FOR FREE PEOPLE

Let's Get to a Million Free Pressers!

FOR FREE PEOPLE

Oliver Anthony warms up before performing at North Street Press Club in Farmville, Virginia, on August 23. (All photos by Ryan M. Kelly for The Free Press)

Meet Oliver Anthony: The New Voice of America’s Working Class

Two weeks ago, nobody had heard of ‘Rich Men North of Richmond.’ Now the song is a symbol of forgotten America. The Free Press sits down with the man behind a movement…

Back in 2022, Oliver Anthony started recording his songs because he thought he was going to die, and he didn’t want his music to die with him.

His anxiety and depression had gotten so bad, Anthony told me, that he was suffering from “brain fog, and I was getting chest pains.” It wasn’t any one thing so much as an accumulation of things over many years of working dead-end jobs and feeling increasingly hopeless.

“I was feeling like my body was starting to fall apart, and it got to a point where I was questioning how much longer I’d be able to be around and sing these songs and do this stuff, so I was like, ‘Well, let me just go ahead and start getting everything uploaded, so at least if, God forbid, I die of a heart attack in my thirties, there’s some legacy there,’ ” he said.

Anthony, whose real name is Chris Lunsford, had just wrapped up a set Wednesday at the North Street Press Club, in his hometown of Farmville, Virginia, and he was exhausted but elated as he devoured a burger and fries.

While he ate just a few miles from the camper he calls home and shares with his wife and two children, tens of millions of people around the country tuned in to Fox News to watch the first Republican debate. The first question of the evening featured a clip of Anthony performing “Rich Men North of Richmond.” 

“Why is this song striking such a nerve in this country right now?” 

That question—asked by Fox News host and debate moderator Martha MacCallum of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis—is why I came to Virginia to meet Anthony. 

Fans watch Anthony perform at North Street Press Club. One told me his song speaks to the fact that “people in this country are waiting for someone to come from the middle with common sense and decency to represent all of us.”

It’s been just shy of three weeks since the 31-year-old singer-songwriter with the bushy, red beard and resonator guitar became a household name. 

That was when a little-known YouTube channel called Radiowv posted a video of Anthony performing “Rich Men North of Richmond” in his yard, and he rocketed to the top of the Billboard Hot 100, leapfrogging ahead of Taylor Swift’s “Cruel Summer,” Morgan Wallen’s “Last Night,” and Luke Combs’s cover of “Fast Car.” 

Since then, the video has been viewed more than 44 million times. Several other Anthony songs, including “I Want to Go Home” and “Ain’t Got a Dollar,” have also reeled in tons of listens on U.S. iTunes.

But when I asked Anthony about being catapulted into the first major event in a presidential election cycle, he shrugged. “I’d like to stay out of politics,” he told me. 

And the idea that he has been embraced by the political right baffles him. “If anything,” he said, his music is “more about the right than the left.” 

He added: “I’m singing more about, like, a lot of the older, super conservative politicians that brought us into endless war through my entire childhood.”

Maintaining The Free
Press is Expensive!

To support independent journalism, and unlock all of our investigative stories and provocative commentary about the world as it actually is, subscribe below.

Subscriber Benefits:

  • Unlimited articles including weekly columns
  • Early access to live events
  • Access to the comments section

Already have an account? Sign in

our Comments

Use common sense here: disagree, debate, but don't be a .

the fp logo
comment bg

Welcome to The FP Community!

Our comments are an editorial product for our readers to have smart, thoughtful conversations and debates — the sort we need more of in America today. The sort of debate we love.   

We have standards in our comments section just as we do in our journalism. If you’re being a jerk, we might delete that one. And if you’re being a jerk for a long time, we might remove you from the comments section. 

Common Sense was our original name, so please use some when posting. Here are some guidelines:

  • We have a simple rule for all Free Press staff: act online the way you act in real life. We think that’s a good rule for everyone.
  • We drop an occasional F-bomb ourselves, but try to keep your profanities in check. We’re proud to have Free Press readers of every age, and we want to model good behavior for them. (Hello to Intern Julia!)
  • Speaking of obscenities, don’t hurl them at each other. Harassment, threats, and derogatory comments that derail productive conversation are a hard no.
  • Criticizing and wrestling with what you read here is great. Our rule of thumb is that smart people debate ideas, dumb people debate identity. So keep it classy. 
  • Don’t spam, solicit, or advertise here. Submit your recommendations to tips@thefp.com if you really think our audience needs to hear about it.
Close Guidelines

Latest