There's a few oddities about it:
- There aren't that many obvious selections. I mean, Bruce Springsteen in New Jersey is the only "No, Really?" choice.
- Indie props to Alaska, whose artist is Ginger Kwan, 33rd in the state but 12,062nd nationally, and so obscure that she doesn't even have her a Wikipedia entry.
- Rush in Delaware? Of course, Delaware has so few people that it could be thrown off by only a few big fans. And I'm betting Joe Biden is one of them.
- Sufjan Stevens is famous for his tongue-in-cheek attempt to make an album dedicated to each of the fifty states. He's only done two of them, but one was for Illinois, and apparently that meant a lot to the state.
- Tegan and Sara in Idaho? Okay, I guess I don't really know what I should expect from that state. The only mental picture I have of them is people farming potatoes while dreaming up trick football plays. But from now on, I will also assume they are singing "Closer" to themselves as they go.
- The Virginias went with Matchbox 20 and the Dave Matthews Band. I didn't see them as being the laid-back states.
- Rhode Island is America's enclave of grunge. Wouldn't have called that one.
- Looking up some of the names I wasn't familiar with, I find that many of the musicians that are popular in their own state are folk or hip-hop artists. So apparently those are the most regional genres.
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