- Martie Maguire
-
Martie Maguire
Maguire performing in Austin, Texas during the Accidents & Accusations Tour 2006Background information Birth name Martha Elenor Erwin Also known as Martie Seidel Born October 12, 1969
York, Pennsylvania
United StatesGenres Alternative country, country, bluegrass, country rock, folk Occupations Musician
Songwriter
Record Producer
Musical String ArrangerInstruments Violin, Viola, Guitar, Bass, Mandolin, Vocals Years active 1989–present Labels SonyBMG, Open Wide, Columbia Associated acts Dixie Chicks, Court Yard Hounds Website DixieChicks.com
CourtYardHounds.comMartie Maguire (born Martha Elenor Erwin; October 12, 1969) is a Grammy Award-winning American songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and a founding member of the female alternative country band, the Dixie Chicks. She won awards in national fiddle championships while still a teenager. Maguire is accomplished on several other instruments, including the mandolin, viola, acoustic bass, and guitar. She has written and co-written a number of the band's songs, some of which have become chart-topping hits. She also contributes her skills in vocal harmony and backing vocals, as well as orchestrating string arrangements for the band. She is left-handed but plays right-handed.[citation needed]
Maguire learned several instruments at a young age, honing her skills with her younger sister, Emily Robison (born Emily Erwin) and two schoolmates (a brother and sister team, Troy and Sharon Gilchrist) for over five years as a part of a high school touring bluegrass quartet. After graduation, the sisters forged an alliance with two other women they had met through the Dallas music scene, Laura Lynch and Robin Lynn Macy, forming a bluegrass and country music band, busking and touring the bluegrass festival circuits for six years. After the departure of Macy, and the replacement of Lynch with singer-songwriter Natalie Maines, the band widened their musical repertoire and appearance. The result was a trio so commercially successful that it took the country music industry by surprise, with a number of hit songs, albums, and awards that have set records in the music industry. Maguire subsequently stood by her bandmates as they were engulfed in political controversy.
Contents
Early life
Martha Elenor Erwin (nicknamed "Martie") was born October 12, 1969, in York, Pennsylvania,[1] to Barbara Trask and Paul Erwin. She was raised in Addison, a northern suburban town on the edge of Dallas, Texas. She has an older sister, Julia Erwin-Weiner, born in 1967, and a younger sister, Emily Robison, born in 1972.
Encouraged by her parents — educators at private schools — Maguire began playing classical violin at age five, and by age 12, started to learn playing "fiddle style" after receiving a birthday gift of fiddle lessons.[2] She also was active in her school orchestra.[3]
Her sister Emily Erwin shared her love and interest in music, and displayed early talent herself. The two sisters were provided musical instruction on several instruments, and their talent for vocal harmony continued to be nurtured. Although Maguire became famous for her harmony and mastery of the fiddle, she also plays a variety of stringed instruments that include the viola, guitar, mandolin, and bass.[4] Maguire composes songs and arranges the use of stringed instruments for concert and recording performances.
Early career
By 1983, Maguire was touring with her sister Emily and school friends; siblings Troy and Sharon Gilchrist.[5] The sisters showed an "almost obsessive" interest in busking at small venues and attending bluegrass festivals.[6] The four students formed the teenage bluegrass group "Blue Night Express", playing together for 5 years, from 1984–1989,[7] while still attending private Greenhill School (Addison, Texas).[4] "We'd drive down to the west end of Dallas and open our cases, and that was our job", Maguire said of it in a later interview to 60 Minutes II correspondent Dan Rather. "That's how we made money in high school".[8] In 1987 Maguire(then known as Martha Erwin), was awarded second place for the fiddle in the National fiddle championships held yearly in Winfield, Kansas. Upon graduation from high school, with Emily still in high school, she spent a year attending college at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, from 1988-1989. She performed in the school orchestra there and again competed in the National fiddle championships at the Walnut Valley Festival, in Winfield, earning third place that year.[9]
The Dixie Chicks
In 1989, Maguire and Robison joined guitarist Robin Lynn Macy and Laura Lynch on bass in the Dixie Chicks, playing what was at the time predominantly bluegrass music and a mix of country standards. Originally listed as Martha, and then Martie Erwin, Maguire played fiddle, mandolin, viola and harmonized with Robison on backing vocals within the band.[10]
Maguire had begun writing and recording songs on their debut independent album, Thank Heavens for Dale Evans; and in 2001, one song, co-written with Laura Lynch called "Pink Toenails" resurfaced. The song was featured in the film, Don't Say A Word, with Skye McCole Bartusiak performing the song.[11]
When their second album had a more polished sound, Maguire commented, "I hope our fans won't be disappointed [in The Little Ol' Cowgirl]; it's got drums on every track; it's no longer bluegrass, but we have to make a living and you can't do that playing bluegrass".[12]
Two albums later, after Natalie Maines assumed the position of lead vocalist, the band was revitalized. Maguire said of their music, "It's very rootsy, but then Natalie comes in with a rock and blues influence. That gave Emily and I a chance to branch out, because we loved those kinds of music but felt limited by our instruments".[13]
Maguire co-wrote the song, "Cowboy Take Me Away" on the Chicks sophomore studio album Fly for her sister Emily. It was a tribute to Emily's courtship with country music writer/singer Charlie Robison.[2] Maguire was singled out by BMI in 2000, and awarded Songwriter of the Year for writing and/or co-writing "Cowboy Take Me Away", "Ready To Run" and "You Were Mine". You Were Mine was co-written by the sisters about their parent's divorce.[14]
In 1999, the Dixie Chicks performed two songs, recording a cover of the song, You Can't Hurry Love as well as Maguire's "Ready to Run" for the Julia Roberts/ Richard Gere film Runaway Bride. In 2003, Maguire was nominated for a Tony Award for co-composing the film score to Urban Cowboy; the musical used her "Cowboy Take Me Away".[15] In addition, Maguire played fiddle on the song, " Somewhere Down The Road" on Deryl Dodd's eponymous debut album.
After the band achieved massive commercial success with its first Sony studio two albums with Maines, they struggled with their record company over artistic direction on the third. Maguire commented, "I don't think any of us ever trusted Nashville. When you're in that town you know everybody is talking about everybody else. Everybody is wishing for the other guy to fail".[16]
Although Maguire and Robison often appear quiet and demure compared to their animated bandmate Natalie Maines, the trio have stood united on controversial subjects since they banded together to play in 1995, even when their opinions have had the potential to serve them more harm than good. In 2006, Maguire said, "I'd rather have a smaller following of really cool people who get it, who will grow with us as we grow and are fans for life, than people that have us in their five-disc changer with Reba McEntire and Toby Keith. We don't want those kinds of fans. They limit what you can do".[17]
Court Yard Hounds
With Natalie Maines taking a break from music, Maguire was working on a solo album; however, it was announced in January 2010 that she and sister Emily Robison have formed a side project called the Court Yard Hounds, with Robison on lead vocals.[18][19] The band made their live debut in March at South by Southwest with an album released in May 2010.[20]
Personal life
Martie married pharmaceutical representative Ted Seidel on June 17, 1995, and changed her last name to Seidel. She also was stepmother to his son, Carter. Brad Paisley emerged as a new country music singer who co-wrote a song about child watching as his mother kept being rejected by her dates because she had a child, and the gratitude the boy felt to the man who was able to care for them both. Martie wrote to tell him she was moved both because she was now a stepmother, and had a stepfather as well. The song was called,"He Didn't Have to Be", and Maguire joined him in performing it onstage in a concert on a CMT showcase program, "On the Verge", saying the song "struck a chord" in her." [21] However, her marriage did not last, and she and Ted Seidel were divorced in November, 1999.[2]
At bandmate Natalie Maines' sister Kim's wedding Martie met Gareth Maguire, a Roman Catholic teacher and actor from Northern Ireland. The couple became engaged in June, 2001, and married August 10, 2001, in a civil ceremony in Hawaii; as explained at one of their concerts, the Dixie Chicks' song "White Trash Wedding" is based on Martie's relationship with Gareth.[22] Later they had a Catholic "blessing" ceremony in the groom's hometown, Carnlough in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, on March 9, 2002, for all the guests that were not able to attend the first wedding. She said of the ceremony that the Catholic Church would not permit a wedding service due to her prior divorce. Maguire says ruefully that there were so many "special" people that they'd wanted to include, but that they just couldn't wait to marry.[23] Another reason for the rush was Gareth's need to keep flying back and forth because of visa considerations.[24] After her marriage, Martie changed her name again to that of her new husband; which is why in her musical career she has had the surnames of Erwin, Seidel, and now Maguire.
Martie and Gareth have three daughters: fraternal twins Eva Ruth and Kathleen 'Katie' Emilie were born April 27, 2004. Katie was named after Gareth's late sister, Kathleen, who died in a car crash circa 1997. Third daughter Harper Rosie Maguire was born July 25, 2008.
Maguire has been frank about using invitro fertilization to conceive their daughters. In an interview in Conceive Magazine, she said, "All my paperwork said 'unspecified origin.' We spent three years of active trying before we went to IVF. First I went on Clomid. Then I had some dye tests and found I had a collapsed tube, so I had laparoscopic surgery; the tube wasn't blocked, just spasming." After three attempts at intrauterine insemination, she said, she and her husband didn't think it was worth continuing in that manner, and switched to IVF.[25] In August 2007, Maguire began IVF again, resulting in their third daughter Harper.
Regarding the number of children the Dixie Chicks have produced in the past seven years, (Maines has two; Robison has three in addition to Maguire's twins and newborn) Maguire told People Magazine, "We'll have to move over and let the little chicks take over! We've got a new band!"[26]
Maguire and Robison co-wrote a song, "So Hard", about their own personal experiences with infertility and their need to rely on other methods to conceive. They speak out about the difficulties they faced, but also their good fortune; both having options that for many women are financially prohibitive. Mentioning the stigma attached to IVF, Magurie said, "I think we feel a responsibility to break down some barriers. It's much more of a common problem than people realize."[27] A final concern Maguire mentioned was the question of what to do with all the unused frozen embryos. "Now that I have children, I see those embryos as possible children. So I have to think about what my options are if there are leftovers again. I could keep them in storage, and maybe they will help my children some day. Or I can try to donate them to stem cell research. I don't think I could give them to another family," she admits. "I would always worry: what if it's an abusive family? What if they don't get enough love?"[25]
Awards
Further information: Dixie Chicks#AwardsDiscography
Main article: Dixie Chicks discography- Maguire played fiddle on the song, " Somewhere Down The Road" on the eponymous album, Deryl Dodd by Deryl Dodd on Sony.
- Maguire also played fiddle on The Flatlanders' adaptation of Woody Guthrie's "Sowing On The Mountain" on their 2009 album Hills and Valleys.
References
- ^ TV Guide
- ^ a b c Ladies' Home Journal(Retrieved 13 March 2008)
- ^ Gilchriest, Gail The Dixie Chicks Put Cowgirl Chic Back in the Saddle Elle Magazine 1991
- ^ a b Leggett, Steve All-Music Guide writer on MSN (Retrieved 9 March 2008)
- ^ Jam Base Sharon Gilchrist
- ^ Frost, Jane Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, KS, Early 1980s The All-Inclusive Dixie Chicks Page
- ^ Gilchrist, Sharon Faraway Hills Retrieved 12 February, 2008
- ^ Rather, Dan 60 Minutes II Dixie Chicks Not Whistling Dixie The Trio Has Sold 17 Million CDs 6 September 2002 Retrieved 26 June 2008
- ^ Walnut Valley Association 1987 and 1989 National fiddle championships in archive Retrieved 2 March, 2008
- ^ Superior Pics Retrieved 23 March, 2008
- ^ (Retrieved 22 March 2008)Yahoo Movie Review for Don't Say a Word
- ^ Clark, Renee Can the Dixie Chicks make it in the big time? Local Heroes (Transcribed from) Dallas Life Magazine, Dallas Morning News, March 1, 1992(Retrieved 23 January 2008)
- ^ Malkin, Nina
- ^ Hillman, Chris Entertainment Weekly (Retrieved 21 April 2008)
- ^ Dixie Chicks website (Retrieved 9 March 2008)
- ^ Martie Maguire, to The Los Angeles Times, 5/21/06. Flippo, Chet (May 25, 2006) CMT News Nashville Skyline: Dixie Chicks, Dixie Chicks, Dixie Chicks
- ^ Tryangiel, Josh (May 29, 2006). "In The Line of Fire". Time Magazine. http://www.time.com/time/archive/preview/0,10987,1196419,00.html.
- ^ http://www.dixiechickshenhouse.com/
- ^ http://www.countrystandardtime.com/news/newsitem.asp?xid=2485
- ^ "Pair of Dixie Chicks Plan Album, Tour as New Band Court Yard Hounds" Rolling Stone, January 15, 2010 (Retrieved January 19, 2010).
- ^ Paisley, Brad "He Didn't Have To Be" (Retrieved 20 January, 2008)
- ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EshGQDYBKyE
- ^ CMT Online CMT Online (Retrieved 25 September, 2005)
- ^ Minchin III, James R. and Lieberman, Ellen InStyle Magazine; February 2003, Vol. 10 Issue 2, pg. 244 Retrieved 25 September 2005]
- ^ a b Weinhouse,, Beth (Fall 2007). "The Dixie Chicks: Taking the Long Way ... to Motherhood". Conceive Magazine Online. http://www.conceiveonline.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=71&Itemid=22. Retrieved 2008-07-27.[dead link]
- ^ People Magazine (accessed 28 January 2008)Dixie Chick Martie Maguire Is Expecting
- ^ Frontpage Publicity Dixie Chicks Website
External links
- Martie Maguire at the Internet Movie Database
- Dixie Chicks (Official Site)
- Court Yard Hounds (Official Site)
Dixie Chicks Natalie Maines · Emily Robison · Martie Maguire
Laura Lynch · Robin Lynn MacyStudio albums Compilations Playlist: The Very Best of Dixie Chicks · The Essential Dixie ChicksSingles "I Can Love You Better" · "There's Your Trouble" · "Wide Open Spaces" · "You Were Mine" · "Tonight the Heartache's on Me" · "Ready to Run" · "Cowboy Take Me Away" · "Goodbye Earl" · "Cold Day in July" · "Without You" · "If I Fall You're Going Down with Me" · "Heartbreak Town" · "Some Days You Gotta Dance" · "Long Time Gone" · "Landslide" · "Travelin' Soldier" · "Godspeed (Sweet Dreams)" · "Top of the World" · "I Hope" · "Not Ready to Make Nice" · "Everybody Knows" · "The Long Way Around" · "The Neighbor"Live recordings An Evening with the Dixie Chicks · Top of the World Tour: Live (DVD)Tours Fly Tour · Top of the World Tour · Vote for Change · Accidents & Accusations Tour · Eagles 2010 Summer TourRelated articles Collaborators Grammy Award for Song of the Year (2000s) Itaal Shur & Rob Thomas - "Smooth" (2000) · Adam Clayton, David Evans, Larry Mullen, Jr. & Paul Hewson - "Beautiful Day" (2001) · Alicia Keys - "Fallin'" (2002) · Jesse Harris - "Don't Know Why" (2003) · Richard Marx & Luther Vandross - "Dance with My Father" (2004) · John Mayer - "Daughters" (2005) · Adam Clayton, David Evans, Larry Mullen, Jr. & Paul Hewson - "Sometimes You Can't Make It on Your Own" (2006) · Emily Burns Irwin, Martha Maguire, Natalie Maines Pasdar & Dan Wilson - "Not Ready to Make Nice" (2007) · Amy Winehouse - "Rehab" (2008) · Guy Berryman, Jonathan Buckland, William Champion & Christopher Martin - "Viva la Vida" (2009)
Complete list · (1960s) · (1970s) · (1980s) · (1990s) · (2000s) · (2010s) Grammy Award for Record of the Year (2000s) "Smooth"* by Santana (Rodney Holmes, Tony Lindsay, Karl Perazzo, Raul Rekow, Benny Rietveld, Carlos Santana, Chester Thompson) featuring Rob Thomas
· engineered/mixed by David Thoener, produced by Matt Serletic (2000)"Beautiful Day"* by U2 (Bono, Adam Clayton, The Edge, Larry Mullen, Jr.)
· engineered/mixed by Richard Rainey & Steve Lillywhite; produced by Brian Eno & Daniel Lanois (2001)"Walk On" by U2 (Bono, Adam Clayton, The Edge, Larry Mullen, Jr.)
· engineered/mixed by Richard Rainey & Steve Lillywhite; produced by Brian Eno & Daniel Lanois (2002)"Don't Know Why"* by Norah Jones;
· engineered/mixed by Jay Newland; produced by Arif Mardin, Jay Newland & Norah Jones (2003)"Clocks" by Coldplay (Guy Berryman, Jon Buckland, Will Champion, Phil Harvey, Chris Martin)
· engineered/mixed by Coldplay, Ken Nelson & Mark Phythian; produced by Coldplay & Ken Nelson (2004)"Here We Go Again" by Ray Charles and Norah Jones
· engineered/mixed by Al Schmitt, Mark Fleming, & Terry Howard; produced by John R. Burk (2005)"Boulevard of Broken Dreams" by Green Day (Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt, Frank Edwin Wright III)
· engineered/mixed by Chris Lord-Alge & Doug McKean, produced by Green Day & Rob Cavallo (2006)"Not Ready to Make Nice"* by Dixie Chicks (Martie Maguire, Natalie Maines, Emily Robison)
· engineered/mixed by Chris Testa, Jim Scott & Richard Dodd; produced by Rick Rubin (2007)"Rehab"* by Amy Winehouse
· engineered/mixed by Tom Elmhirst, Vaughan Merrick, Dom Morley, Mark Ronson & Gabriel Roth; produced by Mark Ronson (2008)"Please Read the Letter" by Alison Krauss and Robert Plant
· engineered/mixed by Mike Piersante; produced by T-Bone Burnett (2009)Complete list · (1960s) · (1970s) · (1980s) · (1990s) · (2000s) · (2010s) Grammy Award for Album of the Year (2000s) Supernatural performed by Santana (Rodney Holmes, Tony Lindsay, Karl Perazzo, Raul Rekow, Benny Rietveld, Carlos Santana, Chester Thompson); engineered/mixed by Alvaro Villagra, Andy Grassi, Anton Pukshansky, Benny Faccone, Chris Theis, Commissioner Gordon, David Frazer, David Thoener, Glenn Kolotkin, Jeff Poe, Jim Gaines, Jim Scott, John Gamble, John Karpowich, John Seymour, Matty Spindel, Mike Couzzi, Steve Farrone, Steve Fontano, T-Ray, Tom Lord-Alge, Tony Prendatt & Warren Riker; produced by Alex Gonzales, Art Hodge, Charles Goodan, Clive Davis, Dante Ross, Dust Brothers, Fher Olvera, Jerry 'Wonder' Duplessis, K. C. Porter, Lauryn Hill, Matt Serletic, Stephen M. Harris & Wyclef Jean (2000) Two Against Nature performed by Steely Dan (Walter Becker, Donald Fagen); engineered/mixed by Dave Russell, Elliot Scheiner, Phil Burnett & Roger Nichols; produced by Donald Fagen & Walter Becker (2001) O Brother, Where Art Thou? Soundtrack performed by Alison Krauss & Union Station (Barry Bales, Ron Block, Jerry Douglas, Alison Krauss, Dan Tyminski), Chris Sharp, Chris Thomas King, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, Harley Allen, John Hartford, Mike Compton, Norman Blake, Pat Enright, Peasall Sisters (Hannah Peasall, Leah Peasall, Sarah Peasall), Ralph Stanley, Sam Bush, Stuart Duncan, The Cox Family (Evelyn Cox, Sidney Cox, Suzanne Cox, Willard Cox), The Fairfield Four (Nathan Best, Isaac Freeman, Robert Hamlett, James Hill, Joseph Rice, Wilson Waters, Jr.), The Whites (Buck White, Cheryl White, Sharon White) & Tim Blake Nelson; engineered/mixed by Mike Piersante & Peter Kurland; master engineered by Gavin Lurssen; produced by T-Bone Burnett (2002) Come Away with Me performed by Norah Jones; engineered/mixed by Jay Newland & S. Husky Höskulds; master engineered by Ted Jensen; produced by Arif Mardin, Craig Street, Jay Newland & Norah Jones (2003) Speakerboxxx/The Love Below performed by OutKast (André 3000, Big Boi); engineered/mixed by Brian Paturalski, Chris Carmouche, Darrell Thorp, Dexter Simmons, John Frye, Kevin Davis, Matt Still, Moka Nagatani, Neal H. Pogue, Padraic Kernin, Pete Novak, Reggie Dozier, Robert Hannon, Terrence Cash & Vincent Alexander; master engineered by Bernie Grundman & Brian Gardner; produced by André 3000, Big Boi & Carl Mo (2004) Genius Loves Company performed by Ray Charles and Various Artists; engineered/mixed by Al Schmitt, Ed Thacker, Joel W. Moss, John Harris, Mark Fleming, Pete Karam, Robert Fernandez, Seth Presant & Terry Howard; master engineered by Doug Sax & Robert Hadley; produced by Don Mizell, Herbert Waltl, John R. Burk, Phil Ramone & Terry Howard (2005) How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb performed by U2 (Bono, Adam Clayton, The Edge, Larry Mullen, Jr.); engineered/mixed by Carl Glanville, Flood, Greg Collins, Jacknife Lee, Nellee Hooper, Simon Gogerly & Steve Lillywhite; master engineered by Arnie Acosta; produced by Brian Eno, Chris Thomas, Daniel Lanois, Flood, Jacknife Lee & Steve Lillywhite (2006) Taking the Long Way performed by Dixie Chicks (Martie Maguire, Natalie Maines, Emily Robison); engineered/mixed by Chris Testa, Jim Scott & Richard Dodd; master engineered by Richard Dodd; produced by Rick Rubin (2007) River: The Joni Letters performed by Herbie Hancock; featuring Norah Jones, Joni Mitchell, Corinne Bailey Rae , Tina Turner ; produced by Herbie Hancock & Larry Klein; engineered/mixed by Helik Hadar; master engeineered by Bernie Grundman (2008) Raising Sand performed by Robert Plant & Alison Krauss; produced by T-Bone Burnett; engineered/mixed by Mike Piersante; master engeineered by Gavin Lurssen (2009) Complete list · (1960s) · (1970s) · (1980s) · (1990s) · (2000s) · (2010s) Categories:- 1969 births
- American buskers
- American country fiddlers
- Songwriters from Pennsylvania
- American vegetarians
- American violinists
- Dixie Chicks members
- Grammy Award winners
- Living people
- American mandolinists
- American multi-instrumentalists
- People from York, Pennsylvania
- Musicians from Dallas, Texas
- American bluegrass musicians
- Sony BMG artists
- Columbia Records artists
- American singer-songwriters
- American female singers
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