I had the pleasure of seeing Shut Up & Sing recently, a documentary about the Dixie Chicks' latest album and the controversy that erupted when, at a London concert in March 2003, just days before the Iraq war began, lead singer Natalie Maines made an off-the-cuff joke about how she was embarrassed that President Bush was from Texas. I remember the incident well, because I was living in Los Angeles at the time, but was soon to return to Texas, where more than a few people I knew were furious at what Maines had said. I've been trying to make sense of the furor surrounding the group ever since, and I've come to only a few conclusions.
• They weren't attacked for political speech, but for liberal political speech. Many of the criticisms the band received focused on the fact that, as a band, they're being paid to sing, not offer political commentary. But Toby Keith released the single "Courtesy of the Red, White, & Blue (The Angry American)" in 2002; among its lyrics was the warning that "We'll put a boot in your ass / It's the American way." Rather than tell Keith to tone down his rhetoric, country music fans supported the song. Maines wasn't even performing political songs, and it's clear from the footage of the London show that her joke is spontaneous. Yet country music fans still turned on the group for expressing a political belief. To embrace Keith for his politics but tell Maines to not express her beliefs is hypocritical.
• The vitriol with which the Dixie Chicks were attacked extended to their gender, which is just frightening. They were labeled the "Dixie Sluts" by some extremist critics, something that never would have happened to a male singer who voiced an unpopular opinion. Cash, Haggard, Kristofferson and Willie himself were labeled outlaws and given respect, but for women to speak out is apparently too much for country fans to handle.
• Yes, people who stopped listening to the Dixie Chicks after the Bush jab were completely within their rights. Freedom of expression extends to what albums you do or don't buy, and the former fans who professed their newfound hatred for the Chicks had every right to do so. But that doesn't mean it wasn't a boneheaded, myopic thing to do.
I had several friends who liked the Chicks but stopped supporting them after spring 2003, and it wasn't because their tastes changed. No, it was pretty much because of Maines' joke. Why should that stop you from listening to their music if you already liked it? Does her political belief mean she can't sing as well, or play the guitar with the same skill? Does the group's tight harmony become sour when you realize that Maines doesn't support the president? If Rhett Miller came out in fervent support of President Bush, I'd strongly disagree with him, but I wouldn't get rid of my Old 97's albums. I love those albums. I love the songs, the lyrics, the blend of music and emotion and Texas references and heartbreak and pop swagger and just about everything on them. It wouldn't make sense to stop listening to a fantastic musician because I don't like his voting record.
• My personal experience with the controversy was a weird one, mired as it was in a dangerous mix of conservative politics, fundamentalist Christianity, and West Texas heat waves. I thought my friends who abandoned the Chicks because of Maines' outburst were pitiable and sad, but mainly because I could never figure out where they drew the line. Refusing to listen to a band because its members aren't practicing Christians would be foolish, but at least it would have been in line with these people's refusal to listen to the Dixie Chicks. So what was it about politics that got these people so motivated that God didn't have? Why were these people willing to hate a band out of their love for Bush but not their belief in God?
• I've liked the Dixie Chicks for a while now; they're talented musicians, and Maines has a voice like a cannon. I still think Home is a fantastic album. And what do you know, when I listen to it, I don't think about politics, or fanatics, or the way our culture devours itself out of boredom. I think about the music, and how this band won't just shut up and sing, and how great that is. And on that note:
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Los Angeles, California I'm a twentysomething white male with ambitions to be a professional film critic and generally spend my days getting paid to watch movies and write about it. I try not to think too hard about how I want to build my life around talking about other people's creations and not mine. A compulsive reader and stubborn cineaste, I take an often contrary stance to my more fundamentalist peers and upbringing by celebrating the pursuit of the good, and the Good, in life, love, art and film. If you watched enough episodes of a few TV shows ("The Hungry and the Hunted," "The Cut Man Cometh," "The Body," "Waiting in the Wings," "Out of Gas," "April is the Cruelest Month," "20 Hours in America," "Colonial Day" for starters), you would understand me completely, and you'd also realize that much of my worldview and philosophical insights are heavily influenced by fictional works/programs, and many of the good things I've said in my life are just a regurgitation of someone else's imaginings. I guess I was made to be a film critic. This Month
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Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
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Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
by
Kevin Longrie
on Thu 30 Nov 2006 02:02 AM PST | Permanent Link
It's too bad when people let their opinions of the artists affect the art. I guess history repeats itself. John Lennon made an offhand remark, a little joke about how more teenagers loved the Beatles than Jesus and many towns across the south rose up against the band they'd worshiped they day before, burning their old records and boycotting new ones. Even after John's appeasement/apology the support was never the same. Like you said, the records didn't change. The poetry didn't change. The people did.
This kind of behavior always reminds me of the childish characters in Saturday morning cartoons that, upon drinking a glass of milk, express their approval and then spit it out when they're told it's soy. Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
by
Gertie
on Thu 30 Nov 2006 06:49 AM PST | Permanent Link
Thanks Dan, your entry has summed up my feelings about that whole situation.
Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
by
Jonathan Grubbs
on Thu 30 Nov 2006 09:18 AM PST | Permanent Link
Same thing with Sinead O'Conner ripping up a picture of the Pope on SNL. People went ape-squat: they wrote letters to SNL, bulldozed her CDs, and booed her off the stage at a Bob Dylan tribute. I personally don't like her music, but I think it's a shame people gave up on her because of her political/religious beliefs. She's never really put anything else out. At least nothing I've heard of. Luckily, the Dixie Chicks seem to have weathered this storm and continue to sell tons of albums.
Re: Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
by
Anonymous
on Thu 30 Nov 2006 02:38 PM PST | Permanent Link
She's a priest now.
Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
If Rhett Miller came out in fervent support of Bush, I think I would take to my bed and cry for a week! I am having a hard enough time with the fact that the 97's did a Chili's commercial.
Great blog, Dan -- I just found you, and look forward to reading more. Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
by
Anonymous
on Sun 03 Dec 2006 07:51 PM PST | Permanent Link
That point about Christians not listening to liberals but having no problem listening to secular artists was really interesting to me. Why are these things so entwined/confused for so many people? Why do you have to avoid anything that's different anyway? I don't know - just a good observation DC.
JH Re: Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition: Further Thoughts On The Dixie Chicks
by
Bob
on Thu 25 Jan 2007 05:11 PM PST | Permanent Link
Thanks for this view of the scene from the point of view of at least one intelligent and objective American. I've been getting seriously worried reading up on what happened in the USA since Natalie's 2003 comment.
The internet can be accessed globally, and much of what's been said about the Chicks is still readily available. So it's pretty frightening - if it represents what our Allies (and the world's most powerful country) really mean when banging on about freedom, democracy etc, that is. Your summation comes as something of a relief, therefore. Yes, I've seen the clips of TV hosts using the Chicks to score points, but that's hardly reassuring; they all just have one vote each. What has to matter (to us in the UK and Europe) is the ability of the majority to see sense, and express it. Yes, of course the Bush administration scares the hell out of us, but that isn't my main concern in trying to discover what Americans think, and it doesn't matter whether you support him or not. (Our own governments have scared us enough times!). I just hope there really are many more Americans able to stand back from the extremes of gut-reaction "patriots", who in fact just give your country a bad name. Thanks |
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