Quantcast

North Pima News

Monday, April 29, 2024

Heap: "The Black and White Working Class have far more in common we are led to believe."

Justinheap

Rep. Justin Heap, R-Texas | Arizona State Legislature

Rep. Justin Heap, R-Texas | Arizona State Legislature

Arizona Rep. Justin Heap used platform X to discuss two key points of Oliver Anthony's conservative-based music. Anthony, a farmer based in Virginia, accomplished the feat of having three songs simultaneously hold the top positions on the iTunes chart last week.

"The reaction to Oliver Anthony's brilliant song has shown two things: the Black and white working class have far more in common than we are led to believe. And there are a distressingly large number of people who don't know D.C. is north of Richmond,"  Heap said.

Anthony, from Farmville, Virginia, has been writing songs since 2021 and uploading them to his Youtube. Lately, his songs, widely regarded as conservative-leaning political anthems, have garnered significantly heightened attention, even experiencing a rapid and almost meteoric rise in popularity overnight, according to Rolling Stone.

Some of Anthony's songs, including tracks like "Rich Men North of Richmond," "I’ve Got to Get Sober," and "Ain’t Gotta Dollar," delve into political themes such as the nation's current state, elevated taxes, human trafficking, welfare matters, and even allusions to Epstein's island, among others political topics, according to Rolling Stone.

"Rich Men North of Richmond has been uploaded to all major streaming platforms and will show up there in a few days," said Anthony on the platform. "I'm still in a state of shock at the outpouring of love I've seen in the comments, messages and emails. I'm working to respond to everyone as quickly as possible."

"It touches base on human trafficking and the atrocities that… I’ll say this, I sit pretty dead center down the aisle on politics and always have," said Anthony, according to a Youtube video. "I remember as a kid the conservatives wanting war and me not understanding that, and I remember a lot of the controversies when the left took office, and it seems like both sides serve the same master and that master is not someone of any good to the people of this country."

Anthony is now among the ranks of country artists like Jason Aldean and Jeffrey Steele who have previously released politically inclined songs with a conservative stance. Last month, Aldean's latest track "Try That in a Small Town" secured the top spot on Billboard’s Top 100. However, it also stirred controversy due to its music video featuring violence and subject matter that some have criticized as racist, according to American Songwriter.

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS