The Chicks March to Their Own Drum at Santa Barbara Bowl
Jenny Lewis
Subverted Margaritaville Romanticism During Opening Set
By
Caitlin Kelley,Santa Barbara Independent
There
was Jenny Lewis, decked out in the loudest of cowfolk regalia at the Santa Barbara Bowl on July 29. In case there was any
doubt about the twanginess of the night’s proceedings, the indie-country queen rocked a bright red Nudie suit, complete
with matching steel toes and a shag haircut. Yes, there was a steel slide guitar moment on "Do Si Do." Of course, there was
a bit of Bonnie Raitt flair on "She’s Not Me" — in which the richness of Lewis’s lower register melted into
the greater heights of her pristine head voice. But the peak of her guitar-toting, hip-swaggering set? "Puppy and a Truck,"
a tongue-in-cheek pastiche of yacht-rock subverting all the trappings of Margaritaville romanticism in a way only Jenny Lewis
knows how.
The
Chicks
Then
came The Chicks, rootsy icons who forged their own path after the conservative country establishment canceled them for speaking
out against ol’ Dubya in the mid-aughts. What could’ve been an elephant in the room has become core to the group
identity of the Chicks, who dropped the "Dixie" from their name in 2020.
What
could’ve been an elephant in the room has become core to the group identity of the Chicks, who dropped the "Dixie" from
their name in 2020. | Credit: Carl Perry
That
theme carried through the night, as the members cheekily emerged onto a gold-paneled set — which was thoroughly Swiffer-ed
during the intermission — to the sounds of Joan Jett’s "Bad Reputation."
There
was "Tights on My Boat," a scorching kiss-off detailing a real-life episode of infidelity. Melding the musical tics of Jason
Mraz and Regina Spektor, it stands as one of Natalie Maines’s most vocally adventurous cuts. And, naturally, the personal
made way for the political as an animation of conservative justices lost at sea played during the line, "You’re gonna
get what you got coming to ya."
It’s
not like serving justice is anything new in the trio’s discography. The storied "Goodbye Earl" is a Thelma and Louise–style
revision of the murder ballad that joyfully dances on the graves of abusive men — and had the whole amphitheater singing
along! That sentiment blended seamlessly into the Gaslighter-heavy setlist, as the title track of the 2020 album builds an
empowerment anthem out of personal turmoil.
"March
March" took this messaging a step further. The slow-simmering protest song directly addressed social issues from gun violence
to climate change. The flickering protest footage culminated in a moving tribute to the Black Lives Matter movement —
heightened as the fleet of instrumentalists pulled off a mesmerizing breakdown. Maines pounded out the handclap rhythm while
Emily Robison wailed on the banjo and Martie Maguire whittled away at her fiddle. There’s no doubt the Chicks march
to their own drum.
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