Earlier this month, following BeyoncĂ©âs performance with the Dixie Chicks at the 50th annual CMA Awards on Nov. 3, Travis Trittâas well as many other country music fansâtook to Twitter to voice his thoughts about the presence of non-country artists performing at country music awards show.
While many agreed with what Travis had to say, BeyoncĂ© fansâalso known as the Beyhiveâset their sites on Travis, attacking him via social media for what they believed were racist and derogatory comments.
Nash Country Daily had a chance to sit down with Travis after the Twitter battle to talk about his new album, A Man and His Guitar (more on that next week), his comments regarding the CMA show and the backlash.
But first, here are the comments that Travis made on Twitter.
Thanks to everyone who came out to see us in Bowling Green, KY tonight. Sorry we werenât able to do any BeyoncĂ© for all the country fans.
â Travis Tritt (@Travistritt) November 4, 2016
FYI â My band and I are gonna try to work up BeyoncĂ©âs âAll The Single Ladiesâ for all you die hard country fans who love traditional music!
â Travis Tritt (@Travistritt) November 4, 2016
I want to know when the BET or SoulTrain awards are gonna ask a country artist to perform on their awards show?
â Travis Tritt (@Travistritt) November 4, 2016
As I see it, country music has appealed to millions for many years. We can stand on our own and donât need pop artists on our awards shows.
â Travis Tritt (@Travistritt) November 4, 2016
I love honest to God country music and feel the need to stand up for it at all costs. We donât need pop or rap artists to validate us.
â Travis Tritt (@Travistritt) November 4, 2016
NCD: Youâve been quite outspoken on Twitter about BeyoncĂ© being part of the CMA Awards. Why?
Travis Tritt: âIt wasnât so much about just BeyoncĂ©. This is a complaint that Iâve heard for a long time, actually for decades. Back in the â90s, it was Elton John or Sting or whoever. Every year the CMA television producers feel a need to bring in acts from other genres, and itâs always done to boost ratings. I understand the concept behind that but at the same time Iâve always found it a little bit insultingâ from the standpoint of being a country music artistâbecause this is a format that Iâve been a part of since the very beginning in my career. Itâs a format that I have seen grow a tremendous amount in the 27 years that Iâve been doing this.
âAs part of the Class of â89âGarth Brooks, Alan Jackson, Clint Black and myselfâwe saw country music album sales increase by millions over what they had ever been before. We saw an ability by all country music artists to put more fannies in concert seats than weâd ever seen before. We sold a ton of product, drew in millions and millions of fans that had never listened to country music before. I think during that period of time weâve certainly become strong enough to stand on our own two feet without the help from outside sources. Iâve been complaining about this for years, and itâs funny to me that it took complaining about this yearâs performance, before anybody paid any attention to it.
âItâs very strange to me. Iâve had open discussions about this on social media for the last 10 days and the fact is that while there are a lot of people that try to twist this into being something different than what it isâbeing motivated by something different than what itâs motivated byâthe fact is that this is something that Iâve been very vocal about for a long time. Race has nothing to do with it. Thatâs what Iâve tried to make clear from the very beginning. We should be better than that. To make everything about raceâto meâit makes me sad to be honest.â
NCD: In the times that we are living in now, with race being such a dividing point, is that what you feel they turned your comments into, something racial?
âThat was done by the people who picked the story up from Twitterâfrom my Twitter feed. Some of the people in the media twisted it completely around. First of all, they said that I trashed BeyoncĂ©, which I never did. I never made a statement saying anything bad about her personally. All I said was that her performanceâin my humble opinionâher performance as well as any of the other performances that have been on from the pop world, including Arianna Grande, Meghan Trainor, Justin Timberlake or whoever, do not belong. I donât think they belong on any country music show. Especially on a country music show that was a 50-year celebrationâan anniversary of what was supposed to be the entire 50-year history of country music awardsâthe CMA Awards show. The other thing that frustrated me was the fact, and it has frustrated me for years, is the fact that for every pop performance or R&B performance or any other type of genre performance that you have on the CMA Awards, that takes time away from somebody who is a country music artist, doing country music songs, releasing country music singles to radio, selling country music under that moniker to people all across the country and across the world. Thatâs taking time away from them. There are other artists that could have been just as much of a draw and that really should have been involved in that slot to celebrate the music that they have helped to create.
âSo many great country music artists that you can name that werenât part of it because there is only so much timeâI get that, I understand that and everybody else does too. But when you take a portion of that precious time and give it to an artist outside of our industry, it makes no sense. It makes about as much sense to me as it would make sense to bring Eminem in on the Dove Awards. But you wouldnât do that because it doesnât fit the format. Thatâs my humble opinion.â
Travis Tritt photo by Richard McLaren/Aristo PR