In all the commotion over Natalie Maines expressing her shame that Bush is from Texas in 2003, people sometimes forget what talented musicians the Dixie Chicks are.
Their voices are as about as harmonically in tune as a trio can get. And they play the banjo, guitar and fiddle (and other instruments) in the masterful tradition of bluegrass (especially on this album), country, folk and -- obviously -- crossover music.
Natalie Maines leads with a passionate soprano voice that knows how to modulate with just the right, word-hugging emphasis. They sing songs that you really want to hear, as the lyrics unfold stories and feelings.
"Home" is the album that Country and Western stations shunned because Natalie Maines dared to be the least bit critical of Bush in the run up to the Iraq War.
Of course, she's been proven the patriot, and Bush the scoundrel (except on FOX TV, where they equate the preservation of power at all costs and greed to being "pro-American").
But in the uproar, "Home" got partially lost in the political shuffle.
That's unfortunate, because it's a fine album indeed, clearly in the bluegrass, folk, and Country and Western traditions. But the Dixie Chicks have clearly moved out of the narrow cliches of contemporary Country and Western music and created a style all their own.
"They are the highest-selling female band in any musical genre, having sold 30 million albums as of June 2006."
Home (CD) -- The Dixie Chicks Album That Got Banned from C & W Stations
Dixie Chicks

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Mighty fine musicians, mighty fine indeed.
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The Dixie Chicks are a female country music trio comprising Emily Robison, Martie Maguire and Natalie Maines. They are the highest-selling female band in any musical genre, having sold 30 million albums as of June 2006.
The group formed in 1989 in Dallas, Texas. After years of struggle and personnel changes, the Dixie Chicks achieved massive country and pop success starting in the late 1990s with hit songs such as "Wide Open Spaces," "Cowboy Take Me Away," and "Long Time Gone." The group became well-known for their lively persona, instrumental virtuosity, fashion sense, and outspoken political comments. As of 2007, they had won 13 Grammy Awards, and are the first country-rooted act in Grammy history to receive three Album of the Year nominations, with Fly, Home, and Taking The Long Way.
Ten days before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, lead vocalist Natalie Maines publicly criticized U.S. President George W. Bush. The ensuing controversy cost the group half of their concert audience attendance in the United States as chronicled in the 2006 documentary Dixie Chicks: Shut Up and Sing.
At the 49th Grammy Awards Show in 2007, the Chicks, as they are informally known, won all five categories for which they were nominated, including the coveted Song, Record, and Album of the Year, in a vote they interpret as partly a statement for free speech."
-- Wikipedia
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Audio CD (August 27, 2002)
Original Release Date: 2002
Number of Discs: 1
Label: Sony
ASIN: B00006BIMO
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