"Murder on Music Row" is a 1999 song written by Larry Cordle and Larry Shell, and originally recorded by American bluegrass group Larry Cordle & Lonesome Standard Time, as the title track from their album Murder on Music Row.[3] It gained fame soon after that when it was recorded as a duet between American country music artists George Strait and Alan Jackson. The song laments the rise of country pop and the accompanying decline of the traditional country music sound; it refers to Music Row, an area in Nashville, Tennessee considered the epicenter of the country music industry.
Although the Strait/Jackson version was not released officially as a single, it received enough unsolicited airplay to reach number 38 on the BillboardHot Country Singles & Tracks chart.
"Murder on Music Row" is a lament and criticism of the ongoing trend of country pop crossover acts and pop influences on country music, a trend that has pushed traditional and neotraditional country music (and those who perform it) to the periphery. The lyrics metaphorically compare the pop trend to "an awful murder down on Music Row", and lament that "The steel guitar no longer cries and fiddles barely play / But drums and rock and roll guitars are mixed up in your face."[5] In addition, the song also states that older traditional country artists "wouldn't stand a chance on today's radio," citing by nickname Hank Williams ("Old Hank"), Merle Haggard ("The Hag"), and George Jones ("The Possum").
In 2006, Dierks Bentley and George Jones recorded a version of the song that was included on the album Songs of the Year 2007, which was only available in Cracker Barrel restaurants.
^Latest Greatest Straitest Hits (CD booklet). George Strait. MCA Records Nashville. 2000. MCAD-70100.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)