Tag: Keith Urban

Fierce Country Women in Charge of Their Destiny—Twenty Years of Dixie Chicks’ ‘Fly’

On August 31, 1999, the Dixie Chicks doubled down on their iconoclastic country stance with their second major-label album, Fly. The full-length won the trio—Natalie Maines, Emily Strayer, and Martie Maguire—a Grammy Award for Country Album of the Year and spawned eight country singles, including two No. 1 hits, “Cowboy Take Me Away” and “Without You.”

Unsurprisingly, Fly also became one of country music’s best-selling albums ever. In 2002, it was certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America® (RIAA) for 10 million copies shipped—a total surpassed only by the Dixie Chicks’ own 12-times-platinum previous album, 1998’s Wide Open Spaces. Streaming-wise, Fly also dominates, having been streamed over 132 million times.

Twenty years later, Fly feels even more radical and urgent than it did upon release. That’s largely due to the album’s lyrics, which star women in control of their lives and destinies who aren’t letting anything—or anyone—get in their way.

“Let Him Fly” is about knowing when to let a romantic partner go because a relationship has run its course. “Don’t Waste Your Heart” establishes that even starting a partnership is futile (“my heart can’t compromise”), while “Some Days You Gotta Dance” encourages women to shake off concerns (e.g., inappropriate bosses, commitment issues) with some stress-relieving body moving.

Of course, Fly’s protagonists aren’t immune to being knocked down by a failed relationship; the fiddle-heavy waltz “Hello Mr. Heartache” is self-explanatory, while “Without You” is a cry-in-your-whiskey ballad about heartbreak. However, Fly‘s characters also don’t suffer fools gladly: The album’s most notorious song is “Goodbye Earl,” a modern murder ballad that finds a pair of best friends conspiring to off an abusive husband using poisoned black-eyed peas.

Although the latter tune caused controversy at country radio, the Dixie Chicks revealed in interviews that their record label had far more issues with the feminist-leaning anthem “Sin Wagon.” The lively bluegrass tune concerns a newly single woman unabashedly sowing her oats—or, as the song goes, doing “a little mattress dancin’/That’s right, I said mattress dancin’.”

“Since we have sold so many records, one of the good things that comes out of that is we have lots of control,” Natalie Maines told USA Today in August 1999. “So we said, ‘There’s 13 songs on the record. You can like 12 of them, and we’ll like the other one.'”

Music-wise, Fly found the Dixie Chicks becoming more resolute about foregrounding their bluegrass and classic country roots—another bold move, given that the album emerged during a time when mainstream music was more welcoming than ever to pop-leaning country artists such as Shania Twain and Faith Hill.

Appropriately, however, Fly captures many moods. Kicky fiddle and twangy guitars dominate brisker songs, highlighted by the hip-shaking “Some Days You Gotta Dance” (featuring bluesy guitar from pre-superstardom Keith Urban), which is then balanced out by the keening pedal steel and melting multipart harmonies of “Cold Day in July” and “Ready to Run.” And on Fly, Natalie Maines’ Texas-bred holler sounds confident and versatile. It’s wild and untamed on “Hole in My Head” and “Sin Wagon” and tender on the string-swept “Without You” and wistful “Cowboy Take Me Away.”

Despite its straightforward classic country tones, time has proven Fly to be suitable for genre crossover covers. “Goodbye Earl” was once given a punk makeover by Me First and the Gimme Gimmes, while boygenius, an indie-rock supergroup featuring Lucy Dacus, Julien Baker, and Phoebe Bridgers, redid the optimistic Cowboy Take Me Away as a longing love song.

Fly‘s DNA is also omnipresent in today’s country music. The all-women supergroup Highwomen exudes the ladies-first, us-against-the-world stance favored by the Dixie Chicks. Cam is making unabashedly feminist country music on her own terms, while Miranda Lambert—both solo and with her own straight-talking trio, Pistol Annies—is building an arsenal of songs cataloging life’s ebbs and flows from the perspective of a firebrand woman uninterested in conforming to stereotypes. Plus, the withering, take-no-prisoners attitude of “Goodbye Earl” shows up in spades in Kacey Musgraves‘ “High Horse,” a deceptively bubbly disco-pop song about deflating the ego of an overly confident man.

The Fly era of Dixie Chicks also made an impression on Taylor Swift, a longtime fan of the band, who recently told Entertainment Weekly she was inspired by Fly‘s overall “aesthetics” and appreciated how Dixie Chicks were creating music in “an unapologetically feminine, imaginative way”—a descriptor that just so happens to describe the pop superstar’s own catalog and shows how far Fly’s influence stretches. It wasn’t just the classic country fans who embraced the album: it was the rockers and pop stars and loads of inspired women in between.

Step into your boots and revisit the Dixie Chicks’ 1999 album Fly.

Spotify’s Flagship Country Playlist, Hot Country Launches with Original Video Content from Keith Urban, Kacey Musgraves, plus a special performance from Justin Timberlake and Chris Stapleton

Country music may have gotten its start in Nashville, TN, but it has since expanded far beyond. For some time, country music fans around the world have been looking for a way to help them connect to the artists they love, discover new music, and share their love of the Country genre. With Spotify’s Hot Country Playlist—now enhanced with video—they may just find it.

Enhanced playlists, like the previously launched Rap Caviar and ¡Viva Latino!, combine music and video into a single view. This allows users to listen to their favorite audio tracks as well as watch interviews and music videos featuring their favorite artists. Enhanced playlists bring storytelling back to music discovery—a theme that country music emphasizes as well.

After enjoying the constantly refreshing playlist throughout the week, listeners can tune in every Friday to experience new and original country video interviews with an all-new Hot Country look and feel. First up: Grammy Award winner Keith Urban, who takes the wheel today with a feature cover story that coincides with the release of his new album, Graffiti U. On Hot Country, Keith gives viewers a behind-the-scenes look at his extensive guitar collection, discusses his love of playing in his new home studio, and dives into the inspiration behind his new album.

While reflecting on the Hot Country playlist, Keith Urban said; “Spotify has been an amazing partner, helping me to connect my music with people all over the planet. On their new Hot Country playlist people will not only hear Graffiti U, they’ll be able to come inside the studio with me and see a bit about the making of the album. Can’t wait for everyone to hear it.”

According to Brittany Schaffer, Head of Artist and Label Marketing at Spotify’s Nashville office, the country music audience has been slower to adopt streaming than audiences of other genres. But, “country artists have been craving the attention of the streaming services to help bring the country audience into streaming and craving a deeper ability to connect with and expand their audiences,” she says. “The enhancement of the Hot Country playlist is Spotify’s first significant step in helping artists do just that.”

Schaffer also notes that the enhanced playlist is only the beginning of Spotify’s collaboration with the country industry. “Spotify is serious about making an impact in country music, and the launch of the Hot Country enhanced playlist is only the first step in showing that commitment,” she says. “This opportunity is opening new doors for current and potential listeners of country music, in Nashville and around the world. Our commitment doesn’t start and end with the launch of Hot Country.”

Through Hot Country and upcoming Spotify partnerships, fans can look forward to behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with their favorite country artists such as Keith Urban, Kacey Musgraves, and Kenny Chesney. From a tour of Keith Urban’s new state-of-the-art home recording studio in Nashville and the making of Kenny Chesney’s stadium tour to video footage from Kacey Musgraves’ Fan-First high tea in London or Justin Timberlake x Chris Stapleton’s Spotify Premium event recording of “Say Something” at the Roundhouse in London, Spotify is dedicated to telling the stories of country’s biggest names.

To bring more Hot Country to its more than 4.5 million followers worldwide, the enhanced playlist feature will also launch in four additional markets outside the U.S.: Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Spain (in addition to the UK, Sweden, and Latin America). According to John Marks, Programming Head of Country Music at Spotify, the audience for country music will only keep growing. “There are multiple awakenings happening right now. Streaming is opening a global market. There’s been a hybridizing of other international music into the country playlists, which is opening people’s eyes and minds to country music in other countries. Launching in those markets—which have very active fan bases—will start to speed up the process.”

Marks, who has a long history working in Nashville with country industry and artists, is enthusiastic about the partnership—and he’s not the only one, he says. “The Nashville music industry and Nashville artists have really embraced this idea out of the shoot. We have some big stars on board with Keith Urban and Kenny Chesney, and there are plenty others on queue. It’s really been gratifying to see how quickly and how nimbly everyone in the industry has supported this idea of enhanced playlists and to see it all come together.”

Check out the new Hot Country playlist here.