Three of the hottest chicks in rock music, on form and fused with a disdain of their American president, revived the Mission Concert in spectacular fashion in front of one of the Hawke's Bay vineyard show's biggest crowds on Saturday night.
Treated cautiously by some in October when confirmed as the stars for a later-than-usual or preferable April evening in the Mission Estate Vineyard on the outskirts of Taradale, after the concert lapsedafter the failure to secure a Mission-quality act for 2016, the Dixie Chicks proved to be just the lot to get it going again, leaving no questions the Mission Concert is here to stay.
Promoters reckoned they'd struck paydirt with not only the star act of Natalie Maines and Erwin sisters Emily Burns Strayer and Martie Maguire and their four-man band, including one from Napier, but also the four warm-up acts, which expanded the concert to more than eight hours from the time Badger started at 1.30pm to when the Dixie Chicks departed about 9.50pm.
The 23-song set-list diverted from that for the year-long, 82-show world tour a half-hour in to take a dig at Donald Trump with the 1969 Thunderclap Newman's social change anthem Something In The Air.
Some of the crowd would know of their feelings about "our new president", Maines would say in what seemed an understatement of the expectation in the air, given the events of last week, including the Trump-ordered rocket-strike, and given Maines' stand ahead of the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq when she told a London audience: "We don't want this war, this violence, and we're ashamed that the president of the United States (George W Bush) is from Texas."