- Wide Open Spaces · 1998
- Fly · 1999
- Home · 2002
- Home · 2002
- Lover · 2019
- Fly · 1999
- Taking the Long Way · 2006
- Wide Open Spaces · 1998
- Wide Open Spaces · 1998
- Gaslighter · 2020
- Taking the Long Way · 2006
- Gaslighter · 2020
- The Essential The Chicks · 1999
Essential Albums
- After two albums that leaned heavily on a more pop-friendly sound, Home brought the Dixie Chicks back to their bluegrass roots. That meant no drums, but plenty of Dobro, banjo, and mandolin. "Truth No. 2," for instance, opens with a ferocious fiddle lick that complements Natalie Maines’ tough, tender voice, while "Long Time Gone" finds the group directing their ferocity at the country-music industry, longing for the days of Merle and Hank over an instrumental that toes the line between barn dance and barn burner.
- It was 1998’s Wide Open Spaces—their first album together as the Dixie Chicks—that made the trio of Natalie Maines, Emily Robison, and Martie Maguire massive stars, able to garner both critical acclaim and enormous sales in one fell swoop. But it was the follow-up the next year that put them on the path to legendary status. Even though Maines would later admit that she now has a hard time listening to Fly (she thought her Southernesque accent was too affected), it's actually now a North Star of modern twang: There's sin, heartbreak, dancing, and a ton of fast-picking banjo. And though the album was embraced by a Nashville that would later shut out the Chicks, it's also a blueprint for how to toy gleefully with the rules—challenging the ways that women of the genre are supposed to behave, how they approach their instruments, and the topics they are supposed to sing about. Fly boasted a total of eight official charting singles, including the classic modern murder romp "Goodbye Earl," with Maines' voice full of venom that flipped country's vision of femininity on its head, and the gorgeous "Cowboy Take Me Away," anchored in some of the Chicks' most precise harmonies and skillful strings. Shockingly, "Sin Wagon," which finds the Chicks in their spitfire, barn-burning mode, was not one of those eight, yet still managed to secure airplay and go on to be one of the trio's signature songs. Though the Chicks only wrote a select few of the tracks on Fly, the record is still a mastery of intelligent song selection: "Heartbreak Town," by Darrell Scott, is sung with exquisite emotion by Maines, while Jim Lauderdale and Buddy Miller's "Hole in My Head" is pure country kiss-off with a satisfying dose of cowpunk. But Maines and Robison also show on "Don't Waste Your Heart" that they can write circles around most anyone—a precursor to 2006's Taking the Long Way, which the Chicks entirely co-wrote. "It's funny how the girls get burned," Maines sings on "Don't Waste Your Heart." That's a loaded line for a band that went on to be banned from country radio for simply expressing their opinions. They may have gotten burned, but Fly proves that the Chicks can absolutely take the heat.
- The wild success of Wide Open Spaces turned The Dixie Chicks into superstars. They deliver knockout honky-tonk tunes (“Tonight the Heartache’s on Me”), sweet ballads (“Loving Arms”), and some choice covers, including a sizzling take on Bonnie Raitt’s “Give It Up or Let Me Go.” There’s not a drop of filler—the trio tears it up from start to finish.
Albums
- 2020
- 2006
- 2002
- 1999
- 1998
Artist Playlists
- Country queens whose career was undercut by controversy.
- Folk rock, bluegrass, and outlaw-country inspirations abound.
- The veteran country pop act share their favorite protest songs.
- The history-making trio is finally back on the road. Explore the set list here.
- The Chicks walk Zane Lowe track by track through the new album.
Live Albums
- 2018
Compilations
Appears On
More To Hear
- The Chicks and Kelleigh talk 'Wide Open Spaces' to 'Gaslighter.'
- Ryan Hurd and Maren Morris chat about their first-ever duet.
- Conversations on selected music from their personal playlist.
- The trio talk about their first album in 14 years, "Gaslighter."
- FaceTimes with The Kid LAROI, The Chicks, KYLE, Zedd, and more.
- The veteran country group talk about their song "Gaslighter."
- The "Slow Burn" singer pays tribute to her female influences.
More To See
About The Chicks
For as conservative as it can seem at times, country music has always been a place for rebels. One of the most successful bands of the ’90s and 2000s, The Chicks (formerly known as the Dixie Chicks) emerged as valuable counter-programming to Nashville’s more outdated narratives, mixing radio-friendly bluegrass with a progressive edge that made them outcasts to country purists but unlikely heroes in mainstream pop. Not that they ever courted the mainstream, per se. If anything, the band served as an early swell in a broader wave of country artists—including Miranda Lambert, Little Big Town, and Lady A—that mixed the rootsy sound of early country with an image and feel suited to the modern day. Formed in Dallas by sisters Emily and Martie Erwin (later Emily Strayer and Martie Maguire), the band started out as bluegrass revivalists, wading into more modernized arrangements with the arrival of vocalist Natalie Maines in the mid-'90s. Even before they were blacklisted from corporate radio for their denunciation of President George W. Bush and the 2003 invasion of Iraq, they carried an air of controversy, turning out songs that had a dark sense of humor (“Goodbye Earl”) and raw—albeit funny—sexuality (“Sin Wagon”) that came on a little too strong for some audiences. Still, the band always came off as earnest and upright, torch-carriers for an old-fashioned sense of truth that has always made country shine (“More Love,” “Truth No. 2”). After a 14-year hiatus from the studio, The Chicks released Gaslighter in 2020. Amidst a broader reckoning of the legacy of racism and slavery in America, they also removed the word “Dixie” from their name—a reminder that their true strength wasn’t in keeping things the same, but in understanding what it means to change.
- HOMETOWN
- Dallas, TX, United States
- FORMED
- 1989