The Chicks’ social justice song March March ‘might have been 25 minutes long’

Derrick Santistevan

Nation music trio The Chicks have exposed their brand-new social justice anthem March March was at first a lot longer than the 4 minutes it ended up being.

The song features on The Chicks brand-new album Gaslighter, the group’s first considering that dropping the Dixie Chicks name amidst the continuous Black Lives Matter demonstrations. In an interview with Music Week publication, bandmember Emily Strayer looked into March March’s political subject.

“We were just all riled up about what was on the news and how we were feeling with the state of the country and what it was we were passionate about,” she showed.

The group composed the song after going to the March For Our Lives (a presentation that avoids weapon violence), Stayer discussed: “So we were talking about that in the session, and that’s where the march idea came up… But we didn’t want to write three verses all about gun control, so we started talking about other things we were passionate about.”

The track covers numerous subjects, consisting of women’s rights and environment modification.

Strayer has actually stayed unsure that U.S. leaders are taking the required actions towards development, and firmly insisted: “There’s so much to do (as a country) and we’re just going back to undo the progress that’s been made.”

Vocalist Natalie Maines concurred, including, “Once you go down that path, we could have had endless verses,” which the song might have been 25 minutes long.

“Like, where to begin? And we wrote that song over two years ago, so now we’d really have a lot of verses,” she chuckled.

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