Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

David Allan Coe (Music)

 David Allan Coe (Music)
type
TVTItem
 David Allan Coe (Music)
label
David Allan Coe (Music)
 David Allan Coe (Music)
page
DavidAllanCoe
 David Allan Coe (Music)
comment
David Allan Coe (born September 6, 1939) is one of the predominant figures of Outlaw Country Music, and one of the first names people think of when they think of this subgenre. While largely underground, he has had some success as a songwriter, penning several songs that were crossover pop hits Covered Up by other artists, including "Would You Lay With Me (In a Field of Stone)," made famous by Tanya Tucker; and "Take This Job and Shove It," popularized by Johnny Paycheck (also covered by Dead Kennedys, as well as being the main sample in "Shove This Jay-Oh-Bee", a song by rappers Canibus and Biz Markie appearing in the movie Office Space).Much of his mystique centers on the fact that the "outlaw" part of his being an outlaw country performer was quite literal. Beginning at age 9, he spent 20 years in and out of various correctional facilities before beginning his music career in 1968, as a Blues singer.note He mainly did prison time for robbery and grand theft auto, but he loves exaggerating his criminal exploits to the extent that for a while he said he killed a fellow prisoner and received the death sentence for it, before music journalists refuted the claim, to Coe's annoyance. Penitentiary Blues is about Coe's experiences in prison. He began recording Country Music in the early '70s. His music anticipated the "fuck you" attitude of Punk Rock, and proved influential on alt-country, especially the bands that attempted to fuse punk and country. Coe's music and attitude was not only formed from Country, but from blues and early rock and roll.Controversially, Coe recorded a pair of X-rated country albums called Underground Album and Nothing Sacred. His legacy has been cemented by influencing the Groove Metal band Panteranote (notably, he did a collaboration with three of that band's members entitled Rebel Meets Rebel, which was released after guitarist Dimebag Darrell's murder), rapper and singer Kid Rock and eclectic artist Hank Williams III.Coe's son, Tyler Mahan Coe, has also made a name for himself, but not as a musician; He's the host of the critically acclaimed country music journalism podcast Cocaine & Rhinestones. Tyler has yet to cover his father in an episode, in part because they're somewhat estranged from one another, but he also feels too close to David's story to report on it objectively.Trope Namer for Take This Job and Shove It.
 David Allan Coe (Music)
fetched
2023-08-12T08:29:01Z
 David Allan Coe (Music)
parsed
2023-08-12T08:29:01Z
 David Allan Coe (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to AmericanCountryCountdown: Not a Feature - ITEM
 David Allan Coe (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to HankWilliams: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 David Allan Coe (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to JimmyBuffett: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 David Allan Coe (Music)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_148e222c
type
Crosses the Line Twice
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_148e222c
comment
If you're still not offended, "Rails" contains the lyrics "niggers made me vote for segregation" and "the Ku Klux Klan is bigger, so take the sheets of of your bed and let's go hang a nigger". Even though this was supposed to be a satire, it still Crosses the Line Twiceinvoked.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_148e222c
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_148e222c
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_148e222c
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_1e7487cd
type
Breaking the Fourth Wall
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_1e7487cd
comment
Breaking the Fourth Wall: The spoken interlude on "You Never Even Called Me by My Name" includes Coe's discussion of the song with its writers, and how it was "the perfect country and western song".
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_1e7487cd
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_1e7487cd
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_1e7487cd
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_657f77e4
type
Caught with Your Pants Down
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_657f77e4
comment
Caught with Your Pants Down: "Masturbation Blues" is about this.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_657f77e4
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_657f77e4
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_657f77e4
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_72526173
type
Bleached Underpants
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_72526173
comment
Bleached Underpants: Shel Silverstein served as "the devil on Coe's shoulder" inspiring Coe to record some X-rated country songs. The albums were basically a joke and didn't make him much money. They were sold through ads in biker magazines, and now through his website.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_72526173
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_72526173
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_72526173
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_74e34bb
type
Singer Namedrop
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_74e34bb
comment
Singer Namedrop: In his version of "You Never Even Called Me By My Name" Also in the final spoken verse on the alternate take of "The Ride" that occasionally gets heard, where Coe is speaking as Hank Williams.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_74e34bb
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_74e34bb
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_74e34bb
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_7815ba15
type
N-Word Privileges
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_7815ba15
comment
N-Word Privileges: Coe's defense of these lyrics was that they were not meant to be taken seriously, and that the drummer on these tracks was African American and married to a white woman: Coe's 1977 single "If That Ain't Country" contains the line "workin' like a nigger". If the above line doesn't sound too offensive, there's "Nigger Fucker", in which the narrator bemoans that his spouse left him for a black man because the black man was better in bed than the narrator. If you're still not offended, "Rails" contains the lyrics "niggers made me vote for segregation" and "the Ku Klux Klan is bigger, so take the sheets of of your bed and let's go hang a nigger". Even though this was supposed to be a satire, it still Crosses the Line Twiceinvoked.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_7815ba15
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_7815ba15
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_7815ba15
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_84b1a036
type
Gay Aesop
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_84b1a036
comment
Gay Aesop: "Fuck Anita Bryant" is one of the first pro-gay rights songs.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_84b1a036
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_84b1a036
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_84b1a036
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_ab2f3f27
type
Heavy Meta
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_ab2f3f27
comment
Heavy Meta: "You Never Even Called Me By My Name" is a parody of the notion that Country songs are all trucks, trains and getting drunk. Coe even lampshades this in a spoken-word section after the second verse.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_ab2f3f27
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_ab2f3f27
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_ab2f3f27
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: Jimmy Buffett accused Coe of ripping off his "Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes" and turning it into Coe's "Divers Do It Deeper". Coe responded by writing the song "Jimmy Buffett", which appeared on the X-rated album Nothing Sacred. Coe essentially called Buffett a poser, mocked Buffett for moving from Key West, Florida to Malibu, California but continuing to represent himself as being a part of Key West culture (Coe still lived in Key West after Buffett moved to California), and suggested that they "get drunk and screw". Just as controversial was the song he wrote for Johnny Paycheck, "Take This Job and Shove It" ... essentially a big "fuck you" (although the F-word indeed appears nowhere in the lyrics) to corporate hierarchy and the poor working conditions, verbal abuse, etc. the average working man has to endure on a daily basis; and while those workers have to work hard for low pay, the big boss man gets to sit in his cushy office enjoying the high life and looking down upon whom he essentially views as peons and cretins, if not other names for low-life forms. Even in 1978, the year the song became a big hit for Paycheck, radio hosts such as Bob Kingsley (of American Country Countdown) were calling "... Shove It" a "political statement" that stood up for the blue-collar working man. (Incidentally, years later Coe accused Paycheck of ripping off his song and calling him a "has been" in his (Coe's) re-recording of "... Shove It," despite the fact Paycheck and his recording label Epic Records had always correctly credited Coe as the song's sole composer.)
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_b53077b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_b53077b3
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_c6e0455d
type
Afterlife Express
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_c6e0455d
comment
Afterlife Express and Beware of Hitchhiking Ghosts: Reversed and combined for his 1983 top-5 country hit "The Ride," as Coe fills the shoes of a young hitchhiker who, while hitchhiking from small-town Alabama to Nashville, Tennessee, has an encounter with the ghost of Hank Williams.
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_c6e0455d
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_c6e0455d
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_c6e0455d
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_de15a322
type
Tangled Family Tree
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_de15a322
comment
Tangled Family Tree: His obscure 1972 Rockabilly/Hard Rock-flavored single "Two Tone Brown" is a basically a genealogy of the many interracial pairings of the Brown family, producing sons with names like Downtown Brown and Lowdown Brown, each described as the "coolest cat in town".
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_de15a322
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_de15a322
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_de15a322
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_name
type
ItemName
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_name
comment
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
David Allan Coe (Music) / int_name
 David Allan Coe (Music) / int_name
itemName
David Allan Coe (Music)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
American Music / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Bawdy Song / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Deus Angst Machina / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Heavy Meta / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Misattributed Song / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Pretender Diss / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Remake Cameo / int_2e432f04
 David Allan Coe (Music)
hasFeature
Singer Namedrop / int_2e432f04