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bullet.jpg (975 bytes)Feature CD
Dixie Chicks
Fly

Sony
Released 1999/08/31
Dixie Chicks  
Click on an underlined track to hear a RealAudio sound sample. (being updated)
01. Ready to Run
02. If I Fall You're Going Down with Me
03. Cowboy Take Me Away
04. Cold Day inJuly
05. Goodbye Earl
06. Hello Mr. Heartache
07. Don't Waste Your Heart
08. Sin Wagon
09. Without You
10. Some Days You Gotta Dance
11. Hole in My Head
12. Heartbreak Town
13. Let Him Fly
 

The Dixie Chicks rose from relative obscurity in 1998 to become one of the most popular acts in contemporary country music. Their origins date back nearly a decade earlier to 1989, when fiddler Martie Seidel and her banjo-playing sister Emily Erwin formed the group in Dallas with bassist Laura Lynch and guitarist Robin Lynn Macy; after getting their start on local street corners, the quartet soon graduated to clubs, receiving an enormous boost when Seidel earned third place honors at the National Fiddle Championships. Originally, the Dixie Chicks (their name inspired by the Little Feat song "Dixie Chickens") promoted a classic cowgirl image, complete with a sound inspired by traditional country, folk and bluegrass; they even titled their 1990 indie-label debut Thank Heavens for Dale Evans.

With 1992's Little Ol' Cowgirl, the Chicks' began slowly moving towards a more contemporary sound, a transformation which in part resulted in the exit of Macy; with Lynch assuming lead vocal duties, the remaining trio resurfaced in 1993 with Shouldn't a Told You That. Shortly after the Chicks signed with Sony's newly-revived Monument imprint in 1995, Lynch left the group as well -- according to a December 10, 1998 feature in the Dallas Observer, both she and Macy were likely victims of Seidel and Erwin's desire to foster a more youthful image; the magazine goes on to call the group "the country version of Menudo, hiring and firing based on age." Soon named as Lynch's replacement was then-21-year-old lead vocalist Natalie Maines, the daughter of steel-guitar legend Lloyd Maines.

The line-up switch brought with it a new contemporary wardrobe and an equally modernized country sound; still, few predicted the enormous success of the Dixie Chicks' 1998 major label debut Wide Open Spaces. After the album's advance first single "I Can Love You Better" became the group's first Top Ten hit, both "There's Your Trouble" and the title track went on to top the country charts. Within a year of Wide Open Spaces' release, the record had gone quadruple-platinum, and the Dixie Chicks had become superstars -- not only did they take home Best Vocal Group honors and the Horizon Award from the Country Music Association, but they were also named Favorite New Country Artist at the American Music Awards. Wide Open Spaces additionally earned a Grammy for Best Country Album on its way to becoming the best-selling duo or group album in country music history.


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