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Dixie Chicks - Taking The Long Way (CD)

Taking The Long Way
$4.98 - $16.59
4.4 out of 5.0 stars 20 Ratings (11 Reviews)

Album Details: Taking The Long Way

Release Date:05/23/2006
Label:Sony
UPC:828768073926

Other Available Formats: Taking The Long Way

User Reviews: Taking The Long Way

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    An Electric Tamale of enjoyment!

    By BRY or JELLY SHORTS PANTS MAN  Jun 21, 2006 | 1 out of 1 found this Taking The Long Way review helpful

    Pros: a fairy tale of enthusisam!

    Cons: Sit back, close youre eyes, lean back, turn it up and drive around town!

    I half to say I am aware of some contrverosy things the Dixie Chickens said regarding a argument with other stars concerning views in terms of a certain presiident and allegedly some things he may or may not have said and people who might or may not ...have disagreed. But GUESS What! I thought this record compact disk would just be a argument record, like, just maybe even talking without any music about who said what or who disagrees more madly than the other or who is going to have a fight with whom after the COuntry Cable Musicains Awards show is over. But guess what! It's totally excellent country fried music with many thoughts contained--THE DIXIES HAve madea summertime fun expereience and now WE get to all agree on it. LISTEN to this welfare picinic basket of song listings: DO YOU MIND IF I JUST STAND HERE AND FREAK OUT FOR A WHILE?, A LACE DOILY OF LOVE, SNIFFLES THE SADDEST PUPPY IN AMERICA, DON'T HOOT ON MY HOLLER, LET'S COMMIT A CRIME OF PASSION, CYBERDRIP 2000, LOVE IS A HANDSHAKE SIGNED IN BLOOD, MY DREAM IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN YOUR DREAM, VACATION HEADACHE, and the song that have been stirring up extra controversy like one of those blender machines at Dairy Queen (yay summer is finally here! great new Blizzard flavors like pumpkin patch, and rock candy with vanilla donut sprinkle) the song of course is LET FREEDOM REGURGITATE. listen! if you have a working vehicle, than fill it up with fresh gasoline, insert this DIXIE GIRLS tape and let it roll on down the highway of freedom and good times. get into it! SUMMER is great! bryan e! Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    damn right they're back!

    By crv-cj  Jun 4, 2006 | 1 out of 1 found this Taking The Long Way review helpful

    Pros: hey they're back...

    Cons: I don't think they are coming to my town = (

    its been a long time since the chicks have been heard from but after getting married, having kids and that little incident of free speech they have returned with a mix of a new attiude and the old chicks style those of us who didn't trash our chi...cks discs have grown to love love love! "Not Ready To Make Nice" is a great way to say "Hi we're back!" Its rare for me to like all the songs on an album but this is one of those rare discs. I could go on about all the songs but the one that seems to always stick in my mind is "Lullaby" a sweet song written for Natalie's kids but also feels like the sweetest love song. Look after an opening week selling over half a million cd's alone..there really isn't much more you can say except, "what? you don't have it yet?" GO GET IT NOW! Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Taking The Long Way

  • All Music Guide

    The road leading away from Home, the Dixie Chicks' acclaimed 2002 return to straightahead country, proved to be quite rocky for the Texan trio, largely due to antiGeorge W. Bush and antiwar comments lead singer Natalie Maines made during the long crawl to the 2003 Iraqi War. Maines' words, initially spoken off the cuff in concert but then repeated in numerous interviews, earned her plenty of enemies within the country community (most notably Toby Keith), but despite the hailstorm of publicity, Maines, Martie Maguire, and Emily Robison did not back down, even as their country audience slowly diminished. But by that point, the Dixie Chicks were bigger than a mere country act anyway: they were international superstars. Their sound and sensibility played to an audience that was much bigger and more selfconsciously sophisticated than the country audience, so their shift from country to pop on 2006's Taking the Long Way feels natural; even the neobluegrass of Home felt like a kindred spirit ...to the altcountry movement and such AAA singer/songwriters as Sheryl Crow, not the pure bluegrass of Ricky Skaggs, or even the progressive Alison Krauss. Given the controversy of 2003, the conscious distancing from country makes sense and given songs like the defiant "Not Ready to Make Nice" and the redneckbaiting "Lubbock or Live It," the Dixie Chicks don't sound like they're in retreat on Taking the Long Way, either; they merely sound like they're being themselves. And Taking the Long Way is as genuine a Dixie Chicks album as Home or Wide Open Spaces, feeling like an accurate reflection of the trio's current life. They are now savvy, sophisticated urbanites the album cover makes it seem like they've stepped out of Sex and the City and the music reflects that. It's rooted in country or more specifically countryrock and it wouldn't sound out of place in Nashville, but sounds more suited for upscale apartments and coffeehouses. The sound might be a little more NPR than hot country, but the trio's harmonies still shine brightly, they still play with conviction, and they still have a strong body of songs here. No doubt reflecting the influence of producer Rick Rubin, the Chicks work with songwriters well outside of the Music Row mainstream: naturally, Sheryl Crow makes an appearance as a cowriter here, but so does acclaimed pop tunesmith Neil Finn, altcountry mainstay Gary Louris, bluesman Keb' Mo', Heartbreaker Mike Campbell, and through much of the album, Semisonic/Trip Shakespeare frontman Dan Wilson. All are accomplished songwriters whose strengths may not seem to lie in country, but they all know how to structure a song, and they help give the group direction and the album focus. Rubin's skill on picking collaborators for the trio makes up for his typically flat production it's clean and classy but not colorful, which it begs to be, given that this is a pop album filled with different styles and textures from rollicking rock roll to soulful laments to sweet ballads. But this lack of zest in the production is forgivable because Taking the Long Way is otherwise a strong, confident affair that is far from suggesting the Dixie Chicks are being cowardly for moving away from country. Rather, they're bravely asserting their identity through this varied, successful crossover move. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Dixie Chicks

The Dixie Chicks rose from relative obscurity in 1998 to become one of the most popular acts in contemporary country music. Their origins date back nearly a decade earlier, to 1989, when fiddler Martie Seidel and her banjo-playing sister Emily Erwin formed the group in Dallas with bassist Laura Lynch and guitarist Robin Lynn Macy; after getting their start on local stre... Read more