Top 101 Quotes & Sayings by Martie Maguire

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Martie Maguire.
Last updated on September 19, 2024.
Martie Maguire

Martha Elenor Maguire is an American musician who is a founding member of both the all-female alternative country band The Chicks and country bluegrass duo Court Yard Hounds. She won awards in national fiddle championships while still a teenager. Erwin is accomplished on several other instruments, including the mandolin, viola, double 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.

I didn't realize how polarized an industry like music can be.
Any time the Chicks want to play, that takes precedence, because we can make a lot of money.
I'm amazed when I hear my daughters with their friends. They'll just talk openly about, 'Yeah, he used to be a girl and now he's a boy.' It gives me a lot of hope... It's so matters of fact. It's like they're saying blue and yellow make green. I love that.
Especially after the Chicks' success, it's hard to think of starting over. — © Martie Maguire
Especially after the Chicks' success, it's hard to think of starting over.
I used to be a big 'Star Search' fan. I think it's great people who have a music dream have a place to showcase their talent.
We are a little out of the box.
The Court Yard Hounds aren't a threat to the Dixie Chicks.
I'm such an introvert.
We used to be called the Dixie Chickens. Then we played at a barbecue place, and they had a sign saying, 'Featured Tonight: The Dixie Chickens,' and everybody started ordering it for dinner! So we shortened it.
We were the ones that from the beginning said that 'Wide Open Spaces' was a hit. 'This is a hit, people are going to relate to it.'
I was just oblivious to the fact that the country scene was socially backward and politically opposite of everything I am.
At the Grammys, how many performances were with women playing instruments? Is it still surprising that a female can play an instrument proficiently?
When we were unknown, you don't get a lot of bad feedback. Now, we get people bad-mouthing us all the time, but it's all part of the game.
I want our fans to get their money's worth. If they are going to spend $40 to come to a show, it has to be good, from beginning to end. I like razzle-dazzle; we all do. — © Martie Maguire
I want our fans to get their money's worth. If they are going to spend $40 to come to a show, it has to be good, from beginning to end. I like razzle-dazzle; we all do.
We want to embrace the younger crowds and get them to embrace instruments.
You know, I think it's something I want to teach my children, to ask questions and not be afraid to disagree with people in power. Always question, scrutinize everything they do, because they are leading the country, and it's important to me. That is patriotic.
We do appreciate that we have a very conservative audience and we do try to walk the fine line of that and not offend anybody.
While we were promoting 'Wide Open Spaces,' we set aside time to write. We went on several writing retreats where nobody could get hold of us. It was the only way we could take a step back and reflect and write and be living a semi-normal life for a while.
Don't put celebrities up on this pedestal. We are human beings.
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.
We love performing, we love touring.
What I've learned and all of us have learned is: You can't force art, and there's no way you could force somebody to do something that they didn't want to do in this line of work.
You've got to live your life first and do your job second.
My closet CD that I don't admit that I really listen to is Celine Dion. My husband's sister passed away in a car accident, and she was a huge Celine Dion fan. 'It's All Coming Back to Me Now' was her favorite song, so that's kind of my guilty pleasure.
The older I get the more laid back I am about whatever happens, happens.
I play a little acoustic bass and a little guitar. In our house there are instruments everywhere, and I love picking them up and just noodling around. I pick up my husband's tin whistle sometimes. He's really proficient, but it's about the second most annoying instrument - after the banjo - if you don't know how to play it.
I would never go on 'Dancing With the Stars,' because I'm not the greatest dancer in the world. But when I watch 'The Apprentice' sometimes I'm like, 'I could do that task.' The only reason I would not do that is that I could never call people for money and on that show you have to be willing to call people for money.
I think people in the public eye have a problem - they can have security issues.
I love the tone of old, non-amplified, real acoustic fiddles, and Wood Violins are the closest thing I have found to that sound. They play beautifully!
We are bound to make mistakes.
I just was raised always to question and be as informed as I can be.
Nobody has one band anymore. They've got two and three and four!
Fifteen-year-old LeAnn Rimes singing about commitment? You want to go, 'Yeah, right.'
We have to make a living and you can't do that playing bluegrass.
In the beginning, if you look at those early label albums of the Chicks, we didn't write all that much. We had an A&R person and they were getting songs from publishers, listening to hours and hours of cassette tapes.
I think for a while, a lot of artists were doing great things that... were broadening the audience so that country was cool.
We grew up in the South, but in a very liberal household - both our parents are from the Northeast.
So many young kids are fickle when it comes to music. There comes a time when you're not cool again.
We came out of bluegrass, so we could play. — © Martie Maguire
We came out of bluegrass, so we could play.
We're just trying to make good music.
Costumes are great. That kind of effort tells the audience that the performer has taken the time to be the total package.
I don't really enjoy singing lead.
We didn't like the idea of Dixie Chick action figures. I mean that's just the kiss of death for a group. How could a hip teenager enjoy the Dixie Chicks while their little sister is playing with a Martie doll in the other room?
I really have aproblem with the fact that insurance companies don't see infertility as a medical condition requiring coverage. I do want there to be some pressure on the insurance companies.
I'll be very content if I never play 'Devil Went Down to Georgia' again.
I'm such a worrier.
SXSW is all about the music and the collaboration.
You can't just keep bottling the same thing over and over again and think the audience isn't going to catch on.
We've never minded working hard. — © Martie Maguire
We've never minded working hard.
It's such a strong drive for women, knowing you were meant to be a mom. We would have gone into debt, done whatever, exhausted all the options, to get there. But a lot of women have to give up on that dream because they can't afford it.
When you get a record deal, you got to be pretty headstrong, know your direction.
You get your time in the limelight but you don't know how long it's going to last. It's great, but you have to put up with a lot.
We've played music all our lives.
It's not like we were setting out to make a political statement - we're just a band with opinions.
I couldn't imagine that my career could have contributed to the demise of my marriage, but I do think neither of us realized that when you spend 60 to 70 days a year face-to-face, no marriage is going to survive. No relationship is going to survive.
When I look back at some of the Chicks stuff, it's the early stuff we did where we kind of giggle and go, 'You know what? Those were the good old days.'
We have an older sister who gets pregnant easily. So Emily and I think there may be an environmental cause for our problems. Neither of us were very old when we started trying. But we've lived very parallel lives. We've been in a band together since I was 12 and she was 10. We can't help but wonder, did we stay in a hotel near a power plant?
I grew up going to bluegrass festivals, and there were performers who got on stage and didn't say much. They would stand there, stone-faced, picking. I could appreciate that, but it taught me that a little showmanship and some personality adds so much to a performance.
I was born with great eyelashes. They just do what I want them to do.
We don't mind if people think we've come from nowhere. Because once they've become fans, they'll delve deeper in and will be surprised to find we've been around awhile and that we've had a lot of experience doing this.
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