Entertainment Music Country Music Oliver Anthony ‘Getting Out of Music Industry’ 14 Months After Success of 'Rich Men North of Richmond' “I’m looking at switching my whole business over to a traveling ministry," Anthony shared on Tuesday, Oct.29 By Kimberlee Speakman Kimberlee Speakman Kimberlee Speakman is a digital writer at PEOPLE. She has been working at PEOPLE since 2022. Her work has previously appeared in Forbes and she has also worked in broadcast television as a reporter for Hawaii-based news station KHON2 News. People Editorial Guidelines Published on October 31, 2024 09:36AM EDT Comments Oliver Anthony performs at Tootsie's Orchid Lounge Annual Birthday Bash. Photo: Jason Kempin/Getty Oliver Anthony is stepping back from the music industry. His announcement comes just over a year since his song “Rich Men North of Richmond” claimed the No.1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100. “I’ve decided that moving forward, I don’t need a Nashville music company,” Anthony said in a YouTube video posted on Tuesday, Oct. 29. “I don’t even need to exist within the space of music. So I’m looking at switching my whole business over to a traveling ministry.” Earlier, Anthony said that he was "In the process of getting out of the music industry,” while responding to a comment on a social media video, per Rolling Stone. “It’s a big joke,” he added, reported the outlet. Oliver Anthony's Viral Country Song 'Rich Men North of Richmond' Is Controversial and Topping Charts Speaking in the YouTube video, the country singer added that he still plans to release music “like normal,” but that it would be through his new ministry called “The Rural Revival Project.” He continued that this would “just be set up legally as a ministry" and that its first “completely DIY" show is planned for Nov. 2. “I want to create a routing schedule to exist parallel to Nashville that circumvents the monopolies of Live Nation and Ticketmaster,” he explained in his YouTube video. “And it goes to towns that haven’t had music in a long time and it stimulates their economies.” According to his website, the singer said he wants to play in “shows in towns and counties” that find themselves in “financial deficit,” and that the project is “focused on revitalizing rural farms and communities, promoting sustainable development, and improving the quality of life for people living in rural areas.” Oliver Anthony performs at the Eagle Creek Golf Club in August 2023. Mike Caudill/Billboard via Getty Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. He also said that he hoped to reach out to “people who have just gotten out of rehab, with PTSD, and people who are depressed and suicidal” and “learn to exist outside of a system that has just kind of been placed on us as a generation.” In the new video, the singer, whose song “Rich Men North of Richmond” was embraced by the right after it was released, also reflected on whether he is a “conservative.” Tanya Tucker, Patty Loveless and Songwriter Bob McDill Enter Country Music Hall of Fame “I guess I’m a conservative,” he said. “I am a conservative because I believe in the first and second amendment. I don’t know if I’m a Republican or what the hell I am. I am just somebody who thinks the whole way we live is so ass-backward and so stupid. It serves no one than people at the top of a hierarchy that we no longer really need to serve.” Oliver Anthony warms up before the 2023 Rock the Block street festival. Samuel Corum/Getty The socio-political song “Rich Men North of Richmond” first gained traction on TikTok before it was uploaded to the radiowv YouTube account in August, 2023. It garnered over 32 million views on the platform and shot to the top of the charts through downloads, official streams and radio plays.Despite the songs’ success, Anthony shared on his website that he didn’t “want to be in the spotlight” and said he “wrote the music I wrote because I was suffering with mental health and depression." “These songs have connected with millions of people on such a deep level because they’re being sung by someone feeling the words in the very moment they were being sung. No editing, no agent, no b-------. Just some idiot and his guitar,” the Farmville, Virginia singer-songwriter said. “The style of music that we should have never gotten away from in the first place." Close