weekend live performance, Aldean addressed “cancel tradition” when talking to his viewers.
“Cancel tradition is a factor … which implies try to damage your life, damage every thing,” he was quoted as saying. “One factor I noticed this week was a bunch of nation music followers that would see via quite a lot of the bullshit, all proper? I noticed nation music followers rally like I’ve by no means seen earlier than and it was fairly badass to look at, I gotta say.”
Luminate, the brand new title for the gathering of information manufacturers previously generally known as Nielsen/MRC Knowledge and Selection Enterprise Intelligence, is owned by Penske Media Eldridge, the three way partnership between Eldridge Industries and Penske Media Company that additionally owns The Hollywood Reporter.