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Posted (edited)

New country music singer, Dixon Dallas (aka. Jake Hill), has released several gay themed songs, and they contain lyrics referring to bareback sex and cumming inside men.  I never thought a country singer would ever sing about gay sex, let alone gay bareback sex.  His songs include "Lookin Good," Fill Me Up," and "Keep Riding Me,"  and can be found for free on Youtube. Dixon is my new favorite country music  artist!  🤠🎵

Edited by barebackrnb
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Posted
1 hour ago, badubydo said:

Wooooooooow after hearing some of those songs. 

 

Now I need a dude to pump me full. 🙃

I had the same reaction...😉 🍆💦

Posted (edited)

This guy can sing! If you’ve watched his music videos he sells it too!  Hes smart to do these explicit lyrics because it’s going viral. But he parlays this into an actual real career.  His just-released song “Sleeping All Alone” is don’t have the explicit language but is the first country music song I’ve ever heard that I could identify with that sounded like with a breakup is like between two gay men, so in that sense, he’s definitely breaking ground. Just like his boyfriend is breakin in dat “BUSSY” of his! Even I blushed a bit at that lyric…

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Edited by hhmmpt9
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Posted
On 7/22/2023 at 7:43 AM, hhmmpt9 said:

Hes smart to do these explicit lyrics because it’s going viral. But he parlays this into an actual real career.  His just-released song “Sleeping All Alone” is don’t have the explicit language but is the first country music song I’ve ever heard that I could identify with that sounded like with a breakup is like between two gay men, so in that sense, he’s definitely breaking ground.

I wonder how smart it is, in the polarized political climate we’re in. It may go viral, and get attention, but the man’s doing it in the Country genre, which is often espoused by the conservative Right, and is a dominant force in conservative rural areas. Someone coming in and trying to insert his explicit lyrics about buttfucking, or even his softcore lyrics about man-love into that arena is likely to get pushback in an ugly way. I wouldn’t be surprised at death threats.

Jason Aldean is already getting a taste of this for ‘Try That In A Small Town’, with lyrics that push a radical conservative perspective a little too far.

Yes, it would be great if we could all be loud and proud and sing our lustiness from the rooftops without fear of judgment. The ideal would be open-armed acceptance of LGBTQ lifestyles by people everywhere, but we have to be realistic - we have to get to tolerance first. And you can’t get to tolerance if you go up to the person with the thing they think is offensive and rub their face in it.

I could be quite wrong, but I think that the more explicit and juicy his lyrics are, the more rope he’s going to give some people to hang him with.

Posted
16 hours ago, ErosWired said:

I wonder how smart it is, in the polarized political climate we’re in. It may go viral, and get attention, but the man’s doing it in the Country genre, which is often espoused by the conservative Right, and is a dominant force in conservative rural areas. Someone coming in and trying to insert his explicit lyrics about buttfucking, or even his softcore lyrics about man-love into that arena is likely to get pushback in an ugly way. I wouldn’t be surprised at death threats.

Jason Aldean is already getting a taste of this for ‘Try That In A Small Town’, with lyrics that push a radical conservative perspective a little too far.

Yes, it would be great if we could all be loud and proud and sing our lustiness from the rooftops without fear of judgment. The ideal would be open-armed acceptance of LGBTQ lifestyles by people everywhere, but we have to be realistic - we have to get to tolerance first. And you can’t get to tolerance if you go up to the person with the thing they think is offensive and rub their face in it.

I could be quite wrong, but I think that the more explicit and juicy his lyrics are, the more rope he’s going to give some people to hang him with.

Oh, almost certainly, but then so do male-on-male porn actors doing "country boy" scenes. I think in general, "they" already have as much weaponry to use against us as anyone could imagine, and most of it just falls flat outside of very limited circles. Even in terms of things like books in libraries, the most that "they" seem to be succeeding with, for now, is getting some of those titles restricted from circulation by minors - not that I think this is "good", at all, but it's telling that they've generally given up trying to get such material banned from public libraries.

And yeah, there will always be some people who freak out and turn violent against LGBT people because of some deep-seated homophobia. But that's going to happen whether there are funny pro-LGBT songs with somewhat explicit lyrics circulating on the internet, or not. Certainly we need to take reasonable precautions for our safety, but self-censoring for a false sense of security is a losing strategy.

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Posted
6 hours ago, BootmanLA said:

but self-censoring for a false sense of security is a losing strategy.

I would agree, but the successful public speaker learns to read the room. If I wish to say something and I select the best words for the particular occasion and company, I don’t consider it self-censoring (God knows no one in my presence has ever accused me of it) and indeed, we all do the same social verbal calculus, usually subconsciously, every time we have a conversation. Just because I choose not to say something as vulgarly as possible in order to consider the sensibilities of the people I’m speaking to does not mean I’m censoring myself. If a man goes to the roof of a building in the center of town and starts shouting FUCK at the top of his lungs, would he be considered self-censoring if he thought better of it and found some other way to express whatever was motivating him? (Full disclosure: My father, according to his own account, actually did this in college. He did not give a reason, and I did not ask. I suspect alcohol was involved.)

In the case of Mr. Dallas (a stage name, first name a provocative if uncreative ‘Dix-on’, and as my great grandfather’s middle name was genuinely Dixon I look askance at this impostor) there appears to be some question whether he is doing this largely for its potential promotional effect on his career rather than as a genuine statement. Speculation regarding his personal life and sexuality (the sort of online celebrity gossip I find exceedingly tedious to read) suggests that his relationships heretofore have been hetero, and suggests he may not himself be gay, but simply using the material for its edgy value. This is complicated by the fact that some online sources have confused Dixon Dallas the singer with Dallas Dixon the actor/writer/producer, who is openly gay. At that point, however, I reached the stage at which I, like several billion other people, did not care, and quit looking, so can tell no more.

Posted (edited)

Jake Hill has been making rap, hip-hop, metal, and pop-punk albums for years and the Dixon Dallas persona, along with his UR Pretty album, are tongue in cheek / jokes, that became successful and he's capitalizing on them. He's a great songwriter, but supposedly, is actually straight. He's never publicly said he's gay, and he's had a girlfriend named Courtney that he's mentioned on social media. There are forum threads about him elsewhere discussing this if you do a Google search, including postings from a guy he went to school with. Notably, he only does his gay-themed material under other names, rather than on the many albums released under his own name. 

Edited by CoolestDude
correct typos

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