I recalled the incident of 2003, when Natalie Maines, lead singer, expressed shame over the fact President Bush hailed from Texas. This was post 9-11, and the nation was still quite raw from the terrorist attacks. Her comments were allegedly meant to show disdain for Bush's choice to go to war. She said it off the cuff at a show in London, and another band member reminded the crowd they support the troops 100%. The fans cheered in response, but Maines would return home to be lambasted by the American media and the American public. She was accused of being unAmerican and the group would soon lose favor with listeners, after becoming the top selling female band of all time. They reportedly received death threats and feared for the safety of their families and themselves. They largely ducked out of the spotlight for awhile, though still entrenched in controversy.
In 2006, they released another album Taking the Long Way Around, which soared to the number one spot on the Billboard Country Album chart, and broke top 10 on the best Album chart. They also won three Grammys, including best Album. They appeared on the cover of Entertainment Magazine, naked and covered in the words (good and bad) slung at them since the 2003 incident.
However, since then the Chicks have called it quits. Maines has been reported to say they will never make music together as a group. It's possible the other two Chicks, who are sisters, blame Natalie for their demise. Most of the articles written certainly blame the incident.
My support for the Chicks is for their music, ok and for their Freedom of Speech. No matter what you believe about the incident, about our former or current President, in our country we have the First Ammendment. And what followed this episode, was an all out boycott of Dixie Chicks music. Radio stations, all of which are owned by only a few broadcast companies, forbade their DJs from playing any Dixie Chicks songs, and a couple of DJs were reportedly fired for noncompliance. It just seems so ridiculous that any celebrity's politics could have that much of a stronghold on what we do. There was no industry boycott over Chris Brown being a wife beater, or Mel Gibson being an anti-Semite. There was no NFL or TV broadcast boycott over Ray Lewis being a murderer.
Why bring up old news? Plain and simple, I miss the Dixie Chicks. I miss their brand of country, which by the way is not likely to be interpreted as pop. I fought back for some time against recent country music naysayers, who have said country has gone too pop. I've defended my enjoyment of some of the catchy tunes that have been put out by some of the more recent artists. But I'm losing ground, because quite frankly, a lot of it sucks. Rascal Flats? Just the Backstreet Boys with accents. Taylor Swift? Cute and sweet, and a good alternative to some of the trash on the pop chart, but not really country. Even some of the artists who started out country have since crossed over. And I hate to say it, but there are so many new artists with so little flair that I can't even tell them a part. Don't get me wrong, there are some I still like, Little Big Town, the Band Perry, Zach Brown Band, and some of the others. But overall, country music needs the Dixie Chicks to come back. We need the "stripped down" country jamboree country that got me knee slappin' and boot stompin'. We don't need to agree with the politics of our entertainers. We just need to be entertained. That's what they do, and that's what they get paid for. We need the Dixie Chicks back.
Here's an article that explains why:
http://www.savingcountrymusic.com/destroying-the-dixie-chicks-ten-years-after
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