Posted on 11/01/2006 2:32:23 PM PST by beansox
POP POLITICS Marketing the new Dixie Chicks after they left country
By Armond White
Shut Up and Sing
Directed by Barbara Kopple & Cecilia Peck
How many times can celebrities insult President Bush and then complain that their freedom of speech is being questioned? The inability of celebrities to accept criticism is a theme that gets lost in Shut Up and Sing, the Dixie Chicks documentary that Barbara Kopple co-directed with Cecilia Peck.
Kopple, best known for the landmark documentaries Harlan County and American Dreamfilms from the era when documentaries had integrityis expected to bring her wide-ranging, deeply humane social perception. She almost does here, taking what began as a Dixie Chicks promo into the complications that arose when the country-and-western trio spoke out against Bushs Iraq War during a 2003 concert in London. As that storyand the Dixie Chicks infamygot bigger, Kopple and Peck began to examine the politics of showbiz.
At the end of the day, while youre great musicians, youre [also] a brand, the group is informed by one of its handlers. Kopple and Peck try balancing issues of social principle and citizens rights with the imperatives of marketing. This is good for our career, one of the Dixie Chicks enthuses when controversy begins.
Wouldnt it be great if we had, like, [fans] burning CDs? their manager wonders, naively, cravenly. It is to Kopple and Pecks credit that as the public relations storm rages, the film focuses on the Dixie Chicks obstinance. Theres talk about courage and death threats, and lead-singer Natalie Maines doesnt hide her loud-mouth arrogance; still, these commissioned filmmakers try maintaining truth by showing the price that is paid for audacity.
Dixie Chicks lost a large segment of its core country audience (as well as radio airplay and concert ticket sales). Kopple and Peck are stuck with the groups sense of martyrdom. But another fascinating story hovers in the background about showbizs discomfort with principleand about Dixie Chicks caught in the winds of media fashion, tangling free of cultural roots.
Kopple and Peck show the full visual record of Maines London statement: Were on the good side with yall. We dont want this war, this violence. And were ashamed that the president of the United States is from Texas. Maines giggles at her own impudence and hunger for approval. Later, she admits, It wasnt a political statement, it was a joke made to get applause. Keeping these cinema verité gems in mind, Shut Up and Sing inadvertently reveals how celebrities succumb to a social moment yet are shocked at the consequences. Theyre not martyrs; theyre simply the Milli Vanilli of the post-9/11 era.
Maines complains about their newfound status as media darlings: We were never gonna be on the cover of Entertainment Weekly or interviewed by Barbara Walters! Too bad Kopple and Peck dont then explore exactly who the members of the Dixie Chicks are as country artists, as Texas women, political animals. The crushing response of country radio stations that boycotted Dixie Chicks music reflects a my-country-right-or-wrong ethos that goes back to Merle Haggard and Bob Wills. We need to see Dixie Chicks relationship to this tradition.
Kopple and Peck cant disguise what one DJ calls a real contempt [for] what a lot of country listeners believe. Theyre privy to the production of the new album being shaped by non-traditional country artists like producer Rick Rubin and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith. (Well put the song through the Dixie Chicks filter whatever that will be, Svengali Rubin advises.) But the film should go deeper into the Creative Artists Agencys declaration: Were rebuilding a career with a new band. We need to see more of the decision-making about taking Dixie Chicks further into the pop genre, seeking a new market with a high-fashion, including a VH1-ready music video by pop director Sophie Muller.
What made those EW cover girls go mainstream must go deeper than Bush-bashing; it signals a class shift in country culture. Their answer album, Im Not Ready to Make Nice, is not down-home defiance; its arrogant pandering. Shut Up and Sing tracks Americans painful conflict over the Iraq War but misses the deep cultural scrutiny we need. It ends with Dixie Chicks in 2005 returning to the scene of the crime, and the applause of clueless Brits, where Maines reiterates Just so you know, were ashamed the president of the United States is in Texasnot a statement worth making.
Sounds to me like the whole thing was orchestrated for plublicity from the very beginning.
When "fans" burn CDs, it gets the ALA and ACLU on the Vichy Chicks side, buying their product. It also means the fans will have to buy replacement copies of the albums they burned.
Reminds me of the protesters who burned their own draft cards at several protest rallies.
Apparently, EVERYTHING is a joke to these kinds of people......
HAR-DE-HAR..... /sarcasm
Some folks even threw their military medals over the White House fence......IIRC
And then wrote for replacements...
I'll wait for cable, but it does sound like a sweet peek into the world of bubbleheaded insular celebrity.
Natalie Maines and John Kerry say similar stupid remarks... both are camera hogs and love PR good or bad as long as they are in the middle of the attention.
Natalie Maines and John Kerry say similar stupid remarks... both are camera hogs and love PR good or bad as long as they are in the middle of the attention.
At first when I read the title I thought they meant actually burning the CDs with fire. That would be an improvement.
Or threw their own medals over the fence ... oh, wait ... those were someone else's ...
That is what he meant.
Burning them? I don't have the time.
I'm using my DC CDs as oil can costers in my garage.
*smirk*
I have a new song...its called "I'm Not Ready To Buy Crap!"
Everyone but the Chicks have let this go. The fans that didn't like what they said quit listening to them and stopped buying their songs and quit going to their concerts. The Chicks are the ones that keep bringing it back up for publicity. Never liked them anyway.
"Never liked them anyway."
Amen.
Freep This Poll
http://www.countryweekly.com/vote/survey/235
Will you be going to the new Dixie Chicks movie, Shut Up & Sing?
Not sureIll wait for the reviews. 13.6%
Yes! Ill be first in line. 36.4%
No way! 50.0%
Kopple and Peck are nothing more than extra Saddam Sluts(ex. ditzy Chicks)
They finally left the country?
France, no doubt. Au revoir, Whoopsie Chunks.
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