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World Socialist
7 June 2006
Dixie Chicks
Stand Their Ground
By Tom Carter
Dixie Chicks: Taking the Long Way (2006 Sony Music Entertainment,
Inc.) Produced by Rick Rubin. $17.99
The new album by the country music group, the Dixie Chicks, Taking the Long
Way, appears in the aftermath of a media campaign against the group initiated
by Clear Channel, Cox Radio and Cumulus Broadcasting, among others. The campaign
was launched after the lead vocalist, Natalie Maines, came out against George
W. Bush and the war on Iraq in March 2003.
However, the right-wing campaign has largely flopped, and the well-deserved
success of this new albumit jumped to Number 1 on the Billboard charts
in both the Country and Pop categories and is one of the most popular downloads
on the internetis a huge embarrassment for all those country music pundits
who declared the Dixie Chicks careers over.
In the music and lyrics of this record, it is clear that the Dixie Chicks have
emerged from the witch-hunt more mature and serious, but they have not lost
their bearings. As they always have, they perform music with a deep and sincere
empathy for real people in real situations. They sing frankly about real life
in all its ups and downs: domestic abuse, infertility, the passing of old friends,
motherhood, growing up, struggling to make ends meet, war, and falling in and
out of love. And they are the best-selling female group in history for a reason:
they have a genuine gift for writing and performing straightforward music for
fiddle, banjo, and guitar that is both melodically delightful and memorable.
Though their previous music tended to treat its subject matter in the third
person, lyrics in this album are entirely in the first person. Some songs make
direct reference to the campaign against them. For instance, the song Not
Ready to Make Nice crescendos to an angry rejoinder directed against all
those who tried to prod them back into line.
I made my bed and I sleep like a baby, with no regrets and I dont mind
sayin
Its a sad sad story when a mother will teach her daughter that she ought
to hate a perfect stranger.
And how in the world can the words that I said send somebody so over the edge,
That theyd write me a letter sayin that Id better shut up
and sing or my life will be over?
Im not ready to make nice.
Im not ready to back down.
Im still mad as hell.
The Dixie Chicks have been on the country music scene since 1989. The core of
the group, sisters Martie and Emily Erwin (now Martie Maguire and Emily Robison),
hail from Addison, Texas, and were regulars on the Dallas-area folk and bluegrass
music scene for years. When they joined with singer Natalie Maines in 1995 to
form the Dixie Chicks that we know today, their popularity rapidly grew outside
the Dallas area. Their albums Wide Open Spaces (1998), Fly (1999), Home (2002)
and an album of live music from their Top of the World tour together sold 60
million copies. Sony music took for itself nearly all of the revenues from these
sales, but the Chicks were able to win back a portion of this sum through a
lawsuit in 2002.
Backlash
On March 10, 2003, the Dixie Chicks were performing in Londonjust a few
days before a war was launched that, after three years of carnage and counting,
has claimed the lives of more than a hundred thousand Iraqis and more than 2,500
American servicemen and women.
The three women were preparing to play their song Travelin Soldiera
mournful, haunting ballad of a shy American boy, two days past eighteen,
who meets a pretty young waitress at a small-town diner moments before he is
shipped off to Vietnam. He writes letters to the girl from the front, and the
two fall in love in correspondence. After waiting longingly for him to return,
the girl hears the boys name read from a list of war dead.
Maines, preparing the audience for the song, identified a parallel between the
invasion and occupation of Vietnam and the impending war in Iraq. The song took
on a new significance; American boys just like the one in the song were at that
moment saying their farewells to hometown sweethearts at airports and army bases
across the USsome for the last time.
The song struck a chord with the largely antiwar crowd in London, as British
troops were simultaneously being mustered for deployment abroad.
Maines, a native of Lubbock, Texas, remarked, Just so you know, were
ashamed the President of the United States is from Texas.
Denunciations of the presidential office by major figures in the entertainment
industry are not entirely uncommon. However, the American country music industry,
including the country music radio stations, is controlled by some of the most
fanatical right-wing political forces in the United States. Lou Dobbs, Rush
Limbaugh, Laura Schlessinger, Jay Sekulow, Pat Robertson, and Michael Savage
all have talk shows aired on country music radio stations. For one of the most
popular American country music groups of all time to disparage the president
was simply too embarrassing to these elements.
A major campaign was mounted by powerful figures in the country music industry
against the Dixie Chicks, and performers Toby Keith and Reba McEntire, among
others, were mobilized to denounce them. For a sense of the crudity of these
attacks, consider that at Toby Keith concerts, prominently displayed was a doctored
photograph featuring Maines with Saddam Hussein.
Country music stations were called upon to remove all Dixie Chicks music from
the airwaves, and rabid talk radio hosts denounced the women as traitors and
accused them of betraying their fans. One frenzied caller to such a program
raged, I think they should send Natalie [Maines] to Iraq, strap her to
a bomb and just drop her over Baghdad. Dixie Chicks Destruction Day was
declared across the south, and at sparsely attended rallies, the Chicks
records were bulldozed.
Tremendous resources were thrust into this right-wing witch-hunt by Clear Channel,
which owns 60 percent of the country music stations in the country. Clear Channel
imposed a ban on Dixie Chicks music on their airwaves, and helped to organize
and fund the anti-Dixie Chicks bulldozings. Clear Channels chairman, L.
Lowry Mays, has financial and political ties with the Bush family.
The corporations Cox Radio and Cumulus Broadcasting, which also control a substantial
fraction of country music stations in the country, jumped on the bandwagon.
Cumulus, which owns 50 stations, immediately demanded that all Dixie Chicks
music be censored. Simultaneously, country music experts everywhere
began categorically declaring that the Chicks had ruined their careers.
President Bush even pronounced the Chicks careers over. The Dixie
Chicks are free to speak their mind, he told Tom Brokaw of NBC. They
can say what they want to say. They shouldnt have their feelings hurt
when just because people dont want to buy their records when they want
to speak out. As a result of this campaign, the Dixie Chicks lives
were literally endangeredthey received numerous death threats from people
driven into a frenzy by the endless attempts to whip up hatred against the artists.
On Larry King Live, Maines recalled the atmosphere during the initial
days of the campaign. [T]here was a mother holding her two-year-old son
outside of a show protesting, and telling our camera, Screw em,
screw em! And then turned to her two-year-old and said, Say
screw em! And that just made me bawl because I just witnessed someone
learned to hate and I didnt know that kind of hatred existed.
Although the right-wing campaign was no doubt able to mobilize a certain constituency
against the Dixie Chicks, there was nothing grassroots about it,
and by and large the so-called backlash has been exaggerated in
the media. The Dixie Chicks have always sung straightforwardly and sincerely
about real life, real people, and real eventsthis is what earned these
talented musicians their popularity in the first place. For most fans, it came
as no surprise that these sensitive, decent artists were shocked by the ignorance,
callousness, and bloodthirstiness that characterized the lead-up to the invasion
of Iraq.
The Dixie Chicks were initially bewildered by the media frenzy, and fearing
that they had offended their fans, issued an apology on their website. However,
as it became clear that the backlash was being organized by a very
narrow section of powerful people in the country music industry, and that the
majority of their fans had not deserted them, the Dixie Chicks found their footing
and stood their ground. Asked by Time magazine last month about her initial
apology, Maines said, I dont feel that way anymore. I dont
feel he [Bush] is owed any respect whatsoever.
On Sixty Minutes and Primetime, as well as on other
programs during the past three years, the Dixie Chicks have endlessly been prodded
for a mea culpa. Diane Sawyer began her interview with the musicians by asking
stupidly, Do you feel awful about saying that about the president of the
United States?
To their credit, these Texans held their own. Earlier this week, on Larry
King Live, Emily Robison said that until March 2003, the Dixie Chicks
did not think of themselves as a political band, but King interjected,
You are now. Robison nodded.
We are now and we will take that role seriously. I think at the time,
its just odd, you know, it was meant as a topical part of the show because
we were on the eve of war. Getting up on a soapbox is not, you know, what she
intended or what we like to do. But, still, we like to be honest, in the course
of doing interviews and everything else, when this is what is happening in the
world, I think you have to be honest about it. We dont have to shut up
because we happen to be musicians.
The author, who fondly recalls hearing these musicians perform before a small
audience at the Texas State Fair in Dallas more than a decade ago, is happy
to share a home state with the Dixie Chicks. Besides, after all, George W. Bush
was born and raised in Connecticut.
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