It was a one-two punch in the gut from two of country's biggest stars.
Last fall, Zac Brown declared Luke Bryan's "That's My Kind of Night" the "worst song I've ever heard." This winter, Carrie Underwood called out country radio, saying, "Women really do seem to get the short end."
Statistics don't lie: On Billboard's country chart, Miranda Lambert and newcomer Danielle Bradbery are the only women in the top 25. More than a dozen of the rest are songs by men about trucks, babes in tight clothes, tailgating, drinking or partying — or all of the above, as in "That's My Kind of Night," which went to No. 1 in September.
This new wave of mindless party songs — dubbed "bro-country" — has prompted some frustrated country fans to change stations.
"I fit the stereotype of a country fan — 26-year-old, single, a city girl and I like to have fun with friends and listen to music," said Bethany Dorobiala of White Bear Lake, who blogs about country at IndependentSky.com. "But none of what they're playing [on country radio] is anything I'm interested in. I don't want to go for a ride in a pickup truck on a dirt road. I don't like to be sung down to."
However, Dorobiala doesn't fit Nashville's new image. In the past two years, a lot of men in the prized 18-to-34 age group have switched to country radio. Bryan, who performs Sunday at Xcel Energy Center, is their poster boy and country's newest headliner.
"Luke is just so likable," said Leslie Fram, senior vice president for Country Music Television (CMT). "He's got the 'it' factor."
'Rock is dead'
The younger guys have always come to party at We Fest and other country-and-camping festivals. Now they're also tuning in to K102, BUZN 102.9 and other country stations to hear Bryan, Jason Aldean (whose sound is infused with hip-hop and loud guitars) and Eric Church (who brings a gritty rock edge).