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Dixie Chicks withdraw apology to Bush

 
 
Phoenix32890
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 04:45 am
I think that the Dixie Chicks are simply canny businesswomen. They apologized at a time when Bush was riding high in the favor of many Americans. It almost cost them their careers. Now that Bush has lost a lot of his credibility, that is a most opportune time for them to speak up!!!
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snood
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 05:38 am
Well, surely you don't attribute Maines' original statement against Bush as some kind of business-motivated ploy?
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revel
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 05:41 am
I think the word "almost" is an under statement. It did cost them their careers. I hope they have a comeback.
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snood
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 05:48 am
In recent interviews, (and I think they mean it) they have affirmed that they don't miss those that left because of what they said. They say they don't want the kind of fans that "have them in the CD changer along with Toby Keith and Reba McIntyre". I think they're badasses.
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flushd
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 06:02 am
Who cares? The girls make good music! Smile They are musicians first and foremost in my mind.

Music/politics: always mixing. Truth is, I'd listen to them even if they were NeoNazis (would rip the tunes rather than putting any dollars into sales or merch tho).
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panzade
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 07:49 am
Joe Nation wrote:
Who, other than Bruce Springsteen, has had a top 100 hit with a politically slanted message in the past eight years?


I know that many were in the top country chart, all supporting the war. Toby Keith has practically based his career on supporting the war.

Green Day is the only one I know of in the pop charts, but the charts are so fragmented now.

Neil Young's new album is very outspoken...but it will never chart. Crying or Very sad
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FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 07:57 am
I loved the Chicks before the Incident, and I love them even more now. Tomorrow morning I will be searching for their new release on iTunes. I think they're one of the most talented acts in country music, and I think they still have a lot of fans. Standing firm where they are isn't going to cost them another dime. What they were going to lose by speaking out they have already lost, so it really just gets easier from here. If only politicians of other parties could follow their example and have enough balls to stand by their convictions.
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DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 08:06 am
coachryan wrote:
Except for you chicken sacrificing, satanist, liberals from Austin. :wink:


i am sooooo not a satanist.

As for the chickens, how else do you expect me to fix these computers?
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panzade
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 09:06 am
coachryan wrote:
Except for you chicken sacrificing, satanist, liberals from Austin. :wink:


sure produces some great music...
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sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 09:32 am
JoeN, here's another recent political song I know of (not sure if it hit the charts):

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9eDJ3cuXKV4

("Mr. President" by Pink.)
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blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 09:55 am
http://www.eforu.com/cards/pictures/pink/p15_thumb.jpg
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McGentrix
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 11:12 am
Country radio disses Dixie Chicks
'Nice' barely scrapes top 40; follow-up faltering

Monday, May 22, 2006; Posted: 9:36 a.m. EDT (13:36 GMT)

Disappointing airplay for the first two singles from the new album by the Dixie Chicks exposes a deep -- and seemingly growing -- rift between the trio and the country radio market that helped turn the group into superstars.

"Taking the Long Way," due out May 23, is the band's first album since singer Natalie Maines sparked a major controversy in 2003 by declaring that she was ashamed to hail from the same state as fellow Texan President George W. Bush. Radio boycotts ensued, and many fans abandoned the band.

The first single, "Not Ready to Make Nice," peaked at No. 36 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart, beginning its descent after just seven weeks. The second single, "Everybody Knows," is now at No. 50, down two places in its fourth week.

"Not Ready to Make Nice" performed only slightly better at adult contemporary radio, peaking at No. 32 on the AC chart and falling off after six weeks.

From the beginning of the album rollout, the Dixie Chicks were eager that their songs be worked to radio formats beyond country. The album was produced by rock veteran Rick Rubin, whose credits include the Red Hot Chili Peppers, System of a Down and Johnny Cash. (Read Time magazine cover story.)

By picking the defiant "Not Ready" as the first single, they've reopened a wound that was particularly deep for country radio fans, and left many country programmers with the burning question: Why on earth would the band choose to do this?

After hearing the album, WKIS Miami program director Bob Barnett says he was "excited about the opportunity to introduce some great Chicks music to the listeners." But the group's decision to come with "Not Ready" as the lead single left him "stunned, especially in light of the fact that, when asked, programmers and consultants that listened to the project were virtually unanimous in saying we should put the politics behind us and concentrate on all this other great music we were hearing."

KUBL/KKAT Salt Lake City PD Ed Hill criticizes the song's "self-indulgent and selfish lyrics."

Barnett played the song for a week, but pulled it after listeners called to say it sounded like the Chicks were "gloating" or "rubbing our noses in it," he reports. "We didn't need to pick at the scab any longer."

He and other country programmers were upset that the group chose to launch its new album with a single that rehashed all the angst of three years ago.

The two singles have had a striking lack of impact at radio, considering the band's history. Between 1997 and 2003, it notched 14 top 10 country singles, including six No. 1 hits. In addition to eight Grammy Awards, the group has won 10 Country Music Assn. Awards and eight Academy of Country Music Awards. The trio has sold 23.4 million albums in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

The Dixie Chicks and reps from their label, Columbia Records, declined to participate in this story. But -- at least as far as Maines is concerned -- the drop-off at country radio was part of its plan.

Maines was quoted in late January on EW.com, before the single went to country radio, saying: "For me to be in country music to begin with was not who I was ... I would be cheating myself ... to go back to something that I don't wholeheartedly believe in. So I'm pretty much done. They've shown their true colors. I like lots of country music, but as far as the industry and everything that happened ... I couldn't want to be farther away from that."

Maines also said, "I don't want people to think that me not wanting to be part of country music is any sort of revenge. It is not. It is totally me being who I am, and not wanting to compromise myself and hate my life."

At KNCI Sacramento, California, the Chicks' music weathered the 2003 controversy only to be pulled as a result of Maines' new Entertainment Weekly comments, coupled with poor scores in local music tests.

"When an artist says that they don't want to be a part of that industry, it made our decision a no-brainer," program director Mark Evans says. "There are too many talented new artists dying to have a song played on country radio, so I'd rather give one of them a shot."
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panzade
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 12:11 pm
In many ways the Chicks are better off weaning themselves off the Nashville "sugar tit". Country has a recent history of dumping aging female stars and the DC have a big enough fan base to rebuild in a different format IMO
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FreeDuck
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 12:21 pm
I agree.
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blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Mon 22 May, 2006 12:38 pm
Bushie really needs to get Lee Greenwood back in the saddle. Maybe stem the tide of anti-war music washing over the nation. 29% approval and dropping fast.
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BernardR
 
  1  
Reply Tue 23 May, 2006 12:06 am
Panzade wrote:

"In many ways the Chicks are better off weaning themselves off the Nashville "sugar tit". Country has a recent history of dumping aging female stars and the DC have a big enough fan base to rebuild in a different format IMO"


You are absolutely correct, Panzade
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SierraSong
 
  1  
Reply Wed 24 May, 2006 05:40 am
Maybe - if that "format" includes waitressing LOL.

HIX NIX DIXIE CHICKS
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revel
 
  1  
Reply Wed 24 May, 2006 07:06 am
NO SPINE ZONE: BILL O'REILLY KISSES UP TO THE DIXIE CHICKS


http://blogs.mercurynews.com/aei/images/908294_6b0242ea3f.jpg

Quote:
Just want to say that was great," O'Reilly told her. "I really like that new song."

Continues Maines:

"And I go, 'But two million tops, right?'And he goes, 'What?' And I said, 'I saw your show when you said we wouldn't sell more than two million, tops.' And he was like, 'Oh, ah, well, two million's pretty good these days, right?' And I was like, 'Right, yeah. You were saying it in a positive way.'

Then, she says, O'Reilly, who blasted the group on his radio show, added: "We really respect what you did. And we really respect that you stand up for yourself and blah, blah, blah."

Like a weather vane in a Kansas tornado, this guy does nothing but spin.

He comes off all tough and sanctimonious on his show, but obviously, in person, he's as greasy as yesterday's bacon.
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teenyboone
 
  1  
Reply Thu 25 May, 2006 05:17 pm
Bill O'Reilly:
A real Bastion of belief; his OWN! Cool
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ehBeth
 
  1  
Reply Thu 25 May, 2006 05:23 pm
One more Dixie Chicks release and the entire travel rotation in Algernon's changer will be Chicks. Love the way they've been developing musically.
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