"I think some people record songs and make records a certain way to cater to radio. If you're born to make commercial music that's cool. But if you're born to not make commercial records, maybe you're meant to cater to another market"
About this Quote
White is drawing a clean, almost defiant boundary line in a business that constantly blurs it: the difference between making music to be heard and making music to be played. The “radio” he names isn’t just a platform; it’s a set of invisible rules - song length, structure, lyrical themes, vocal polish - that quietly dictate what counts as viable. By calling that approach “cool,” he sidesteps the tired authenticity-versus-selling-out fight. He’s not moralizing; he’s classifying.
The subtext is more personal than the calm wording suggests. “Born to” does heavy lifting here, turning career strategy into identity. It’s a protective move for an artist in a genre (and era) where gatekeepers can make you feel like failure is a character flaw. If your songs don’t fit radio’s template, White offers an alternate story: you’re not behind, you’re aimed somewhere else.
That “another market” phrase is tellingly pragmatic. He’s not pretending commerce disappears outside radio; he’s arguing for plural economies of taste. In the 1990s and 2000s country ecosystem White came up in, radio was the kingmaker, and “commercial” wasn’t merely a sound - it was access to tours, press, and longevity. His quote reads like a quiet negotiation with that reality: permission to opt out without quitting, to treat niche audiences not as consolation prizes but as legitimate destinations.
The subtext is more personal than the calm wording suggests. “Born to” does heavy lifting here, turning career strategy into identity. It’s a protective move for an artist in a genre (and era) where gatekeepers can make you feel like failure is a character flaw. If your songs don’t fit radio’s template, White offers an alternate story: you’re not behind, you’re aimed somewhere else.
That “another market” phrase is tellingly pragmatic. He’s not pretending commerce disappears outside radio; he’s arguing for plural economies of taste. In the 1990s and 2000s country ecosystem White came up in, radio was the kingmaker, and “commercial” wasn’t merely a sound - it was access to tours, press, and longevity. His quote reads like a quiet negotiation with that reality: permission to opt out without quitting, to treat niche audiences not as consolation prizes but as legitimate destinations.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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