This is what he found on urbandictionary.com:A kind of music popular amoung tweens esp. in the midwest and is usualy found in the alternative rock section of a music store. Butt rock bands usualy have perdictable percusion break downs, simple bass lines, simple gutar riffs and overly emotional/ semi romantic lyrics. The trade mark of butt rock is the straind vocals that make the sinnger sound like he is constipated. This is where "butt" rock gets its name. Examples include: Hinder, Creed, Matchbox 20, three doors down, avenge seven fold, ect. Its is possable for a band to resemble butt rock but not actualy be butt rock. I.E. staind, coldplay, foo fighters.
Meanwhile, Girlfriend is still rolling on the floor laughing amidst the wonderment that, what if the people who like "butt rock" don't know the term because their affinity for it creates an ignorance and immunity against it? Boyfriend knew the term. Boyfriend has a great taste in music. Girlfriend did not know the term. Aside from academic music, Girlfriend knows nothing about rock definitions outside of Aerosmith's biography and a fondness for drums.
So a day later, Girlfriend went on a search to more properly define the term in hopes of defending a type of music. What she found was another similar case of an ignorant, butt-rock lover faced with a non-butt-rock-believer that used the term to slam the music.
The following are exerpts from his post that Girlfriend found to be believable, true, and not in any way insulting to a form of music that she finds most appropriate as the soundtrack to a fast ride down Lake Shore Drive with all windows down and sun roof open.
"I spent a little time trying to find a way to define Butt-Rock so that I could wield it as an insult without worrying (or perhaps knowing when to worry) about having it turned back on me. One caveat: this definition is based mostly on me scratching my head, not looking around at how the term is used. I'm sure that I'm not entirely off the mark, but I doubt everyone will buy into what I have to say.
- Condition 1: music must be testosterone-driven.
- Condition 2: music must be rockin'.
- Condition 3: music must take itself seriously (especially its own testosterone).
By way of clarification and defense, here are some examples of bands that I take to meet or not meet these conditions:
- Type O Negative. Conditions 1 and 2 are nicely fulfilled, but condition 3 is not. If the scope of the tongue-in-cheek-ness is equal to or greater than the scope of the testosterone, not Butt-Rock.
- Korn and that other 'nu' metal. Certainly condition 1 and condition 3 (though there are perhaps some condition 3 exceptions). Condition 2 is more variable. I'm generally no 'nu' metal fan, but I'd only call some of it Butt-Rock.
- Hair metal. Hole in one. I think that some people take Hair Metal and Butt-Rock to be the same thing, but I feel that Butt-Rock is a broader notion. For example, I don't think Pantera entirely left their Butt-Rockness behind from 'Cowboys' onward (something I say with much respect for an exceptional set of musicians - RIP Dimebag).
- Country-western. Especially truck-inspired. 1 and 3, but not 2. Much of this music reminds me of things like butts, but there is no Butt-Rock without the rock.
So is any of the music I like Butt-Rock, by these conditions? The songs about macho cars settle it. But then why do I still bristle at the thought of anyone calling Sepultura Butt-Rock? I think this is because with White Zombie, there is some awareness of the Butt-Rockin', but this awareness just moves them to rock that much harder (as they say).
"Music to sit around drinking cheap American beer and watching Nascar with...or putting your fist through a wall. So calling them Butt-Rock suggests that they've failed in trying to make a certain type of music."
Why is this music called 'Butt Rock'? The 'rock' comes from the definition, but what about the 'butt'? Well, in the 80's, the leaders of what I call Butt Rock wore outfits that, among another things, allowed one to know almost every contour of their butts. But but but, you say, not all instances of music that fit the above characterization are played by people with butt-pants. Some cases' get-ups even leave it up in the air whether or not the musicians have butts at all. Well, it looks like this is a matter of the 'butt' being part of a reference-fixing description that itself turned into something that works in a way similar to natural kind terms like 'quicksilver' (which isn't silver in the original sense). Or something like that."
Thank you to the author at http://homepages.nyu.edu/~crm281/butt.html for the outstanding post.
Now do me a favor and turn to the person next to you and say "Butt Rock" in a serious tone.
;-)