Victims of a Republican Plot
The Dixie Chicks Cross
the Road
By The Editors of Rock and Rap
Confidential
Last
year, Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks contemptuously dismissed Toby
Keith's popular pro-war song "Courtesy of the Red, White, and
Blue," saying it was "ignorant and it makes country music
sound ignorant." No boycott was called. In fact, not a word was
said.
So there's no reason to interpret the hostile
response that followed Maines's anti-war comments as the spontaneous
reaction of an outraged country audience. In fact, the attack on the
Dixie Chicks was a political maneuver no less calculated than the
Watergate break-in.
According to a story from americannewsreel.com
sent to RRC by former Reprise president Howie Klein, "Phone calls
originating from Republican Party headquarters in Washington went out to
country stations, urging them to remove the Chicks from their
playlists.The 'alternative concert' [to the Dixie Chicks' tour opener]
is actually the work of the South Carolina Republican Party and party
officials are helping promote the concert.We received a call from
'Gallagher's Army,' urging us to support the alternative concert. Caller
ID backtraced the call to South Carolina GOP headquarters."
Chain radio stations were quick to dump the
Chicks because their parent companies (Clear Channel, Viacom, et al)
have pressing business in the nation's capitol and they want help from
the Republican Party.
The Dixie Chicks Top of the World tour was set
to begin in Greenville, South Carolina, on May 1. The state legislature
had passed a resolution condemning the group. Lipton Tea, their
corporate tour sponsor, scrapped most of its endorsement deal with the
Chicks, saying that it's "wrong" to be for peace. In the wake
of the many death threats against the three young women in the group,
bomb dogs searched the Bi-Lo Center in Greenville before the show.
Lon Helton, country music editor of Radio &
Records, claimed that country fans are all right-wing, saying
"Country music is for people who live in between the Hudson and the
Hollywood sign and they have a different view." If all country fans
opposed Natalie Maines's plea for peace, that raised the question: Would
anyone show up at the Dixie Chicks' shows? Would the group back away
from its beliefs in a desperate attempt to save its career?
Before the concert in Greenville, the arena
sound system played "Everybody Wants to Save the World,"
"Our Lips Are Sealed" by the Go-Gos, "Band on the
Run" by Wings, and Tammy Wynette's "Your Good Girl's Gonna Go
Bad." There were only a few empty seats and the crowd was doing the
wave even before the show began. As soon as it did, there was what the
LA Times's Geoff Boucher described as "a landslide of fan
love."
After the third song, Natalie Maines, clad in a
tank top emblazoned with "Dare to Be Free," offered the crowd
a chance to boo. "If there were any boos, they couldn't be heard
over the huge applause," reported the Greenville News. Nor was
there any booing during the performance of Patty Griffin's "Truth
No. 2" ("You don't like the sound of the truth coming out of
my mouth") when a video was shown onstage that highlighted the
civil rights movement, Gandhi, Malcolm X, and women's rights, along with
footage of people stomping on records by the Beatles, Sinead O'Connor,
and the Dixie Chicks.
The Chicks got the same enthusiastic response
everywhere they went on the first Southern leg of their tour. Sometimes
there would be one protestor standing outside with a pro-Bush sign,
sometimes none. The reception given the Dixie Chicks below the
Mason-Dixon line doesn't change the reality that there is a powerful and
dangerous streak of jingoism in America, one that has its strongest
roots in the South. But the Dixie Chicks have proven that there are two
sides to that story. Even more than their music and their courage, that
may turn out to be their greatest gift of all.
Rock and Rap
Confidential, edited by Dave Marsh and
Lee Ballinger, is the nation's best newsletter on music and politics.
RRC will send a free sample issue to all OpEdNews.Com readers. Send your
request to: Rockrap@aol.com
originally published in www.counterpunch.org
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