It's impossible to ignore the heavy influence the Dixie Chicks have had on today's country music women. The multi-faceted trio from Texas were a dominant act in the late '90s and early 2000s, and their resume is more than long enough to merit inclusion on this list of country music's most powerful females.

You need not go far to find a tribute. During a July 2017 performance at the Ryman Auditorium, Little Big Town and Miranda Lambert did the women proud singing "Goodbye Earl." In July 2016, Kacey Musgraves, Mickey Guyton and more lamented the loss of strong women like the Chicks on country radio. Take a moment to relive Maddie & Tae and Kelsea Ballerini forming a 2015 version of the Dixie Chicks.

Conversations about the No. 11 artist on our Country Music's 30 Most Powerful Women list usually start and end with Natalie Maines and company's descent, which is an injustice to the three great studio albums they crafted and delivered between 1998 and 2002. Grammy Awards, ACMs, and CMA Entertainer of the Year trophy and massive touring numbers made them bonafide superstars.

One could argue there hasn't been a country female artist as strong as the Dixie Chicks since 2002. What truly set them apart was the musicianship and their unbreakable bond. Not for a moment did Emily Robison or Martie Maguire suggest they'd be anything but true to Maines after she said she was ashamed President Bush was from Texas. It cost them a wonderful commercial career, but thankfully the music stays alive forever.

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