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Before they became the most controversial band in country music, the Dixie Chicks were absolutely unstoppable.
In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake unpack the extraordinary story of the Dixie Chicks, whose meteoric rise was matched only by the speed of their catastrophic public downfall. (Or maybe not???)
Long before headlines and controversy, the band had already rewritten the rules of Nashville by playing their own instruments, refusing to fit neatly into the industry's expectations, and stacking up diamond-selling albums studded with hits like "Wide Open Spaces" and "Cowboy Take Me Away."But when Natalie Maines criticized President George W. Bush in 2003, everything changed very, very quickly. Country radio turned against them, protests erupted across America, and the trio suddenly became the face of one of the moment's most heated political debates.
Was the backlash actually about politics, or was it about who was allowed to speak up in country music?
Here's how the biggest band in country became its biggest outcast... until a career-defining comeback saw the Chicks rise again.
By Blake Wyland & Scott Marquart4.8
2525 ratings
Before they became the most controversial band in country music, the Dixie Chicks were absolutely unstoppable.
In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott and Blake unpack the extraordinary story of the Dixie Chicks, whose meteoric rise was matched only by the speed of their catastrophic public downfall. (Or maybe not???)
Long before headlines and controversy, the band had already rewritten the rules of Nashville by playing their own instruments, refusing to fit neatly into the industry's expectations, and stacking up diamond-selling albums studded with hits like "Wide Open Spaces" and "Cowboy Take Me Away."But when Natalie Maines criticized President George W. Bush in 2003, everything changed very, very quickly. Country radio turned against them, protests erupted across America, and the trio suddenly became the face of one of the moment's most heated political debates.
Was the backlash actually about politics, or was it about who was allowed to speak up in country music?
Here's how the biggest band in country became its biggest outcast... until a career-defining comeback saw the Chicks rise again.

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