The Dixie Chicks announce first album in 14 years | Inquirer Entertainment

Country trio The Dixie Chicks announce first album in 14 years

/ 06:30 PM March 05, 2020

Dixie Chicks

The Dixie Chicks, Emily Robison, left, Natalie Maines and Martie Maguire at the 49th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. Image: AFP/Gabriel Bouys

More than a decade after their unceremonious blacklisting from music, The Dixie Chicks on Wednesday announced their first studio album since George W. Bush was in the White House.

The Texas-based country trio released their comeback single “Gaslighter” along with a music video, and said they would release their first new album since 2006 on May 1.

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The group that soared to fame in the late 1990s all but vanished from music’s main stage after lead singer Natalie Maines told a show in London she was “ashamed” that Bush hailed from Texas — and that the band did “not want this war, this violence,” referring to the then-impending invasion of Iraq.

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The comment went viral and many country radio stations quickly ditched their music — which included hits like “Wide Open Spaces”, “Goodbye Earl” and a popular cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide”.

“Can the words that I said / Send somebody so over the edge / That they’d write me a letter / Saying that I better Shut up and sing / Or my life will be over?” Maines sings in the group’s only mainstream success post-incident to date, “Not Ready To Make Nice”.

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Country is considered by many as the United States music’s most conservative genre. Many critics saw the trio’s ouster as a turning point that emphatically erased any edge it had left, with artists fearing getting “Dixie Chicked” if they voiced opinions.

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“I feel like we are tainted,” Maines told Rolling Stone in 2013.

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But on Wednesday, the group was back in full force: in addition to the single and video, they published a promotional photo featured Maines, Emily Robison and Martie Maguire wielding Statue of Liberty-esque torches while wearing gas masks, in a battlefield-esque landscape bathed in sunset pink.

“Gaslighter” is reminiscent of the blistering Dixie Chicks of yore, featuring barbed-but-layered lyrics and elaborate harmonies.

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Maines’ political streak was by no means short-lived: the 45-year-old has been a vocal critic of President Donald Trump.

“Listen, I think it’s unbelievable how people are badmouthing the President! It’s unacceptable! This is our President!” she wrote in a 2018 Instagram post brimming with sarcasm. “How dare you make fun of the mentally ill and elderly?” RGA

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Dixie Chicks say new album is coming

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TAGS: Country Music, Dixie Chicks, London, Natalie Maines, United States

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