I'm not usually a fan of country music, but I might have to make an exception for the Dixie Chicks.
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PZ Myers is a biologist and associate professor at the University of Minnesota, Morris.
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A conversion narrative
Category: Politics
Posted on: October 27, 2006 3:48 PM, by PZ Myers
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Comments
Posted by: Linkmeister | October 27, 2006 3:58 PM
I reviewed the recent album (post-controversy) here. It's not straight country by any definition.
Posted by: Diego | October 27, 2006 4:50 PM
I had prejudged the Dixie Chicks as Nashville bubblegum pop country before I seriously listened to them a year or two ago. I was happy to find that I was wrong.
Posted by: quork | October 27, 2006 5:21 PM
Which two albums of theirs would you recommend most highly?
Posted by: Amit | October 27, 2006 5:24 PM
PZ, you should have a listen to their new album. Its pretty good!
Posted by: Stephen Frug | October 27, 2006 5:50 PM
I never liked country music either, but the Dixie Chicks' latest album is actually superb. I gave my own conversion narrative here. I must admit I haven't gotten into any of their earlier music that I've heard, which backs up the idea that their latest album is different from country music -- from their country music anyway.
Definitely check it out. Amazing stuff, all the way through.
Posted by: coturnix | October 27, 2006 5:52 PM
Loved them from the start!
Posted by: Pygmy Loris | October 27, 2006 6:03 PM
I've liked the Dixie Chicks for a long time, but I love their new album. Check it out, not really country at all.
Posted by: qalmlea | October 27, 2006 6:19 PM
As SOON as I heard about the controversy, I went out and BOUGHT the album that was out at that time. Someone had to show them some support. They were brave enough to speak up at a time when the media and most of America were rolling over and asking GW to rub their bellies.
Posted by: Stwriley | October 27, 2006 6:49 PM
I've been a fan of the Dixie Chicks for years (but then, I'm also a bluegrass fan) and they've been among the most innovative people in country music, however you care to define that. If you listen to one of their older albums, like Wide Open Spaces you'll hear a band very into country roots, bluegrass, and a blended modern (but hardly pop) sound. They've always been mavericks musically, and it's no surprise they spoke out as part of the natural course of things when they didn't like the way they saw the country going. Natalie in particular has always been outspoken, it's just that this time she ran afoul of the worst kind of jingoistic tendencies in this country. I've never been happier than when they released Taking the Long Way. It was vintage Chicks, musically not what their fans might expect and ready to take on their critics both politically and musically. All I can say is, buy everything they've ever released, even if you don't think of yourself as a country fan. You'll be surprised.
Posted by: edarrell | October 27, 2006 6:50 PM
HA! Coturnix loved them from the start? I liked them when they were still doing free concerts at Duncanville's Poe-Hobden Amphitheatre, in Duncanville, Texas . . .
No, seriously, this is a great band. Even the old members they kicked out like them. They started out as relatively pure bluegrass, named themselves using the Little Feat tune while they were on their way to their first gig. Gotta love a story like that, especially one involving Little Feat and "Dixie Chicken."
The first two commercial albums are fine, and the third one is good, too. I commend them all. But then, I like almost anything with a bluegrass tinge.
And, true to George Bush's record against Vietnam vets or anyone who honors Vietnam vets, in the year prior to their comments against Bush in England, I believe the Dixie Chicks were the only band in pop or country to chart a tune that paid tribute to a Vietnam war soldier.
So, of course, the Bushites must smite the band. Anyone who actually served in Vietnam is fodder for the Bush slander mill, and anyone who honors a Vietnam vet is due for character assassination, too.
Posted by: QrazyQat | October 27, 2006 7:04 PM
Lots of good stuuf from the Chicks. BTW, one of the funniest things I've ever seen online was Christopher Hitchens describing them as "fat fucking slags", which is not just funny because Hitchens pales in comparison to, say, Maury Chaykin, but because Natalie Maines is real cute and the two sisters are absolutely gorgeous. (Link for proof.)
I really liked their video for "Ready to Run"; the lyrics are words to live by for young girls:
When the train rolls by
I'm gonna be ready this time
When the boy gets that look in his eye
I'm gonna be ready this time
When my momma says I look good in white
I'm gonna be ready this time
Oh yeah
Ready, ready, ready, ready...ready to run
Posted by: Jeb | October 27, 2006 8:10 PM
Honestly I think it is a terrible idea for a movie... don't get me wrong I hate Bush as much as the next liberal guy, but I wouldn't pay money to watch this. A better idea for a movie might be an investigation into American politics and how in a supposedly democratic country, nepotism rules. Isn't that what we call a Monarchy?
Posted by: JackGoff | October 27, 2006 8:28 PM
Seriously. The Dixie Chicks are beautiful,
Though, if you make an exception to them, you have to make an exception to the Wailin' Jennys.
Posted by: Evan Murdock | October 27, 2006 9:16 PM
Would you consider an exception for Robbie Fulks, too? He did, after all, pen God Isn't Real.
Posted by: Evan Murdock | October 27, 2006 9:18 PM
Second on the Wailin' Jennys, too. They're playing here in Madison but I have to go to Billy Bacon and The Forbidden Pigs instead.
Posted by: Odd Jack | October 27, 2006 10:55 PM
Ah, the Dixie Chicks are great. Country is not my favorite genre, but the trio are among the country artists that do draw me in. I did really like the first CD. Not as crazy for the second. But the new one is fantastic. "Not Ready To Make Nice" is a great antheme to use for atheists, people ticked at the shoddy governance of the last several years, etc. It ought to be on the minds of forthright sorts.
Posted by: "Q" the Enchanter | October 27, 2006 11:17 PM
Hell, even if'n you ha'int a country fan you've gotta love the Chicks' "Goodbye Earl," a perfect marriage of music, lyric and vocal attitude:
Goodbye Earle (words & music by Dennis Linde)
Mary Anne and Wanda were the best of friends
All through their high school days
Both members of the 4H Club
Both active in the FFA
After graduation Mary Anne went out lookin'
For a bright new world
Wanda looked all around this town
And all she found was Earl
Well it wasn't two weeks
After she got married that
Wanda started gettin' abused
She put on dark glasses and long sleeved blouses
And make-up to cover a bruise
Well she finally got the nerve to file for divorce
She let the law take it from there
But Earl walked right through that restraining order
And put her in intensive care
Right away Mary Anne flew in from Atalnta
On a red eye midnight flight
She held Wanda's hand as they
Worked out a plan
And it didn't take long to decide
That Earl had to die
Goodbye Earl
Those black-eyed peas
They tasted all right to me Earl
You're feeling weak
Why don't you lay down and sleep Earl
Ain't it dark
Wrapped up in that tarp Earl
The cops came to bring Earl in
They searched the house
High and low
Then they tipped their hats
And said 'Thank You ladies
If you hear from him let us know'
Well the weeks went by and
Spring turned to Summer
And Summer faded into Fall
And it turns out Earl was a missing person
who nobody missed al all
So the girls bouth some land
And a roadside stand
Out on Highway 109
They sell Tennessee ham
And strawberry jam
And they don't
Lose any sleep at night
'cause Earl had to die
Goodbye Earl
We need a break
Let's go out to the lake Earl
We'll pack a lunch
And stuff you in the trunk Earl
Well is that all right
Good Let's go for a ride
Earl hey...
Posted by: Tyler DiPietro | October 28, 2006 1:14 AM
BTW, one of the funniest things I've ever seen online was Christopher Hitchens describing them as "fat fucking slags"
Isn't that sort of like Christopher Hitchens calling someone an alcoholic? Oh well, he already calls Muslims bloodthirsty, which isn't so much untrue as it is a case of the pot calling the kettle black.
Posted by: Rey Fox | October 28, 2006 1:31 AM
Not much of a narrative tho.
Posted by: pablo | October 28, 2006 4:36 AM
The Dixie Chicks were on the Oprah show this week (yeah, I know, Oprah) and they had to stop talking a number of times as the audience burst into continuous applause for their comments.
I'm no fan of CW music either, but these women were articulate and seemed to gather strength from their travail.
Posted by: Talen Lee | October 28, 2006 7:57 AM
Astonishingly, my interest in the Dixie Chicks started when I was a teenage male and I saw them on CWT - basically, a hormonal thing because it was a trio of rather gorgeous blondes on a TV station my god-fearing parents would deign to let me watch.
As my music tastes evolved, despite having gotten my hands on two of their albums (which I gave to my sister, whose tastes went more that way), I still found myself greatly appreciating their writing and poetry rather than the musical style they purport.
I'm at the point where I'm looking to give them another shot, because they deserve the support.
Posted by: Desert Donkey | October 28, 2006 11:14 AM
Any decent 'murinca ought to have some kd lang, melissa etheridge and willie nelson proudly on display alongside their dixie chicks. Even if you dont like country music (and I usually dont), it is the right thing to do. And a little diversity in music is a good thing.
Whenever I wander into the red territory to the east I always mention kd and willie as my favorite country artists. It kinda messes with your average redneck's synapses. A guy who likes country music cant be all bad, but ... those are pot smoking hippie lesbian country musicians ... dang.
Its all good fun.
Posted by: N.Wells | October 28, 2006 12:57 PM
Conservatives can be remarkably good at whipping up an hysteria over statements that should be unexceptional. A little over a year ago, Senator Durbin had people ranting against him for saying that America's presidentially approved methods of torture sounded like something out of Nazi Germany (well, they still do). John Lennon got into trouble with religious conservatives for saying (at the height of their popularity) that more people had heard of the Beatles than of Jesus.
On the other hand, there seems to be no limit on how much over-the-top rhetoric the same rightwingers will tolerate from their own people. Ann Coulter insults all the 9/11 widows and calls all liberals traitors, Rush Limbaugh talks about feminazis and makes fun of victims of Parkinson's disease, Pat Robertson can call for assassination of a foreign leader, and so on ad nauseum, and there is comparatively little admonition from the right. Not that this is news to all us "evilutionists".
Posted by: Don | October 28, 2006 1:54 PM
Anybody remember this spoof apology;
http://www.thespeciousreport.com/2003_dixiechicks.html
Posted by: Graham | October 28, 2006 2:14 PM
Any decent 'murinca ought to have some kd lang, melissa etheridge and willie nelson proudly on display alongside their dixie chicks
K.D. Lang is a Canuck...just sayin'.
I'm generally into rock, blues, jazz and a little classical. But the Dixie Chicks rule. They don't just stand there and look cute. They can really play their instruments.
Posted by: Linkmeister | October 28, 2006 4:07 PM
YouTube has a bunch of videos of them singing "Not Ready to Make Nice," the single off the new album. Here's one.
Posted by: JJR | October 28, 2006 10:29 PM
Love the Dixie Chicks...Here in Houston we have the good fortune to have on Saturdays "the Lonestar Jukebox" show which plays some of the most rebellious, subversive, not-ready-for-prime-time Country Music you've ever heard. I love the stuff, and you don't hear it anywhere else in Houston. Give it a listen online at www.kpft.org --- if you like what you hear, donate at pledge time!
Posted by: Rich Clayton | October 29, 2006 1:42 PM
Another "grassroots movement" that was actually nothing of the sort. From what I can tell, this was a message sent from the right-wing to entertainers and media figures, many of whom expressed doubts about the war. The message was this: "We control enough of the media to DESTROY you. And we will, if you step out of line."
It worked. I remember the celebrity outcry against the war suddenly becoming much quieter.
Posted by: Peter Barber | October 29, 2006 4:56 PM
It's so ironic that 'independent' networks in the US are far more in hock to their commercial backers and their political ambitions than the BBC, a state broadcaster, is to the government of the day.
I take some pleasure from the thought that profits from the film release will lead to a sizeable donation to the Democrats!