Best National Roots Act
Dixie Chicks
Put it this way: would Johnny Cash, Steve Earle, or even
Lucinda Williams ever put out an album that credits six hair stylists and four
makeup artists? You might think of the Dixie Chicks as the Hanson of country
music: there's three of them, they're young and wicked cute, and they're better
than they need to be. The Chicks will never have the respect of the
traditional- and alternative-country crowd, and there's a reason for that: you
won't find anything truly deep or risky on Wide Open Spaces and
Fly (both Monument/Sony Nashville), the two albums that made them the
best-selling group in country-music history. But well-executed bubblegum can be
a beautiful thing, and if the Chicks megahits "Ready To Run" and "I Can Love
You Better" are ultimately as fluffy as "MMMBop," they aren't any less
irresistible.
The Chicks are something of a DIY story: founding sisters Martie Seidel and
Emily Erwin released three albums on indie labels, hiring and firing a handful
of members before recruiting the charismatic frontwoman, Natalie Maines.
Instead of marking a sellout, the hit albums with Maines just refined the
commercial strategy they'd been aiming for all along. With no shortage of
fiddle and mandolin, their albums feel like pop while sounding like bluegrass.
And they offer a happy ending even when dealing with spousal abuse -- see their
latest single, "Goodbye Earl" (now generating plenty of "controversy" hype,
even though it's been on a multi-platinum album for a year with nobody batting
an eye). At the very worst, the group could be drawing millions of fans into
harder-core country music -- but that's more than can be said for Shania or the
increasingly wacky Garth.
-- Brett Milano
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