|
| |
|
Subscribe to our newsletter!
We'll email you when we add new wallpapers to the site.
We will not share your email address with anyone. Your email address:
|
|
|
|
| |
|
 |
| |
|
 |
|
- Name:
Dixie Chicks
- "It's easier to write songs that are about other
people," says Natalie Maines. "It's much harder to put
yourself out there, but the songs are so much better and
mean so much more when you can let yourself be
vulnerable, and be honest with your emotions and your
beliefs."
- With TAKING THE LONG WAY, one of the most
anticipated albums in recent years, the Dixie Chicks are
putting themselves out there like never before. For the
first time, every one of the disc's fourteen songs are
co-written by the Chicks themselves, exploring themes
both deeply private and resoundingly political.
Collaborating with legendary producer Rick Rubin (who
has worked with everyone from Johnny Cash to the Red Hot
Chili Peppers, from Run DMC to Neil Diamond), the
biggest-selling female band in history has truly pushed
themselves to new heights both as writers and as
performers.
- "Everything felt more personal this time," says
Maines. "I go back to songs we've done in the past and
there's just more maturity, depth, intelligence on
these. They just feel more grown-up." Inspired by such
classic rock artists as the Eagles, Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers, and the Mamas and the Papas, TAKING THE
LONG WAY adds a sweeping, Southern California vibe to
the Chicks' down-home intimacy. That ambition is matched
with lyrics addressing everything from small-town
narrow-mindedness ("Lubbock or Leave It") to the
psychology of celebrity ("Everybody Knows"). "This album
was about finding a balance in the different aspects of
our lives," says Emily Robison, "but there's something
thematic there, too - it's really about being bold."
- Of course, that's a subject that the Dixie Chicks
know a few things about. Not just "big for a country
band" or "big for a big female band," the Dixie Chicks
are a multi-platinum selling act in North America,
Europe and Australia. They are one of a mere handful of
acts with multiple albums achieving "diamond" status
(meaning sales over 10 million copies) - both WIDE OPEN
SPACES (1998) and FLY (1999) hit that stratospheric
landmark - and have won seven Grammy awards. Their
on-stage reputation has helped them sell over $100
million worth of concert tickets, and outspoken songs
like "Goodbye, Earl" made it clear that this power trio
played by nobody's rules.
- And that was all before Natalie Maines's comments
about a fellow Texan, President George W. Bush, during a
London appearance in March, 2003 really put the Dixie
Chicks in the headlines. The resultant uproar - complete
with boycotts and death threats - is the focus of TAKING
THE LONG WAY's defiant first single, "Not Ready to Make
Nice." "The stakes were definitely higher on that song,"
says Robison. "We knew it was special because it was so
autobiographical, and we had to get it right. And once
we had that song done, it freed us up to do the rest of
the album without that burden."
- Martie Maguire says that all three Chicks believe
they've grown as a result of the incident. "I learned I
was ready to put my career on the line for something I
believed in," she says. "Emily and I could have
pressured Natalie to apologize, and I was so proud that
I had that inner strength - that nothing is as important
as standing up for what you believe in."
- Following the controversy, the group spent the rest
of 2003 on their "Top of the World" tour (documented on
a double-CD and a DVD of the same name), and amassed the
biggest one-year gross for a country music act in
history - a whopping $62 million. The following year,
they joined the historic "Vote for Change" tour in
anticipation of the 2004 Presidential election.
- When it came time to return to the recording studio,
the Chicks knew that they wanted a new direction. Their
last studio album, 2002's HOME, was itself a departure -
a glorious celebration of their acoustic roots - so
there was no obvious next move. They discovered that
they shared a fondness for Rick Rubin's work, only to
find out that he was a Dixie Chicks fan ever since
seeing the trio "completely blow everyone off the stage"
at a Sony Music function early in their career.
- When sessions began in Los Angeles in May, 2005,
Maguire remembers Rubin saying, "I think this should
sound like a great rock act making a country album, not
a country act making a rock album." Beyond that, things
were left open to see where the creative process would
lead. "It was a very different style of working," says
Maines. "You have to learn to relax and be OK with
experimenting. We just knew we wanted to do something
different, and that's scary."
- "The journey is to see where the songs take us,"
says Rubin. "I felt like they had a lot to talk about,
and it would be a good time for them to talk. It was
really like the start of their career. Up until now,
people loved them in a very surface way. This was the
first time that people took them seriously - and in one
stroke they went from loved artists to serious artists."
- Rubin assembled a band including Chili Peppers
drummer Chad Smith, session hero Larry Knechtel, and
Heartbreakers Benmont Tench and Mike Campbell, and
matched the Chicks with co-writers including Dan Wilson
(who wound up collaborating on six of TAKING THE LONG
WAY's songs), Pete Yorn, and Gary Louris of the Jayhawks.
Rubin says that he watched the band's songwriting skills
skyrocket in front of his eyes. "Over a period of time,
by honing their craft and working with good mentors,
they got to be really, really good songwriters," he
says.
- The results cover an impressive range of territory.
"Silent House" examines the emotions that come from
watching an older relative struggle with Alzheimer's.
"It's So Hard When It Doesn't Come Easy" addresses
infertility, an issue that both Robison and Maguire have
faced. ("I think we feel a responsibility to break down
some barriers," says Maguire. "It's much more of a
common problem than people realize.") The Chicks debuted
the gospel-inflected "I Hope," co-written with Keb’ Mo’,
during last year's telethon benefiting the victims of
Hurricane Katrina; the album version features a
blistering guitar solo by John Mayer.
- Of course, political brouhahas weren't the only
things happening in the Dixie Chicks world during the
last few years. The number of children in their posse
has grown from two to seven since the release of HOME,
and their domestic life informs such songs as "Baby Hold
On" and the delicate "Lullaby," which they call "a gift
to our kids." Robison laughs that "our entourage just
consists of nannies," while noting that their tour plans
this time will be "stretched out more - we'll tour
longer, with more time off."
- As for the tour - set to kick off in the summer and
run for more than a year - Maines says that it will be
"more of an old-style rock show, not so much about
theatrics and props but just about the music." She also
notes that "to rock out, we used to have to pull out a
cover tune, so it's nice to have your own songs to fill
that part of the set."
- Superstars, renegades, innovators, heroes, villains,
and moms - over almost a decade, the Dixie Chicks have
grown from a band into a phenomenon. Now more than ever,
the eyes of the world are on them, and with TAKING THE
LONG WAY, they come out swinging, surpassing the
pressures and expectations history has placed upon them.
- "This album was total therapy," says Natalie Maines.
"I'm way more at peace now. Writing these songs and
saying everything we had to say makes it possible to
move on."
|
 |
|
|
|
This site (C) Citysky Wallpapers Download 2000-2008.
Unauthorised copying or redistribution prohibited. By using
this Website, you are indicating your acceptance of our Usage
Agreement.
Please read our Privacy
Statement.
| | |