"Not Ready to Make Nice" | ||||||||||||||||
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Single by Dixie Chicks | ||||||||||||||||
from the album Taking the Long Way | ||||||||||||||||
Released | June 5, 2006 | |||||||||||||||
Format | Digital download Radio airplay CD single |
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Genre | Country pop | |||||||||||||||
Length | 3:55 | |||||||||||||||
Label | Columbia | |||||||||||||||
Writer(s) | Martie Maguire, Natalie Maines, Emily Robison, Dan Wilson | |||||||||||||||
Producer | Rick Rubin | |||||||||||||||
Certification | Gold (RIAA) | |||||||||||||||
Dixie Chicks singles chronology | ||||||||||||||||
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"Not Ready to Make Nice" is a country pop song co-written and performed by the American all-female band Dixie Chicks for their seventh studio album Taking the Long Way (2006). The song was released as the first physical single from the album in June 2006. It remains the Chicks's biggest hit in the US to date.
On February 11, 2007, it won three Grammy Awards in the categories of Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.[1]
In 2009, Rolling Stone named "Not Ready to Make Nice" the 77th best song of the decade.[2]
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Controversy erupted over the Dixie Chicks in 2003 following a critical comment vocalist Natalie Maines made of the American President George W. Bush while performing in a concert in London, United Kingdom. Taking the Long Way was the first studio album released by the Dixie Chicks after that. The controversy, and the band's reaction to it, is the major theme of some of the songs in the album, including "Not Ready to Make Nice".
The song, which was written by all three band members (Maines, Emily Robison and Martie Maguire) along with Dan Wilson, is a statement of how they feel over the controversy, the banning of their songs from country music radio stations, and freedom of speech.
The band went on to the October 25 episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show to promote the documentary film Shut Up and Sing and the music video of the song was quickly shown.[3] While interviewing the band, Winfrey said the song is so well written that someone cannot even tell if it concerns the controversy. Indeed, Maines said that she and the other songwriters wanted the song to have a universal interpretation. However, the final lines of the fourth verse are unequivocally about the death threats the band received during the 2003 Top of the World Tour:
Some other lines in the beginning of this same verse are about a scene featured in the documentary Shut Up and Sing, in which a mother, who was protesting the Dixie Chicks at one of their concerts, is goading her young child to say "screw 'em!":
In the song, "daughter" was used instead of "son" as a matter of poetic license.
The band members released their comments about writing the songs of Taking the Long Way through the website Frontpage Publicity.[4] They commented the following about "Not Ready to Make Nice":
The music video for "Not Ready to Make Nice", which was directed by the acclaimed British director Sophie Muller, uses the contrast of dark and white colors. The video starts with a scene of Natalie painting the white clothes of the other two band members, Martie and Emily, with black paint, which symbolizes the boycott of the band. Then, Natalie is seen wearing a black dress with her hands on a puddle of black paint. In another scene, the band members are sitting in a chair and when Natalie gets up to say something, Martie and Emily pull her back in to the chair. Then, Natalie and the other Dixie Chicks are seen in an environment that looks like a classroom and the teacher sends Natalie to write the English proverb "To talk without thinking is to shoot without aiming" on the blackboard. On the final scenes of the video, Natalie is seen in front of three doctors in what appears to be a mental institution, trying to escape from them.
The music video of the song broke the record as the longest run at #1 on VH1's VSpot Top 20 Countdown spending 15 weeks at the top, 14 of them consecutive. The video also became the second ever to retire to the 20/20 club on the show on 7 October 2006, when it was at #9 on the countdown. In December 2006, it was named one of the best videos of the year by VH1. "Not Ready to Make Nice" was ranked #36 on CMT's 2008 ranking of the 100 Greatest Videos.[5]
The Fox late-night sketch show MADtv performed a parody of the "Not Ready to Make Nice" music video. In the parody, Crista Flanagan portrays Natalie Maines as standing by her comments about George W. Bush; however, her bandmates, portrayed by Nicole Parker and Arden Myrin, want to apologize so they can remain popular in the United States. Flanagan, as Maines, states that there is no God, she supports radical Islamic Jihad, and that every woman should wear a burqa. In the parody, Flanagan writes on a blackboard, "I am angry and important". In the parody, Flanagan is lobotimized and her bandmates toast the operation; whereas in the original, Maines resists being treated by doctors and is toasted by her bandmates.
"Not Ready to Make Nice" was very well-received by music reviewers from publications like Allmusic, Entertainment Weekly, Rolling Stone and USA Today. The song has been praised by these critics for being a statement in which the band does not regret Maines' anti-Bush statement.
To promote both the single and the album, the Dixie Chicks performed the song live on some television programs such as on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Good Morning America, The Late Show with David Letterman, among others. It was also performed to internet radios such as Sessions@AOL and LAUNCHcast. It was performed in every single concert of the band's Accidents & Accusations Tour (June 15–December 5, 2006). It was also performed at the 49th Grammy Awards, just minutes before the band won the awards for Song of the Year and Record of the Year. (In a nod to the controversial origins of the song, Grammy producers had longtime singer-activist Joan Baez introduce the performance.)
"Not Ready to Make Nice" initially peaked at #23 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart,[10] becoming the first song by the band to chart in the U.S. after the 2003 controversy. It was able to chart in the Billboard Hot 100 because of a high number of download sales (it debuted at #11[11] and peaked at #8[12] on the Hot Digital Songs chart), despite low country radio airplay.
For the issue dated February 24, 2007, in the wake of its Grammy success, the song re-entered the Hot 100 at #4, after a 20-week absence,[13] becoming the band's highest charting single to date on the general music charts. It also tied with LL Cool J and Jennifer Lopez' "Control Myself" as the highest re-entry at the chart. That same week, the song would also receive a Gold certification from the Recording Industry Association of America for digital downloads of over 500,000. However, its drop to #28 in the next week broke the record for the biggest drop out of the top five in a single week, beating Clay Aiken's "Solitaire", which fell from #4 to #27 four years earlier.[14]
The song was also very popular in Canada, where it peaked at #3 on the BDS chart. It also became a Top 20 hit in Australia, becoming the second single of the band to chart on the ARIA chart, at #18.[15] In the United Kingdom, the song charted poorly on the UK Singles Chart, peaking at #70;[16] however, it became the fourth single by the band to chart in that country. The song ended up going Platinum in the United States.
Chart (2006) | Peak position |
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Australia ARIA Singles Chart[15][16][17] | 18 |
German Singles Chart[16] | 89 |
Irish Singles Chart[16] | 47 |
Sweden Top 40[15][17] | 20 |
Swiss Singles Chart[15][16] | 22 |
UK Singles Chart[16] | 70 |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[18] | 4 |
U.S. Billboard Pop 100[19] | 6 |
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks[20] | 29 |
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary[21] | 32 |
U.S. Billboard Hot Country Songs[22] | 36 |
Charts (2007) | Position |
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Australian Singles Chart[23] | 98 |
2007 CMT Music Awards:
Preceded by "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" by Green Day |
Grammy Award for Record of the Year 2007 |
Succeeded by "Rehab by Amy Winehouse |
Preceded by "Sometimes You Can't Make It on Your Own" by U2 |
Grammy Award for Song of the Year 2007 |
Succeeded by "Rehab" by Amy Winehouse |
Preceded by "Restless" by Alison Krauss and Union Station |
Grammy Award for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal 2007 |
Succeeded by "How Long" by Eagles |
In 2007, Brazilien singer Wanessa Camargo released a version of Not Ready to Make Nice in Portuguese, titled Não Tô Pronta pra Perdoar.
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