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Dixie
Chicks
There's
old country. There's new country. Then there are the Dixie Chicks.
Natalie
Maines, Martie Seidel and Emily Robison have taken the Texas-bred
sound of a fiddle, banjo, dobro and crystal-clear vocal harmonies
into a whole new territory. They are the rare act that comes
along a few times in a generation that is destined to shake
things up, rewrite the rules and become the new musical trendsetter.
The
public has certainly noticed. The Dixie Chicks' first Monument
album, Wide Open Spaces has become the biggest selling
album ever by a country duo or group - racking up some 6 million
in sales by the time their second album, Fly, was completed,
The tremendous sales success only demonstrates that while the
Dixie Chicks have established themselves as a true country music
act, they have also won over audiences outside the country genre.
In a music field routinely known selling to the conservative
30 and over crowd, more than 6O% of the Dixie Chicks sales have
been to consumers under the age of 25. Their concert audience
is as likely to be comprised of entire rows of young women in
their early teens and twenties as it is to include middle aged
couples and entire families complete with pre-teen girls dressed
like their musical idols and singing every Dixie Chicks song
word for word.
The
press has certainly noticed. Publications from Rolling Stone,
Entertainment Weekly and People to Harper's Bazaar, InStyle,
Seventeen and TV Guide have documented how the Dixie Chicks
are bending the music world to their will. and making country
music more "hip" than ever. With the wrap-up of 1998,
numerous publications named them the "Breakout Act of the
Year" and recognized Wide Open Spaces as one of
the "Best Of' albums of the year. USA Today credited the
Chicks with single-handedly returning the banjo to country radio
and Rolling Stone summed it up when they called them "the
bad ass queen pins of country." And at a time when much
of the press on country music has lamented the "sameness"
of the sound and the artists, no less than the Los Angeles Times
conceded that "the Dixie Chicks are the perfect antidote."
The
music industry has certainly noticed. The Dixie Chicks' fellow
musicians and industry peers, in particular, have overwhelmingly
acknowledged their contribution. In a year's time, they have
been honored with two Grammy Awards (Best Country Album and
Best Country Vocal Performance Due/Group), two Country Music
Association Awards (Group of the Year and Horizon Award), plus
three Academy of Country Music Awards (including Album of the
Year), one American Music Award and two TNN Music City News
Awards. On Nashville's Music Row, where the unspoken business
strategy often seems to be "if we can make it work once,
we can beat it to death," the music industry has obviously
been taking notes. It's likely not a coincidence that almost
every record label in Nashville has signed a female trio since
the Dixie Chicks exploded on to the scene. But clearly what
makes this act work is not just that they are a female trio.
The difference is this: There simply is no other act in any
musical format that sounds like the Dixie Chicks.
The
Dixie Chicks came out of the chute with enough sass and confidence
to adopt slogans like "Chicks Rule" and "Chicks
Kick Ass." Months later, which chicken fool tattoos on
their feet signifying their No. 1 singles and gold and platinum
successes as well as a vast array of awards, it appears they
were right from the beginning.
So
how do the Dixie Chicks follow up? The obvious temptation would
be to stick with what's worked and produce more of the same.
But that safe approach to their art wouldn't be what made the
trio unique in the first place. When the three got together
to plan their second Monument album, Fly, following the
status quo is exactly what they did nor want to do. This time,
instead of contributing one song on their album, the Dixie Chicks
wrote or co-wrote five new tracks. But more than that, they
were determined to push the envelope and themselves as far as
it would go in terms of instrumentation, production, vocals
and - above all - spirit. The end result is an album that shines
with artistic growth on every level.
"We
didn't want to remake Wide Open Spaces," says Martie,
"so we had to go back to that nothing-to--lose feeling.
I definitely think we've grown. It's been a couple of years
since we recorded Wide Open Spaces and I think that shows.
We're not as scared to let the harmonies come through or take
extra time to have an awesome solo. The only rule this time
around was that there were no rules."
Natalie
agrees, "We didn't want to be afraid to try something different.
So we didn't go into it scared. We went in to it thinking, that
we're just going to make the album we want to make and if people
like it, great. If they don't, we wouldn't be happy about that,
but at least we made the album we wanted to make. The three
of us sound better together and have become even better friends
and that makes for better music. We grew as writers and all
of our abilities just grew from playing so much and being around
each other so much."
You
can hear the band's confidence from the opening bars of the
album. It doesn't start with a guitar lick or a vocal hook,
but with an Irish jig, played by Martie's fiddle, which melds
into the first track and the first single "Ready to Run."
And then, within a few lines, you can hear something else: the
sound of personal independence that is a constant theme throughout
the album.
The songs on Fly are all about women defining themselves
their way. While they long for and cherish true love, they will
look for it on their own terms, thank you very much. "Stand
By Your Man" it's not.
In
Natalie and Emily's song "Don't Waste Your Heart",
the woman straight out tells the man trying to snag her that
"It's funny how the girls get burned, but honey as far
as I'm concerned, the tables have turned." Another Natalie/Emily
contribution, "Sin Wagon," notes how "He's lived
his life now I'm gonna go live mine" before proceeding
to live a wild night on the town arriving on a 'sin wagon'.
On "Ready To Run," which Martie wrote with Marcus
Hummon, the woman in the song fully realizes that she should
be ready to settle down but instead decides "All I wanna
do is have some fun/What's all this talk about love?"
"The
album mirrors our lives," says Natalie. "If we're
all happily married and we settle down and have kids we'll have
an album that reflects that. We're going through a lot of stages
in our lives right now and that's what we relate to, think about,
talk about and write about."
One
song that is sure to have journalists writing and politicians
pontificating goes even further. "Goodbye Earl" is
a surprisingly upbeat-sounding tune about a woman called Wanda
who is repeatedly beaten by her husband Earl. Eventually, she
and her best friend Marianne decided that the only way to stop
Earl from hurting Wanda is to take Earl out of Wanda's life
- terminally.
"It's pertaining to wife-beaters, not men in general,"
says Emily, reassuringly. "It's not putting the finger
to guys. It's putting the finger to abusive guys."
Besides,
the music on Fly is really universal. Women will identify
men will get a great glimpse into how many of today's young
women feel but the songs are not gender specific emotions. As
Martie explains, "Just about everyone can relate to songs
about needing the freedom to chase your dreams or dealing with
a broken heart or falling In love or even just wanting to be
a little wild and crazy every now and then."
She
adds. "Women today are stronger and healthier than ever
before but that can make male/female relationships better. When
you're younger so much of life revolves around men and male
acceptance that it's hard to know who you are. Then you reach
this point in your life where you discover girlfriends provide
so many things that you forget about men a little bit. We're
all three, married or not married, focusing a lot on female
relationships and singing songs that reflect our confidence
as women. It's not a negative things because you have a better
relationship when you don't depend on the man in your life for
your whole identity."
It can be a little intimidating for a man when coping with female
stardom on the level the Dixie Chicks have attained. "Men
have definitely got to be strong to deal with it, and to have
their own exciting thing going on," says Emily. But none
of the band is complaining about the pressures of success -
they can all remember the alternative.
For
years, the Texas trio booked their own dates, hired equipment
and carted it to and from gigs themselves. Originally performing
on a Dallas street corner, the band's combination of bluegrass,
cowgirl music and western swing earned them $300 in their very
first hour and soon led them to barbecue joints, corporate gigs
(including political rallies for Ross Perot), and regional nightclubs.
Early stints even included a nursing home, the produce section
of a grocery store and a funeral. With 10 years of paying their
dues, there's nothing they don't know about empty rooms and
flip a coin to see who'd sleep with Emily because she's a cover
hog," jokes Natalie. "Even when we got our own rooms
we were still in sleazy motels - the kind that have the little
machine by the bed to drop quarters in and make the bed shake."
Nowadays,
things are different. "Our lives are very weird and un-normal,"
says Natalie. "But it is fun. We get a lot of perks now
that we didn't get before but I don't think money is that important
to any of us. None of us have made any extravagant purchases.
Where I used to count my money all the time, now I know I can
eat the $5 M&Ms out of the mini-bar and it's okay."
Which
leaves just one question: why is the new album called Fly?
"It's the whole Chick thing. We've kind of earned our wing,"
relates Martie. "The first album was like the momma bird,
the label, pushing us towards the edge so we could learn to
fly. And now we're doing it on our own. We've always stood up
for what we believe in. But now we have more confidence and
ability to soar and fly. Our career has really taken off. Natalie
was flying from a situation she didn't want to be in. Emily's
flying to a better place with someone she loves, and I'm experiencing
the musical flight that I've waited so long to take. When I
said to the girls, "What about Fly for the title
of our album?" we started to see how many references there
were to flight, or birds, or wings in all the songs. There are
so many meanings to it. It was like a sign."
But
this is only the beginning of the Dixie Chicks' musical journey
and their legacy of shaking things up. To some of the more conservative
members of the Nashville community, there's something scary
about the way the Dixie Chicks relish the opportunity to bust
every convention going. (They even kept their picture off the
cover of Fly, just because everyone would have expected
such a "visual" act to put in on). "We're doing
what we want to do. We're playing what we want to play. We're
looking like we want to look. We're saying what we want to say.
In other genres, that's OK but a lot of times in country, the
attitude tends to be more. I'm just happy to be here,"
responds Natalie.
But anyone who thinks the Dixie Chicks might mellow with time
and fame has another thing coming. As Natalie proudly declares,
"I have a feeling that if we're around for 20 years there
will still be things we do that scare them."
It's
a safe bet, however, that the thread that will run constant
through the Dixie Chicks' career will be that Chicks will continue
to rule. And they'll keep kicking ass!
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