News And Notes

All posts tagged "Dixie Chicks"

Feb 2

Second Edition of Encyclopedia of Country Music Released

Photo courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum.

When the Encyclopedia of Country Music was first published in 1998, it became an instant reference and definitive source on country music. Now, the second edition of the book has been released by Oxford University Press and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. The new edition, compiled by museum staff, features new entries on artists who have profoundly influenced country music in recent years, including Kenny Chesney, Dixie Chicks, Miranda Lambert, Brad Paisley, Rascal Flatts, Blake Shelton, Taylor Swift, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban and more.

More new entries in the book focus on the most important studio musicians, songwriters and music executives in the last decade. It also explores the latest and most critical industry trends, such as the digital revolution, the shifting politics of country music, and the impact of American Idol. The importance of Nashville to country music and even the stage costumes worn by country stars are also featured in the new edition.

“I’ve loved country music all my life, and it still amazes me how much more I can learn about it,” Reba McEntire said. “The Encyclopedia of Country Music will be a reference book for the next generation of country music lovers to learn about the folks I was blessed enough to get to know and work with. I will enjoy reading it and getting reacquainted with our history.” Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 11:13 am | Permalink
Oct 19

George Strait, Dixie Chicks, Willie Nelson & More Raise Over $500,000 for Texas Wildfire Victims

Willie Nelson

Willie Nelson photo by David McClister, courtesy of Lost Highway Records.

Country stars came together in Texas on Monday night to raise money for victims of recent wildfires that have devastated parts of the state. Willie Nelson, George Strait, Dixie Chicks, The Avett Brothers and Asleep At The Wheel were just some of the acts on hand for the concert in Austin which raised more than $500,000 was raised.

“When they called us to do this show, there was zero hesitation,” Natalie Maines of the Dixie Chicks told the Associated Press. “You can take the girl out of Texas, but you can’t take Texas out of the girl.”

Willie Nelson called the fires ‘tragic’ and knows firsthand how devastating they can be having lost homes to fire. “You never really get over it,” he said. “There’s nothing I can tell them to make it better except some of us have been there and done that and we survived it, and they will too. Be strong.” Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 10:33 am | Permalink
Sep 7

GAC’s Top 20 Cowboy & Rodeo Songs

Rodeo

Photo courtesy of the PRCA.

The American Cowboy is known all over the world as a symbol of America. The cowboy life might not have been quite as glamorous as the silver screen portrayed it, yet most of the men and women who lived their lives as cowboys or cowgirls wouldn’t have traded it for any big city job available to them at the time.

From that golden era came many familiar cowboy songs, some of them originating as folk tunes in other countries and adapted to their new situation by those Irish or Spanish cowboys who worked out west. Later, cowboy songs were big parts of movies during the singing cowboy era, with Roy Rogers, Tex Ritter, Rex Allen and Gene Autry gaining popularity not only as actors but singers too. Carl T. Sprague is considered the original singing cowboy, recording the first authentic cowboy song, “When the Work’s All Done this Fall,” which sold 900,000 copies.

Today’s singer/songwriters have not forgotten the cowboy way. Folks like Ian Tyson, Michael Martin Murphey, Riders in the Sky, Don Edwards, Ed Bruce and the late Chris LeDoux have given us newer songs and also revived some of the older tunes. Garth Brooks, Willie Nelson, the late Marty Robbins and the late Johnny Cash were also more than happy to sing the new western songs and keep the cowboy tradition alive in country music.

In no particular order, here are our picks for the Top 20 Cowboy & Cowgirl Songs. Leave us a comment below and let us know your favorite! And don’t forget to enter our Wrangler National Finals Rodeo Sweepstakes for your chance to win a trip for two to the rodeo in Las Vegas! Enter now >>

“Amarillo By Morning” – George Strait

YouTube Preview Image
Although Chris LeDoux recorded this song first, most people remember George Strait’s version, which begins with a beautiful intro played by fiddle great Buddy Spicher. Here’s a clip of George singing “Amarillo By Morning” live. The song is about a cowboy’s love for the sport of rodeo, no matter what happens to him and no matter what he loses, saddles and girlfriends included. George, as most of his fans know, sponsors his own Team Roping Classic in San Antonio each year. He is no slouch as a roper either!


“Good Ride Cowboy” – Garth Brooks

YouTube Preview Image
This song, written by Jerrod Niemann (performing it in the clip above), Richie Brown, Bryan Kennedy and Bob Doyle, became Garth Brooks‘ tribute to his friend Chris LeDoux after the rodeo champ and singer passed away in 2005. It chronicles Chris’ rise to fame in the rodeo world and as a singer, as well as his down-to-earth ways as a father and husband. Chris and Garth became friends after the Oklahoma singer named the rodeo cowboy in his first single, “Too Young to Feel This Damn Old.” They also recorded a duet in 1992, “What’cha Gonna Do With A Cowboy.”


“Night Rider’s Lament”Suzy Bogguss

YouTube Preview Image
Upon hearing this song, one would assume it was written in the heyday of the cowboy. A little research finds it was written by real-life cowboy Michael Burton, but in a much more recent setting, circa 1975. It describes how one cowboy chose career over true love and how he sometimes thinks about what might have been. Those thoughts don’t linger long, however, as he quickly remembers why he chose the life of a cowboy on the range. The tune has been recorded by everyone from Chris LeDoux to Garth Brooks and Nanci Griffith, but Suzy has one of the great versions of the tune. Here she is singing it with Jerry Jeff Walker.


“Should’ve Been A Cowboy” – Toby Keith

YouTube Preview Image
Despite the fact that he is as much at home on a horse as he is on a stage, Toby Keith laments in this song that he should have been a cowboy. The Oklahoma native thinks he should have learned to rope and ride in a cattle drive, because he thinks as a cowboy he could have stolen the young girls’ hearts like his heroes, Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. Who among us hasn’t thought how glamorous it would be to be a cowboy on a big ranch somewhere out west, or at the very least, in a movie?


“Someday Soon” – Ian Tyson

YouTube Preview Image
Written by Ian Tyson, “Someday Soon” has been recorded by Judy Collins, Suzy Bogguss and many others and has charted in pop, folk and country. This 2009 video features Ian singing it – and you can see Suzy’s version HERE. Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 4:23 pm | Permalink
Aug 19

GAC Reveals Full List of the Top 50 Videos of the ’90s

Top 50 Videos of the '90s

GAC asked you, the fans, to help us pick the Top 50 Videos of the ’90s and all this week host Neal McCoy counted  them down! Here’s the final list — we hope each song title brings back lots of good memories! See the re-air times for the series HERE.  Check out the list below and leave us a comment to tell us about your favorite video from the ’90s.

GAC’s Top 50 Videos of the ’90s: Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 9:03 pm | Permalink
Jul 21

GAC’s Top 10 Artists Who Defined the ’90s

As FM radio expanded in the early ’90s, Americans who only knew cowboy hats and a couple of Willie Nelson songs were introduced to stars like Garth Brooks, George Strait and Reba McEntire. It was a great time for country music; the genre was booming and the rest of America was taking notice. Here’s our list of the Top 10 artists who defined country music in a decade when the format reached new frontiers. As with any list, we know there are many more than 10 who impacted the genre. If you don’t see your favorite here, leave us a comment at the end and let us know which artists helped define the ’90s for you! And, don’t forget to cast your vote for GAC’s Top 50 Videos of the ’90s! Vote now »

Garth Brooks photo by Mark Tucker, courtesy of Pearl Records.

Garth Brooks

Garth charted more number one hits (19 in the 1990s) and sold more albums (current tally 128 million, making him the second best-selling American solo artist of all-time behind Elvis) than any other country artist. He is the recipient of 18 ACM awards, 11 CMA awards and 2 Grammys, as well as 16 American Music Awards. However, these staggering facts and figures only tell part of the story of how he defined country music throughout the ’90s; Garth was a one-man country music marketing machine. Through incorporating elements of rock music into his songs and amping up his live shows with an endless supply of energy (remember the music videos of Garth running around stage with a wireless headset mic and joyfully smashing guitars?), Garth brought country music to the mainstream masses. Even people who “don’t like country music” have his Greatest Hits album featuring songs like the classic and universally known “Friends in Low Places,” which, be assured, someone will be singing in a New York City karaoke bar tonight. And not only did Garth headline major concerts in the US, including his free Central Park performance for 980,000 fans in 1997, he was a worldwide phenomenon touring such locales as Brazil, Europe and the Far East as the symbol of American country music. Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 9:00 am | Permalink
May 26

GAC’s Top 20 Songs & Videos Honoring Our Troops

Country songs are often a mirror to the world, a reflection of the times. As a tribute to  the men and women who have served our country, we’ve put together a list of some of our favorite songs and videos that honor our troops – heartfelt compositions that look at war through the eyes of the men and women who fight, as well as the families who are left behind to pray that their loved ones return home safely.  If you don’t see your favorite on our list, leave us a comment below and let us know!

We at GAC extend our sincerest thanks and appreciation to all soldiers and their families!

“‘Til the Last Shot’s Fired” – Trace Adkins

YouTube Preview Image

This heartfelt song is about the life of soldiers through various wars, starting with America’s Civil War and continuing through our current conflicts in the Middle East. Trace Adkins conveys the soldiers’ fervent wish that their job would at some point be eliminated for good. Trace delivers as only Trace can.


“American Soldier” – Toby Keith

YouTube Preview Image

This song depicts the everyday life of a soldier, from not being able to call in sick to working through the holidays while standing up for liberty. Toby never fails to bring the soldiers to their feet when he performs this one on his many USO tours.


“Angel Flight” – Radney Foster/Darius Rucker

YouTube Preview Image

The title of this song refers to the flight on which a soldier killed in war comes home. Radney wrote the song with Darden Smith, then asked Darius Rucker to sing on it with him. The song was inspired by a series of Angel Flights that brought home a group of men known as the Red River Four. Proceeds from sales of the song benefit the groups who help families in crisis. Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 1:35 pm | Permalink
Apr 17

GAC Album Review: Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon Ranger’s Rare Bird Alert

On the follow-up to 2009’s Grammy-winning album The Crow, Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon Rangers get down to business on Rare Bird Alert with a collection of songs showcasing Martin’s rather unique take on everyday life – appropriately set to bluegrass.

Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon RangersWriting ten of the album’s thirteen songs himself (co-writing the other three), Martin displays a wonderful knack for writing catchy and hook-driven melodies centered on his instrument of choice, the banjo. The album’s opening song, the title-track “Rare Bird Alert,” is a quick instrumental lead by banjo and mandolin where Martin and the Rangers introduce themselves by jamming on an intricate riff before finishing off in double-time. Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 9:04 am | Permalink
Jan 7

Steve Martin’s New CD Features a Beatle & Three Chicks

Steve Martin photo courtesy of Rounder Records.

Musician/comedian/actor/author Steve Martin will release his second bluegrass CD, Rare Bird Alert, March 15. He’s backed by the Steep Canyon Rangers, the quintet he toured with last year. But he also has a few special guests on the album– Sir Paul McCartney and the Dixie Chicks.

“It’s very hard to believe,” Steve told Pollstar.com, of having the former Beatle perform on the record. “I was a kid when I first heard Paul McCartney, and if you told me one day that he’d be singing one of my tunes, I’m still flabbergasted.”

Sir Paul sings on “Best Love,” which Steve tells Pollstar is “a love song, but it has a little humor in it.”

When Steve called the Dixie Chicks, they agreed to sing on a song called “You” before they’d even heard it. Steve describes the tune as “very emotional, heartbreaking.” Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 1:38 pm | Permalink
Oct 20

Toby Keith Talks Politics With CNN

Toby Keith photo courtesy of Show Dog-Universal Music.

Airing your political views is supposed to be a bad move for artists. Say the wrong thing and some fans might not like you anymore — just ask the Dixie Chicks.

Not everyone follows that rule, and Toby Keith in particular is known to speak his mind. Ask him a question, he’ll probably give you an answer. And that’s exactly what happened when he talked with CNN about health care, the White House and the Tea Party.

Since Toby’s been portrayed as a conservative, his answers might shock fans who haven’t been paying close attention the last few years. But he grew up a Democrat, even though he’s been known to back a Republican or two. Right now, he sounds fed up with the whole system, which is probably why he can get away with talking about it. His disappointment with Washington means he’s not much different than the rest of the citizens.

Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 2:32 pm | Permalink
Sep 30

Dixie Chicks Side Band Tackles Tough Subject

The Dixie Chicks are no strangers to controversy. During the first couple years of the last decade, they ended up in a public feud with Toby Keith and then lost a big chunk of their fan base over their political views.

But having the rug pulled out from under them didn’t make the band run away from tough issues. In fact, they’ve discovered that there’s a lot of freedom when you’re not trying to make everybody happy.

In that context, the Court Yard Hounds, a duo made up of the Chicks’ Emily Robison and Martie Maguire, had some leeway in the album they made this year to tackle a song about a rift in a family with “Ain’t No Son.” Emily is particularly challenged by the song because it’s subject matter that makes a lot of people uncomfortable and requires her to take on a point of view that she doesn’t agree with.

Continue Reading

ShareThis

Posted at 10:20 am | Permalink

Headline Country

Take a trip inside the world of country music with host Storme Warren! Watch full episodes of Headline Country now.