SHUT UP AND SING: CATCHING UP WITH THE DIXIE CHICKS AND WORRYING ABOUT THE ELECTION

Shut_up_and_sing_2Have you seen  this movie?  I sat in bed watching it early Sunday morning on cable and was just blown away.  It’s one of the saddest, scariest, most moving American documentaries I’ve seen in a long time.  That’s no surprise, since it was directed by  Barbara Kopple, who made Harlan County USA – the landmark documentary about coal mine union battles in Kentucky.

What happened to the Dixie Chicks is infuriating: performing in London just before the start of the Iraq war, lead singer Natalie Maines (married, by the way, to HEROES star Adrian Pasdar,) told the crowd "Just so you know, we’re ashamed the President of the United States is from Texas."  The scene is included in this preview.


As I watched the film, seeing the rage and cruelty that emerged in the response to this one sentence,  my first thought was, "Oh my God, what does this mean for Barack Obama?"  The people who went after the Dixie chicks were nowhere near a sense of respect for the First Amendment – and sounded like they would be particularly vulnerable to "elitist" or racist accusations against a candidate.  If you remember the exit polls in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania you’ll recall that many respondents just about acknowledged that they would not vote for Senator Obama simply because of his race.  Am I unfair to wonder if many of those people are the same ones booing and even threatening Maines’ life?  Still "out there" in larger numbers than we wish?  Look at these figures:

In Pennsylvania
exit polls on primary day, 14% of voters
said that race one one of several important factors. Fifty-five percent of those were Clinton
voters and 45% Obama voters. When asked
race was “important” 19% said yes – 59% of them Clinton voters; when asked if
race was a factor in their decision, 12% said yes. In this group, 76% were white Clinton voters.

In West
Virginia
, when asked race was “important” to their decision, 22% said yes –82%
of them Clinton voters; when asked if race was a factor in their decision, 21%
said yes. In this group, 84% were white
Clinton voters.

Finally, Ohio. There, when asked race was “important” to
their decision, 20% said yes–  59% of them Clinton voters; when asked if race
was a factor in their decision, 14% said yes. In this group, 59% were Clinton voters. (the racial breakdown was not available here.)   

Please understand – I don’t know if I’m right.  I’m not alleging racial bias in all those who rose up to burn Dixie Chicks CDs and threaten country stations with boycotts if they "ever played one of their songs again"  – but I do suspect they could be more vulnerable to campaigns run in an uglier vein – just as they responded to this one.  It’s worrying me.

Beyond that, this film was a revelation.  I’m a sucker for women with
great relationships, but watching these three go through this and show such solidarity; seeing them all in
the delivery room for the birth of Martie Mcguire’s twins and later,
sharing the real pain they feel – not for themselves or the impact of
the boycott on their careers but for Natalie and her sense of
responsibility for what happened to them
— a band that was, as one of them called it "a cash cow" for Sony Music, I found
myself really moved.  I don’t know if these women are as great, and as
good to one another and their families as they appeared to be in the film,
but it was a treat just to watch for a little while and hope it was
true.

One more thing.  This story is a spooky echo of the decimation of
another wildly popular group blacklisted in the 1950s at the height of
their career.   Pete Seeger and the Weavers
had just seen Goodnight Irene top the pop charts and recorded several
other very successful songs when they were accused of being communists.  Here’s the 1949 version:

Once they were blacklisted,  their new TV show disappeared, venues canceled on them from one end of the country to the other, and their careers were never the same again.  That was in 1952 — 56 years ago!  How depressing is that?

2 thoughts on “SHUT UP AND SING: CATCHING UP WITH THE DIXIE CHICKS AND WORRYING ABOUT THE ELECTION”

  1. I haven’t seen the movie but will add it to my Netflix queue. Then I’m going to buy a Dixie Chicks CD.
    I have seen some of the data you quoted from exit polls. It’s very scary stuff.
    And I recently saw a PBS show about Pete Seeger, his life, and the accusations hurled at him so long ago. He held his head high through all of the bad times and plowed ahead. We must do the same as we count down the days until the end of GW’s reign. Then we can begin the work of rebuilding our nation that used to stand for freedom, integrity, and honesty. I hope to have something to celebrate next July 4th.

  2. I don’t think you can compare the “boycotters” of the Dixie Chicks to bigots.
    I was never a Chicks fan (I don’t think I’ve ever heard them sing) so I wouldn’t have bought their albums anyway, but that terrible remark in England cemented that decision for me. Sure, free speech is a wonderful thing and she had every right to say what she did…but that means that I and others who were disgusted by that anti-American remark, made on FOREIGN soil, in a time of war, have the right to express OUR opinion by not buying their albums.
    And I don’t care that what she said was against Bush and not America- when you make a remark like that on foreign soil it is most certainly taken as anti-American. I was appalled and ashamed of what she said.
    On the other hand, I have no problem voting for a black president. I actually think it would be a very good thing for the country. I just don’t happen to like Obama and don’t think he is the right man for the job, but that’s beside the point.

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