Jump to content

Women in music

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Women musicians)

Kassia, one of the earliest known female composers

Women in Music perform many roles and make a wide range of contributions. Women shape music movements, genres and trends as composers, songwriters, instrumental performers, singers, conductors, and music educators. Women's music, created by and for women can explore women's rights and feminism. Women in music impact and influence creativity, activism, and culture.

In the 21st Century, a significant proportion popular music and classical music singers are women, and a significant proportion are songwriters (many of them being singer-songwriters). Despite this, few record producers, rock critics, or rock instrumentalists are women.

Female artists in pop music, exemplified by figures like Madonna, Billie Eilish, and Lady Gaga, have openly addressed the issue of sexism within the music industry.[1][2][3] A 2021 study stated that "...over the last six years, the representation of women in the music industry has been even lower."[4][5] Despite their substantial contributions (Medieval period to present day), women composers are significantly under-represented in the commonly performed classical music repertoire, music history textbooks, and music encyclopedias. For example, in the Concise Oxford History of Music, one of the only female composers mentioned is Clara Schumann.

While women constitute a significant proportion of instrumental soloists in classical music and the percentage of women in orchestras is increasing, a 2015 article on concerto soloists in major Canadian orchestras indicated that 84% of the soloists with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra were men. In 2012, women made up just 6% of the top-ranked Vienna Philharmonic orchestra. Not many women are instrumental players in popular music genres such as rock and heavy metal. Women are particularly underrepresented in extreme metal genres.[6]: 103  There have, however, been various female instrumentalists and singers in all-female bands.

Women are also under-represented in orchestral conducting, music criticism/music journalism, music producing, and sound engineering. While women were discouraged from composing in the 19th century, and there were few women musicologists, women did become involved in music education "to such a degree that women dominated [this field] during the later half of the 19th century and well into the 20th century."[7]

According to Jessica Duchen, a music writer for London's The Independent, women musicians in classical music are "too often judged for their appearances, rather than their talent" and they face pressure "to look sexy onstage and in photos."[8] Duchen states that while "[t]here are women musicians who refuse to play on their looks...the ones who do tend to be more materially successful."[8] According to the UK's Radio 3 editor, Edwina Wolstencroft, the music industry has long been open to having women in performance or entertainment roles, but women are much less likely to have positions of authority, such as being the conductor of an orchestra,[9] a profession which has been called "one of the last glass ceilings in the music industry."[10]

In popular music, while there are many women singers recording songs, there are very few women behind the audio console acting as music producers, the individuals who direct and manage the recording process.[11] One of the most recorded artists is a woman, Asha Bhosle, an Indian singer who is best known as a playback singer in Hindi cinema.[12]

Western composers

[edit]
Nineteenth-century composer and pianist Clara Schumann

American musicologist Marcia Citron has asked "[w]hy is music composed by women so marginal to the standard 'classical' repertoire?"[13] Citron "examines the practices and attitudes that have led to the exclusion of women composers from the received 'canon' of performed musical works." She argues that in the 1800s, women composers typically wrote art songs for performance in small recitals rather than symphonies intended for performance with an orchestra in a large hall, with the latter works being seen as the most important genre for composers; since women composers did not write many symphonies, they were deemed to be not notable as composers.[13]

According to Abbey Philips, "women musicians have had a very difficult time breaking through and getting the credit they deserve".[14] During the Medieval eras, most of the art music was created for liturgical (religious) purposes and due to the views about the roles of women that were held by religious leaders, few women composed this type of music, with the nun Hildegard von Bingen being among the exceptions.[15] Most university textbooks on the history of music discuss almost exclusively the role of male composers, while very few works by women composers are part of the standard repertoire of classical music. In the Concise Oxford History of Music, Clara Schumann is one of the only women composers mentioned.[14] Philips states that "[d]uring the 20th century the women who were composing/playing gained far less attention than their male counterparts."[14]

Medieval era

[edit]

Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179) was a German Benedictine abbess, composer, writer, philosopher, and visionary.[16] One of her works as a writer and composer, the Ordo Virtutum, is an early example of liturgical drama and an early morality play.[17] Some writers have speculated a distant origin for opera in this piece, though without any evidence.[18][19] Seventy-seven sequences each with its own original poetic text, survive.[20] This is one of the largest repertoires among medieval composers. Hildegard composed many liturgical songs that were collected into a cycle called the Symphonia armoniae celestium revelationum. The songs from the Symphonia are set to Hildegard's own text and range from antiphons, hymns, and sequences, to responsories.[21] Her music is described as monophonic,[22] using soaring melodies that pushed the boundaries of the more traditional Gregorian chant.

Renaissance era

[edit]
This painting by Artemisia Gentileschi, representing Saint Cecilia, has become identified with Maddalena Casulana since 2010. Considered the first female composer to have her music printed and published.[a]

Maddalena Casulana (1544–1590) was an Italian composer, lutenist and singer.[23] Her first work dates from 1566: four madrigals in a collection, Il Desiderio, which she produced in Florence. Two years later in Venice she published her first book of madrigals for four voices, Il primo libro di madrigali, which is the first printed, published work by a woman in Western music history.[24] She was close to Isabella de' Medici and dedicated some of her music to her. In 1570, 1583, and 1586 she published other books of madrigals. In the dedication to her first book of madrigals, she shows her feelings about being a female composer at a time when this was rare: "[I] want to show the world, as much as I can in this profession of music, the vain error of men that they alone possess the gifts of intellect and artistry, and that such gifts are never given to women." Her style is contrapuntal and chromatic and her melodic lines are singable and attentive to the text. Other composers of the time, such as Philippe de Monte, thought highly of her.

Caterina Assandra (1590–1618) was an Italian composer and Benedictine nun. She became famous as an organist and published various works.[25][26] Assandra composed a number of motets and organ pieces. She studied counterpoint with Benedetto Re, one of the leading teachers of the time, at Pavia Cathedral. She composed a collection of motets in the new concertato style in Milan in 1609, an imitative eight-voice Salve Regina in 1611, and a motet, Audite verbum Dominum, for four voices in 1618. She composed both traditional pieces and more innovative works. Among the latter is Duo seraphim. Her motet O Salutaris hodie, included in Motetti op. 2, was one of the first pieces to include the violone, a bowed stringed instrument.

Baroque era

[edit]
The Lute Player by Orazio Gentileschi, presumed to be a portrait of Francesca Caccini

Francesca Caccini (1587–1641) was an Italian composer, singer, lutenist, poet, and music teacher. Her singing for the wedding of Henry IV of France and Maria de Medici in 1600 was praised by Henry, who called her the "best singer in all of France".[27] She worked in the Medici court as a teacher, chamber singer, rehearsal coach and composer of both chamber and stage music until 1627. By 1614 she was the court's most highly paid musician, because her musical virtuosity, so well exemplified an idea of female excellence projected by Tuscany's de facto Regent, Granduchess Christina of Lorraine. Most of her stage music was composed for performance in comedies. In 1618 she published a collection of thirty-six solo songs and soprano/bass duets. In 1625 she composed a 75-minute "comedy-ballet." In all, she wrote sixteen staged works. She was a master of dramatic harmonic surprise: in her music, harmony changes, rather than counterpoint, most powerfully communicates emotion.

Barbara Strozzi (1619–1677) was an Italian Baroque composer and singer. As a child, her considerable vocal talents were displayed to a wide audience. She was also compositionally gifted, and her father arranged for her to study with composer Francesco Cavalli. Strozzi was said to be "the most prolific composer – man or woman – of printed secular vocal music in Venice in the Middle of the century."[28] Her output is also unique in that it only contains secular vocal music, with the exception of one volume of sacred songs.[29] She was renowned for her poetic ability as well as her compositional talent. Her lyrics were often poetic and well-articulated.[28] Nearly three-quarters of her printed works were written for the soprano voice, but she also published works for other voices.[30] Her compositions are firmly rooted in the seconda pratica tradition. Strozzi's music evokes the spirit of Cavalli, heir of Monteverdi. Her style, however, is more lyrical, and more dependent on sheer vocal sound.[31] Many texts of her early pieces were written by her father Giulio. Later texts were written by her father's colleagues, but she wrote her own texts for many of her compositions..

Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre (1665–1729) was a French composer, musician and harpsichordist. She was born into a family of musicians and master instrument-makers. A child prodigy, she performed on the harpsichord in front of King Louis XIV. She became a musician in the Royal Court: taught, composed, and gave concerts at home and throughout Paris, to great acclaim.[32] She was one of the few well-known female composers of her time, and unlike many of her contemporaries, she composed in a wide variety of forms.[33] Her talent and achievements were acknowledged by Titon du Tillet, who accorded her a place on his Mount Parnassus when she was only 26 years old, next to Lalande and Marais and directly below Lully. Her works include a ballet, an opera (Céphale et Procris), trio sonatas, harpsichord pieces, Sonates pour le viollon et pour le clavecin and vocal works such as her Cantates françoises sur des sujets tirez de l'Ecriture.

Classical era

[edit]
Swedish opera singer and composer Elisabeth Olin in the 1780s
Princess Anna Amalia (1723–1787) was a Prussian composer and score curator known for her chamber works, which included trios, marches, cantatas, songs and fugues.
French composer and opera singer Henriette Adélaïde Villard de Beaumesnil

Harriett Abrams (1758–1821) was an English composer and soprano. As a singer, she was praised for her performances of George Frideric Handel. She studied singing, music theory, and composition with composer Thomas Arne before making her opera début in 1775 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London. Abrams became a principal singer at the fashionable London concerts and provincial festivals, appearing regularly from 1780 to 1790. Abrams composed several songs, two of which, "The Orphan's Prayer" and "Crazy Jane", became popular. She published two sets of Italian and English canzonets, a collection of Scottish songs and glees harmonized for two and three voices, and more than a dozen songs, mainly sentimental ballads. A collection of songs published in 1803 was dedicated by Harriett to Queen Charlotte.[34]

Maria Teresa Agnesi (1720–1795) was an Italian composer. Though she was most famous for her compositions, she was also an accomplished harpsichordist and singer. The majority of her surviving compositions were written for keyboard, the voice, or both. Her career was made possible by the Austrian Lombardy, which was progressive and enlightened in women's rights. Her patron was Maria Theresia, holy Roman Empress and sovereign of Lombardy, and Maria Antonia Walpurgis, a gifted composer and contemporary. Her early works are simple and clean, while her later works are more virtuosic, complex, and melodramatic. She composed operas, including heroic drama and serious drama styles. She also wrote arias, concertos, and sonatas for keyboard, small ensemble and voice.

Princess Anna Amalia (1723–1787) was a Prussian composer and score curator. She learned to play the harpsichord, flute, and violin as a young woman. She became the Abbess of Quedlinburg in 1755.[35] She spent most of her time in Berlin, where she devoted herself to music, and became a musical patron and composer. As a composer, she achieved a modest amount of fame and is most known for her smaller chamber works, which included trios, marches, cantatas, songs and fugues. In 1758, she studied musical theory and composition with Johann Philipp Kirnberger, a student of Johann Sebastian Bach. She composed chamber music such as flute sonatas. Moreover, she set the text of Ramler's Passion cantata Der Tod Jesu ('The Death of Jesus') to music. She was also a collector of music, preserving over 600 volumes of works by Johann Sebastian Bach, George Frideric Handel, Georg Philipp Telemann, Karl Heinrich Graun and Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, among others. Her works of curation are a significant contribution to Western culture.

Elisabeth Olin (1740–1828) was a Swedish opera singer and composer. She debuted as Alfhild in Syrinx, referred to as Sweden's first native opéra comique, at Bollhuset in 1747. She became a famed vocalist in the regular public concerts at Riddarhuset in Stockholm, and published her own compositions; she was one of the Swedish composers who wrote one composition each for the collection Gustaviade. En hjältedikt i tolv sånger ('Gustaviade. A heroic poem of twelve songs') from 1768; where she wrote the composition number eight.[36] At the inauguration performance and foundation of the Royal Swedish Opera on 18 January 1773, she sang the role of the Sea Goddess Thetis in Francesco Uttini's opera Thetis och Pélée.[37] She remained the primadonna of the Swedish opera for a decade. In 1773, she became the first woman to be granted the title Hovsångare, and in 1782, she was inducted as the first female member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music.[36]

Henriette Adélaïde Villard de Beaumesnil (1748–1813) was a French composer and opera singer. She began working in minor comedy roles from the age of seven and debuted as a soloist at the Paris Opera in 1766.[38][39] She was the second woman to have a composition performed at the Paris Opéra.[40] Previously the Paris Opera had staged the tragédie-lyrique Céphale et Procris by Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, in 1694. Anacréon, her first opera, received a private performance at the residence of the Count of Provence in 1781. In 1784, her opera Tibulle et Délie was performed at the Paris Opera. In 1792, her two-act opéra comique, Plaire, c'est commander was performed at the Théâtre Montansier.

Anna Bon (1739–1767?) was an Italian composer and performer. She attended the Ospedale della Pietà in Venice, where she studied with the maestra di viola, Candida della Pièta.[41] She held the new post of 'chamber music virtuosa' at the court of Margrave Friedrich of Brandenburg Kulmbach. She dedicated her six op. 1 flute sonatas, published in Nürnberg in 1756, to Friedrich.[41] In 1762 she moved to the Esterházy court at Eisenstadt, where she remained until 1765. She dedicated the published set of six harpsichord sonatas, op. 2 (1757), to Ernestina Augusta Sophia, Princess of Saxe-Weimar, and the set of six divertimenti (trio sonatas), op. 3 (1759), to Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria.[42] She also wrote six divertimenti for two flutes and basso continuo; an aria, "Astra coeli", for soprano, two violins, viola, and basso continuo; an offertory, "Ardete amore", for singers, instruments and basso continuo; a motet, "Eia in preces et veloces", for alto, two violins, viola, and basso continuo and an opera.

Jane Mary Guest (1762–1846) was an English composer and pianist. A pupil of Johann Christian Bach, and initially composing in the galante style,[43] she composed keyboard sonatas, other keyboard works and vocal works with keyboard accompaniment.[44] She was piano teacher to Princess Amelia and Princess Charlotte of Wales.[45] She performed in London from 1779, giving subscription concerts there in 1783/84.[43] She was known for her expressive style of playing.[43] Around this time she published her Six Sonatas, Op. 1, which gained extensive subscriptions,[46] including from royalty, and which were also published in Paris in 1784 and Berlin in 1785.[45] In addition to her keyboard sonatas, she also composed other keyboard pieces, such as her Introduction and March from Rossini's Ricciardo e Zoraide (1820) and a number of songs with keyboard accompaniment.

Marianne von Martínez (1744–1812) was an Austrian composer, singer and pianist. Metastasio noticed her precocious talents and came to oversee her musical education, which included keyboard lessons from Haydn, singing lessons with Porpora and composition lessons with Johann Adolph Hasse and the Imperial court composer Giuseppe Bonno. She was a native speaker of both Italian and German and knew French and English.[47] As a child, she played for the Imperial court, where she "attracted attention with her beautiful voice and her keyboard playing."[48] As an adult, she was frequently asked to perform before the Empress Maria Theresa.[47] A number of the works that Marianna composed are set for solo voice. She wrote a number of secular cantatas and two oratorios to Italian texts. Surviving compositions include four masses, six motets, and three litanies for choir. She wrote in the Italian style, as was typical for the early Classical period in Vienna. Her harpsichord performance practice was compared to the style of C. P. E. Bach. Her Italian oratorio Isacco figura del redentore was premiered by massive forces in 1782.[49]

Romantic era

[edit]
Fanny Mendelssohn, 1842, by Moritz Daniel Oppenheim

Maria Szymanowska (1789–1831) was a well-known Polish composer and pianist. She wrote in many of the same genres as fellow Pole Frederic Chopin (1810–1849). Szymanowska maintained connections with several famous nineteenth-century people, including Gioacchino Rossini, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and Adam Mickiewicz, Poland's greatest poet.

Fanny Mendelssohn (1805–1847) was one of the best-known women composers of the 1800s. She showed prodigious musical ability as a child and began to write music. Even though famous visitors to her family home were equally impressed by Fanny and her brother Felix Mendelssohn, Fanny was limited by prevailing attitudes of the time toward women. Her father was tolerant, rather than supportive, of her activities as a composer. Her father wrote to her in 1820, telling her that "[m]usic will perhaps become his [i.e. Felix's] profession, while for you it can and must be only an ornament [in your life]."[50] Felix cautioned her against publishing her works under her own name and seeking a career in music. He wrote:

From my knowledge of Fanny I should say that she has neither inclination nor vocation for [musical] authorship. She is too much all that a woman ought to be for this. She regulates her house, and neither thinks of the public nor of the musical world, nor even of music at all, until her first duties are fulfilled. Publishing would only disturb her in these, and I cannot say that I approve of it.[51]

Clara Schumann (1819–1896) was a German composer and concert pianist who had a 61-year concert career, which changed the format and repertoire of the piano recital and the tastes of the listening public. From an early age, she had a one-hour lesson in piano, violin, singing, theory, harmony, composition, and counterpoint. In 1830, at the age of eleven, she had become a virtuoso soloist and she left on a concert tour of European cities. In the late 1830s, she performed to sell-out crowds and laudatory critical reviews. Frédéric Chopin described her playing to Franz Liszt, who came to hear one of her concerts and subsequently "praised her extravagantly" in a letter that was published in the Parisian Revue et Gazette Musicale.[52] She was named a Königliche und Kaiserliche Kammervirtuosin ("Royal and Imperial Chamber Virtuoso"), Austria's highest musical honor.[52]

She was also instrumental in changing the kind of programs expected of concert pianists. In her early career, before her marriage to Robert Schumann, she played what was then customary, mainly bravura pieces designed to showcase the artist's technique, often in the form of arrangements or variations on popular themes from operas, written by virtuosos such as Thalberg, Herz, or Henselt. As it was also customary to play one's own compositions, she included at least one of her own works in every program, works such as her Variations on a Theme by Bellini (Op. 8) and her popular Scherzo (Op. 10). Her works include songs, piano pieces, a piano concerto, a piano trio, choral pieces, and three Romances for violin and piano.

20th and 21st century

[edit]
Composer Lili Boulanger (1893–1918)
Jennifer Higdon an American composer who has won a Pulitzer Prize for Music and multiple Grammy Awards for her compositions.

Katherine Hoover (1937–2018) studied music at the University of Rochester and the Eastman School of Music, where she earned a Performance Certificate in Flute and a Bachelor's of Music in Music Theory in 1959.[53] She started publishing professional works in 1965, with her Duet for Two Violins. Hoover was the winner of the National Flute Association's Newly Published Music Competition twice, first in 1987 with her piece Medieval Suite and second in 1991 with her piece Kokopelli for solo flute. These pieces use many extended techniques for flute, such as pitch bending. Many of her works have been recorded by renowned musicians and performed in Carnegie Hall.[54]: 252–253 

Joan Tower (born 1938) wrote her 1976 piece Black Topaz, which features many tonal melodies and harmonies.[55]: 134  She received her Doctor of Musical Arts degree in composition from Columbia University in 1978. She was commissioned in 1979 by the American Composers Orchestra, resulting in her first orchestral work, Sequoia. This has been performed by numerous orchestras worldwide. From 1985 to 1988 Tower was the composer-in-residence at the St. Louis Symphony. In 1990 she was the first woman to win the Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition, which included a prize of $150,000. Since then, Tower has been the composer-in-residence at numerous music festivals, including the Norfolk Chamber Music Festival and Tanglewood Contemporary Music Festival. Tower has been a professor of music at Bard College in New York since 1982 and is considered one of the most influential women composers of the 20th century.[54]: 278–280 

Ellen Taaffe Zwilich (born 1939) received her doctorate in composition from Juilliard and was the first woman to ever achieve this. The same year, she won a gold medal at the International Composition Competition in Italy. In 1983 Zwilich made history again, becoming the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music for her Symphony No. 1. Since this success, she has received many commissions. Her piece Millennium has been performed by twenty-seven orchestras since its premiere in 2000. She has been the Francis Eppes Professor of Music at Florida State University since 1999.[54]: 288–290  Zwilich is known to have an 'eclectic millennial voice' in her compositions, utilizing a clear design and rich timbres. Though her music was originally very dissonant and influenced by the Second Viennese School, her style became more emotional after the death of her husband.[55]: 179 

Libby Larsen (born 1950) earned her Master of Music in 1975 from the University of Minnesota and her PhD from the same school in 1978. In 1973 she co-founded the Minnesota Composers Forum, now known as the American Composers Forum.[56] Larsen was the composer-in-residence at the Minnesota Orchestra from 1983 to 1987. Larsen composed over 220 works, including orchestra, dance, opera, choral, theater, chamber, and solo repertoire. Her pieces have been performed across the United States and Europe. Larsen is a strong supporter of contemporary music and female musicians, and she won a Grammy Award for her CD The Art of Arleen Auger in 1994. Larsen won the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2000 and published her book The Concert Hall That Fell Asleep and Woke Up as a Car Radio in 2007.[55]: 242–253 [54]: 256–258 

Jennifer Higdon (born 1962) earned an MA and PhD from the University of Philadelphia in 1994. Higdon has received awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, American Academy of Arts and Letters, International League of Women Composers, and others. Her 1996 work Shine was named Best Contemporary Piece by USA Today.[54]: 252–253  Of Higdon's many pieces, blue cathedral is most frequently performed. In 2010, Higdon won the Grammy award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition for her Percussion Concerto. Also in 2010 she won the Pulitzer Prize for Music for her composition Violin Concerto, premiered by Hilary Hahn.[57]

Additional female composers are listed below. Some are also performers (e.g. Agnes Tyrrell, Amy Beach and Verdina Shlonsky were noted pianists). For a full list, see List of female composers by birth year.

Songwriters

[edit]

[l]ike most aspects of the... music business [in the 1960s], songwriting was a male-dominated field. Though there were plenty of female singers on the radio, women... were primarily seen as consumers:... Singing was sometimes an acceptable pastime for a girl, but playing an instrument, writing songs, or producing records simply wasn't done... [and women] were not socialized to see themselves as people who create [music].

Erika Abrams in Rebeat, 28 January 2015

A songwriter is an individual who writes the lyrics, melodies, and chord progressions for songs, typically for a popular music genre such as pop, rock, or country music. A songwriter can also be called a composer, although the latter term tends to be mainly used for individuals from the classical music genre.

A cowriter can help a songwriter balance out their own strengths and shortcomings by specializing in a particular area, such as lyrics or arranging. Many of the Top 40 songs that are consistently heard on streaming sites like Spotify or Pandora are written by seasoned songwriters who then provide their tune to top-tier talent for recording. Not all songwriters are singers.

  • Carole King, who wrote multiple hits for other artists before launching her own successful recording career. Her album Tapestry sold over 15 million copies worldwide.[58]
  • Joni Mitchell, who self-produced all of her own musically diverse albums.[58]
  • Dolly Parton, who has sole writing credit on over 700 songs and is described as the most successful female country artist of all time.[58]
  • Loretta Lynn, who wrote songs on the political issues of white working-class women in America, including contraception and divorce. For her accomplishments she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013.[59][58]

19th century-early 20th century

[edit]
Carole King, one of the most successful singer-songwriters, was included among Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Songwriters of All Time and Songwriters Hall of Fame.[58]

"Only a few of the many women [songwriters] in America had their music published and heard during the late 19th and early 20th centuries."[7] According to Richard A. Reublin and Richard G. Beil, the "lack of mention of women [songwriters] is a glaring and embarrassing omission in our musical heritage."[7] Women "struggled to write and publish music in the man's world of the 20th century Tin Pan Alley."[7] Before 1900 and even after, it was expected that "women would perform music, not make music."[7] In 1880, Chicago music critic George P. Upton wrote the book Women in Music, in which he argued that "women lacked the innate creativity to compose good music" due to the "biological predisposition" of women.[7] Later, it was accepted that women would have a role in music education, and they became involved in this field "to such a degree that women dominated music education during the later half of the 19th century and well into the 20th century."[7] As part of women's role in music education, women wrote hymns and children's music. The "secular music in print in America before 1825 shows only about 70 works by women."[7] In the mid-19th century, women songwriters emerged, including Faustina Hasse Hodges, Susan McFarland Parkhurst, Augusta Browne and Marion Dix Sullivan. By 1900, there were many more women songwriters, but "many were still forced to use pseudonyms or initials" to hide the fact that they were women.[7]

Carrie Jacobs-Bond was the "preeminent woman composer of the late 1800s and well into the middle of the twentieth century... [making her] the first million-selling woman" songwriter.[7] Maude Nugent (1877–1958) wrote "Sweet Rosie O'Grady" in 1896. She also penned "Down at Rosie Reilly's Flat", "My Irish Daisy" and "Mary From Tipperary".[7] Charlotte Blake (1885–1979) was a staff writer for the Whitney Warner Publishing Co., in Detroit, Michigan. Initially, the company billed her as "C. Blake" to hide her gender, but by 1906 ads used her full name.[7] Caro Roma (1866–1937) was the gender-ambiguous pseudonym for Carrie Northly. She was "one of America's more well known and popular composers of the Tin Pan Alley era."[7] Her songs include "Can't Yo' Heah Me Calling", "Faded Rose", "The Angelus", "Thinking of Thee" and "Resignation."[7] About 95% of the songwriters in British music hall during the early 1900s were men; however, about 30% of the singers were women.[60]

Jazz in the 20th century

[edit]
Examples of 20th century jazz female figures

While jazz songwriting has long been a male-dominated field, there have also been women jazz songwriters. In the 1930s, Ann Ronell (1905–1993) wrote the songs "Willow Weep for Me" and "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?."[61] Irene Higginbotham (1918–1988) wrote almost 50 songs, her best-known being "Good Morning Heartache."[61] Dorothy Fields (1905–1974) wrote the lyrics for over 400 songs, some of which were played by Duke Ellington. She co-wrote "The Way You Look Tonight" with Jerome Kern, which won the 1936 Oscar for Best Song. She co-wrote several jazz standards with Jimmy McHugh, such as "Exactly Like You", "On the Sunny Side of the Street" and "I Can't Give You Anything but Love."[61] Lil Hardin Armstrong (1898–1971) played piano in King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band. Her song "Struttin' with Some Barbecue" has been recorded 500 times. Armstrong also recorded "Doin' the Suzie Q", "Just for a Thrill" and "Bad Boy."[61] Billie Holiday (1915–1959) was a singer who co-wrote "God Bless the Child" and "Don't Explain" with Arthur Herzog, Jr. and she penned the blues song "Fine and Mellow."[61]

Jazz music was a propelling force to help women with liberation in the early 20th century. Jazz music also helped pave the way for more jobs for women. This increase of a very male-dominated career until the 1920s allowed more women to be in a performing arts career. In return for this increase, Showboat, the first jazz Broadway musical, was produced. Showboat discusses the hardships of family in Mississippi and the reunification of family.[62] Jazz music was an influence in helping women gain jobs, as well as opening the environment for post-war equality and freer sexuality in the early twentieth century.[citation needed] Many of the women in jazz music at the time helped influence the genre and many jazz women musicians were people of color. These factors helped grow the genre to what it is today.[citation needed]

Many women influenced jazz music by producing, composing, and performing jazz music. An influential woman in jazz music was Bessie Smith, also known as the Empress of the Blues. She lived from 1894 to 1937. She is a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, and 1989 Smith was awarded a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.[63] Another woman who made history in the jazz industry is Dolly Jones, the first woman jazz trumpeter to be recorded.[64] Many women do not get credit in this genre as their male counterparts do. Women like Sweet Emma Barrett, who performed in the Original Tuxedo Orchestra, toured domestically and internationally. One of Barrett's hit songs is "A Good Man is Hard to Find". More women such as Billie Pierce, Lovie Austin, Jeanette Kimball, Mary Lou Williams, Alice Coltrane, and Hazel Scott, all had an impact in the jazz genre.[65] These women made their mark especially by being women in a very male-dominated genre.

Many of these women who are well-known in the jazz world are not seen to receive as much recognition as they deserve because of their male competitors.[citation needed] Not only were women influential as jazz singers, but there are so many jazz musicians that also do not get their credit. One woman was Ingrid Monson, who brought to the attention that when women first started to play the piano, they also gained more social acceptance in the music industry. Typically women would be seen to play in an all-women's jazz group, but when they would step into the "professional jazz world" they would be an instant hit.[66] One woman, by the name of Valaida Snow, was also known as the "queen of the trumpet."[67] Another woman, Nona Hendryx, was a jazz vocalist who also played many instruments and got the chance to work with many talented hip-hop artists like Prince.[67] There are many such accomplished women whose names are not known.

These women had a lot of success, but for some it was short-lived. These women rose to fame when men were drafted into World War II. However, once the men came home from being deployed, the jazz musicians who were women were then faced with difficult hardships. Problems such as sexual harassment and harsh criticism from their other band members and fellow jazz musicians were seen.[citation needed]

Pop in the 1960s

[edit]
Dusty Springfield in 1965

In the 1960s pop music scene, "[l]ike most aspects of the...music business [in the 1960s], songwriting was a male-dominated field. Though there were plenty of female singers on the radio, women ...were primarily seen as consumers:... Singing was sometimes an acceptable pastime for a girl, but playing an instrument, writing songs, or producing records simply wasn't done."[68] Young women "were not socialized to see themselves as people who create [music]."[68] Carole King "had a successful songwriting partnershi[p] with husband Gerry Goffin, penning hits like "The Loco-Motion," "Will You Love Me Tomorrow", "Up on the Roof" and "Natural Woman." "King was the first female recipient of the 2013 Gershwin Prize for Popular Song."[68] Ellie Greenwich and her husband Jeff Barry wrote "Then He Kissed Me", "Be My Baby" and "River Deep, Mountain High." Laura Nyro penned "Wedding Bell Blues", "Eli's Coming" and "And When I Die." She stated "I'm not interested in conventional limitations when it comes to my songwriting...I may bring a certain feminist perspective to my songwriting."[68] During the 1960s, both King and Goffin demonstrated the changing nature of American music as well as the emergence of new romantic and sexual patterns. "Musicians represented one of the leading edges of sexual and romantic change in American society",[69] impacting and shifting the youth's social standards. During the late 1940s and 1950s, young people began settling into marriages and adult responsibilities at a very young age.[69] However, King challenged the date, marriage, sex sequence by demonstrating that sex after marriage and the conventional practice of dating, is not captivating. She promoted the casualness of relationships between people and highlighted the trend of those of the opposite sex "becoming friends"[69] with her song "You've Got a Friend."

1960s: New wave of female singer-songwriters

[edit]
Baez stands behind a too-tall podium bristling with microphones, wearing a plaid sleeveless top, longish hair in a feather cut
Joan Baez playing at the March on Washington in August 1963

By the late 1960s, a new wave of female singer-songwriters broke from the confines of pop, writing more personal songs in the confessional style of poets like Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath. The artists spearheading this movement were featured in Newsweek, July 1969, "The Girls: Letting Go": "What is common to them – to Joni Mitchell and Lotti Golden, to Laura Nyro, Melanie, Janis Ian and to Elyse Weinberg, are the personalized songs they write, like voyages of self-discovery."[70] While innovating, these women also faced many struggles such as discrimination. In a male-dominated publishing world, female songwriters such as Joni Mitchell want to be seen outside categories of race and gender, and into the category of pure artistry.[71] In her 1994 interview with Alice Echol, Joni Mitchell rejected feminism but voiced her animosity towards discrimination, sex-based exclusion, and gratuitous sexualization. Echol places Mitchell's "discomfort with the feminist label into the context of her artistry."[71] Women songwriters want to be seen as good musicians without having their talents marginalized because of their gender. Moreover, Grace Slick, a former model, was widely known in rock and roll history for her role in San Francisco's burgeoning psychedelic music scene in the mid-1960s. In The Guardian, 26 January 2017, author Laura Barton describes the radical shift in subject matter – politics, drugs, disappointment, the isolation of the itinerant performer, and urban life.[72] Native New Yorker, Lotti Golden, in her Atlantic debut album Motor-Cycle, chronicled her life in NYC's East Village in the late 1960s counterculture, visiting subjects such as gender identity ("The Space Queens [Silky is Sad]") and excessive drug use ("Gonna Fay's"). The women in the 1969 Newsweek article ushered in a new age of the singer-songwriter, informing generations of women singer-songwriters from the 1970s to the present day.[70][72]

Musical theatre

[edit]
Ethel Merman Known as the "First Lady of Musical Theatre," Ethel Merman's powerful voice and larger-than-life presence graced many Broadway stages.

In musical theatre, "female songwriters are rare in an industry dominated by males on the creative end. Work by male songwriters is more often produced, and it was only [in 2015] that an all-female writing team made history by winning the Tony Award for Best Score."[73] In 2015, for the first time, an all-female writing team of Lisa Kron (Best Book) and Jeanine Tesori and Kron (Best Original Score)[74] won the Tony Award for Best Score for Fun Home, although work by male songwriters continues to be produced more often.[73] In 2013, Cyndi Lauper was the "first female composer to win the [Tony for] Best Score without a male collaborator" for writing the music and lyrics for Kinky Boots.[74] Female songwriters in musical theatre include singer-songwriter and actress Lauren Pritchard, who wrote Songbird; Zoe Sarnak, who wrote A Lasting Impression and The Years Between; and Katie Thompson, who would like to "see women characters...that are complicated and strong and vulnerable."[73] Thompson stated that in the musical theatre industry, "when you fight for something as a woman, especially an artistic thing ..you are either perceived as being a bitch or you are perceived [as] 'emotional'", a label that enables others to dismiss you.[73] The gender imbalance in musical theater exists well into the twenty-first century with women being only 3% of wind band composers and 12% of the choral composers.[75] Despite the stigma and lack of women in musical theater, over fifty women have received international artistic recognition for composing full-length musical scores on Broadway and Off-Broadway theaters.[75]

Black women

[edit]
Abbey Lincoln (1930–2010), was an American jazz vocalist, songwriter, and actress, who wrote and performed her own compositions. She was a civil rights advocate during the 1960s.[76][77]

African-american women have made historical contributions to jazz, blues, rock, gospel, and other genres over the years. Early examples include Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, and Diana Ross, more contemporary artists include Missy Elliott, Mariah Carey, Beyoncé, and Rihanna. Female musicians, especially Black women, nevertheless experience their jobs differently than their male counterparts, as do women in many other industries. According to LaShonda Katrice Barnett, a college and university teacher and author of a book on black women songwriters, of the "over 380 members of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, just two are black women (Sylvia Moy and Valerie Simpson)."[78]

Teyana Taylor decided to leave the music industry in December 2020, when her album The Album from June 2020 was not nominated for a Grammy even though it had placed as number 1 at the Billbord Top R&B Albums chart in July. Taylor had expressed her frustration with the fact that only male performers had been nominated for a Best R&B Album Grammy that year.[79]

Instrumental performers

[edit]
[edit]

Individuals and bandleaders

[edit]
Known for her powerful and soulful voice, Janis Joplin was a trailblazer in the rock music scene of the 1960s.
Suzi Quatro is a singer, bassist and bandleader. When she launched her career in 1973, she was one of the few prominent women instrumentalists and bandleaders

Women have a high prominence in many popular music styles as singers. However, professional women instrumentalists are uncommon in popular music, especially in rock genres such as heavy metal. "[P]laying in a band is largely a male homosocial activity, that is, learning to play in a band is largely a peer-based... experience, shaped by existing sex-segregated friendship networks.[6]: 101–102  As well, rock music "is often defined as a form of male rebellion vis-à-vis female bedroom culture."[6]: 102  In popular music, there has been a gendered "distinction between public (male) and private (female) participation" in music.[6]: 102  "[S]everal scholars have argued that men exclude women from bands or from the bands' rehearsals, recordings, performances, and other social activities."[6]: 104  "Women are mainly regarded as passive and private consumers of allegedly slick, prefabricated – hence, inferior – pop music..., excluding them from participating as high status rock musicians."[6]: 104  One of the reasons that there are rarely mixed gender bands is that "bands operate as tight-knit units in which homosocial solidarity – social bonds between people of the same sex... – plays a crucial role."[6]: 104  In the 1960s pop music scene, "[s]inging was sometimes an acceptable pastime for a girl, but playing an instrument...simply wasn't done."[68]

"The rebellion of rock music was largely a male rebellion; the women—often, in the 1950s and '60s, girls in their teens—in rock usually sang songs as personæ utterly dependent on their macho boyfriends...."[80] Philip Auslander says that "Although there were many women in rock by the late 1960s, most performed only as singers, a traditionally feminine position in popular music." Though some women played instruments in American all-female garage rock bands, none of these bands achieved more than regional success. So they "did not provide viable templates for women's on-going participation in rock."[81]: 2–3  In relation to the gender composition of heavy metal bands, it has been said that "[h]eavy metal performers are almost exclusively male"[82] "[a]t least until the mid-1980s"[83] apart from "exceptions such as Girlschool."[82] However, "now [in the 2010s] maybe more than ever–strong metal women have put up their dukes and got down to it",[84] "carv[ing] out a considerable place for [them]selves."[85] When Suzi Quatro emerged in 1973, "no other prominent female musician worked in rock simultaneously as a singer, instrumentalist, songwriter, and bandleader."[81]: 2  According to Auslander, she was "kicking down the male door in rock and roll and proving that a female musician ... and this is a point I am extremely concerned about ... could play as well if not better than the boys."[81]: 3 

A number of these artists are also sang and wrote songs, but they are listed here for their instrumental skills:

All-female bands and girl groups

[edit]

An all-female band is a musical group in popular music genres such as blues, jazz and related genres which is exclusively composed of female musicians. This is distinct from a girl group, in which the female members are solely vocalists, though this terminology is not universally followed. For example, vocalist groups Girls Aloud are referred to as a "girl band" in OK! magazine[86] and The Guardian,[87] while Girlschool are termed a "girl group" at IMDb[88] and Belfast Telegraph.[89] While all-male bands are common in many rock and pop bands, all-female bands are less common.

A girl group is a music act featuring several female singers who generally harmonize together. The term girl group is also used in a narrower sense within English-speaking countries to denote the wave of American female pop music singing groups that flourished in the late 1950s and early 1960s between the decline of early rock and roll and the British Invasion, many of whom were influenced by doo-wop style.[90][91] All-female bands are sometimes also called girl groups.[92] These all-female bands were difficult to maintain, as many earlier groups struggled with replacing female musicians once they departed, and some were forced to open the bands to men to avoid quitting.[93]

1930s–1960s

[edit]
Stevie Nicks performing

In the Jazz Age and during the 1930s, all-female bands such as The Blue Belles, the Parisian Redheads (later the Bricktops), Lil-Hardin's All-Girl Band, The Ingenues, the Harlem Playgirls, Phil Spitalny's Musical Sweethearts and Helen Lewis and Her All-Girl Jazz Syncopators were popular. Ina Ray Hutton led an all-girl band, the Melodears, from 1934 to 1939. Eunice Westmoreland, under the name Rita Rio, led an all-female band appearing on NBC Radio and for Vitaphone and RKO. A Polish group Filipinki was established in 1959.[94]

Groups composed solely of women began to emerge with the advent of rock and roll. Among the earliest all-female rock bands to be signed to a record label were Goldie & the Gingerbreads, to Atlantic Records in 1964, The Pleasure Seekers with Suzi Quatro to Hideout Records in 1964 and Mercury Records in 1968, The Feminine Complex to Athena Records in 1968, and Fanny (who pioneered the all-female band sound in the early to mid-1970s) in 1969 when Mo Ostin signed them to Warner Bros. Records. There were also others, such as The Liverbirds (1962–1967), the Ace of Cups (1967), The Heart Beats (1968), Ariel (1968–1970), and the New Coon Creek Girls (1930s).[93]

1970s–1980s

[edit]
Joan Jett is known for her fierce attitude and punk-inspired sound.

In 1971 Fanny became the first all-female band to reach the Hot 100's top 40, with "Charity Ball" peaking at No. 40. In 1975, the Canadian duo of sisters, Kate and Anna McGarrigle, recorded the first of a string of albums. The Runaways were an early commercially successful, hard-edged, all-female hard rock band, releasing their first album in 1976: band members Joan Jett, Cherie Currie and Lita Ford all went on to solo careers. The 1980s, for the first time, saw long-sought chart success from all-female bands and female-fronted rock bands. On the Billboard Hot 100-year-end chart for 1982[95] Joan Jett's "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" at No. 3 and the Go-Go's "We Got the Beat" at No. 25 sent a message out to many industry heads that women who could play could bring in money. In 1989, one of the most famous female bands, the Dixie Chicks, began playing on street corners in Dallas, Texas. The band is trio consisting of Natalie Maines as lead singer, Natalie Maguire on the fiddle and mandolin, and Emily Robison on banjo, the Dobro, guitar, and the accordion. The Dixie Chicks sold more CDs than all other country music groups combined.[citation needed] They won five Grammys, in 2000, the Country Music Association's Album of the Year, and the Vocal Group of the Year award in 2002. Another famous female band includes the WildWood Girls. Originally the WildWood Pickers beginning in 1979 from the Chicago area, the all-female band began after the band became a family affair and later, they changed their name to WildWood Girls in 1982, resulting in twice as many bookings. They embarked on overseas tours for the USO and Department of Defense, worked as a band at Dollywood for about five years, and they played many times at Bill Monroe's Bean Blossom Festival in Indiana for 10 years. They released six recordings, despite the issues they ran into regarding the fact that they were an all-girl band.[citation needed] Yet another famous band is the Happy Hollow Stringband (1974–1979). They were an all-female bluegrass band with Sandy Crisco on banjo. Crisco reported that it was difficult to find the ladies restroom during bookings, as due to the lack of female performers, many male instrumentalists did not know where it was.[93]

Punk
[edit]
Viv Albertine (left) and Patti Smith (right), examples of punk female stars. The lattermost became known as the "Godmother of Punk".

In the United Kingdom, the advent of punk in the late 1970s with its "anyone can do it" ethos led to women making significant contributions.[96][97] In contrast to the rock music and heavy metal scenes of the 1970s, which were dominated by men, the anarchic, counter-cultural mindset of the punk scene in mid- and late 1970s encouraged women to participate. "That was the beauty of the punk thing," Chrissie Hynde later said." [Sexual] discrimination didn't exist in that scene."[98] This participation played a role in the historical development of punk music, especially in the U.S. and U.K. at that time, and continues to influence and enable future generations.[99]

Rock historian Helen Reddington states that the popular image of young punk women musicians as focused on the fashion aspects of the scene (fishnet stockings, spiky blond hair, etc.) was stereotypical. She states that many, if not most women punks were more interested in the ideology and socio-political implications, rather than the fashion.[100][101] Music historian Caroline Coon contends that before punk, women in rock music were virtually invisible; in contrast, in punk, she argues "[i]t would be possible to write the whole history of punk music without mentioning any male bands at all – and I think a lot of [people] would find that very surprising."[102][103] Johnny Rotten wrote that "During the Pistols era, women were out there playing with the men, taking us on in equal terms ... It wasn't combative, but compatible."[104] Women were involved in bands such as The Slits, The Raincoats, Mo-dettes, and Dolly Mixture, The Innocents.

Others take issue with the notion of equal recognition, such as guitarist Viv Albertine, who stated that "the A&R men, the bouncers, the sound mixers, no one took us seriously.. So, no, we got no respect anywhere we went. People just didn't want us around."[105][106] The anti-establishment stance of punk opened the space for women who were treated like outsiders in a male-dominated industry. Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon states, "I think women are natural anarchists, because you're always operating in a male framework."[107]

Heavy metal
[edit]
Girlschool is a British all-women heavy metal band formed in the new wave of British heavy metal scene in 1978 and frequently associated with contemporaries Motörhead. They are the longest running all-female rock band, still active after more than 35 years.[108][109]

The all-female heavy metal band Girlschool, from South London, formed in 1978. While somewhat successful in the UK, they became better known in the early 1980s. One of the original members of the band, Kathy Valentine, departed to join the all-female band The Go-Go's, switching from guitar to bass. Among Girlschool's early recordings was an EP titled "The St. Valentines Day Massacre" which they recorded with Bronze label-mates Motörhead under the name Headgirl. In 1974, The Deadly Nightshade, a rock/country band, was signed by Phantom. Women in the heavy metal genre tend to have to limit themselves due to the genre being very male orientated.[110]

Grunge
[edit]
Courtney Love, playing a Fender Mustang in 2012, has played both Fender and Rickenbacker guitars throughout her career

While there is a perception that the groups in the 1980s and 1990s alternative rock genre of grunge were "overwhelmingly male", women were represented in grunge bands such as L7, Lunachicks, Dickless, STP, 7 Year Bitch, Courtney Love's group Hole and Babes in Toyland, the latter an "all-female Minneapolis band", and grunge was "inextricably linked with Riot Grrrl", an underground feminist punk movement.[111] Women instrumentalists include the bassists D'arcy Wretzky and Melissa Auf der Maur from The Smashing Pumpkins and drummers Patty Schemel (Hole and Courtney Love projects) and Lori Barbero of Babes in Toyland.[112]

Rock music's grunge genre, which peaked in the late 1980s and early 1990s, as well as its associated fashion. The murky-guitar bands that developed from Seattle in the late 1980s as a link between popular 1980s heavy metal-hard rock and post-punk alternative rock are known as grunge. Most notably, these bands include Nirvana and Pearl Jam.

Grunge was born on Seattle's independent Sub Pop record label as Mudhoney, Nirvana, Screaming Trees, and Soundgarden followed in the footsteps of the Melvins, a pioneering Northwestern band, and incorporated elements of punk rock, hardcore-punk inheritors of its DIY ethic, such as Hüsker Dü, and the sound of 1970s heavy metal bands such as Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, and AC/DC.

The Melvins, a band from the Midwest. Nirvana and Pearl Jam garnered a quickly expanding following, signed to major labels, and created albums that sold millions of copies by fusing guitar distortion, agonized vocals, and sincere, angst-ridden lyrics. Following their triumph, Seattle, which was already enjoying an economic boom as a result of the Microsoft Corporation's rapid expansion, attracted record industry professionals seeking for the next big thing. With the help of the media, grunge quickly gained popularity abroad. As a result, American department stores began carrying imitations of the flannel shirts, thermal underwear, combat boots, and stocking caps that Seattle bands and their followers favored.

When Nirvana's Kurt Cobain passed away in 1994, the grunge movement eventually waned. This was partly due to Cobain's role as a generational spokesperson as well as the underwhelming album sales of many Seattle-based bands who were never able to break through. Yet, grunge significantly contributed to the mainstreaming of alternative rock.[113]

1990s–2000s

[edit]
Alanis Morissette signing autographs for fans, 2011

In the 1990s, musician's magazines were starting to view female musicians more seriously, putting Bonnie Raitt[114][115] and Tina Weymouth[116] on their covers. While The Go-Go's and The Bangles, both from the LA club scene, were the first all-female rock bands to find sustained success, individual musicians paved the way for the industry to seek out bands that had female musicians.

In rock music, bands such as Hole, Super Heroines, The Lovedolls and L7 became popular, while demonstrating on stage, and in interviews, a self-confident and "bad" attitude at times, always willing to challenge assumptions about how an all-female band should behave. Courtney Love described her band Hole's artistic ambitions as "[not] only repeating what men have done" while "coming at things from a more feminine, lunar, viewpoint.[117]

Also in the 1990s, the punk, female-led Riot Grrrl movement was associated with bands such as Bratmobile and Bikini Kill.

In pop music, two highly commercialised groups rose to fame in this decade, that would both break apart shortly after. Destiny's Child was an all female American group composed of Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland, and Michelle Williams. Destiny's Child began as Girl's Tyme, in 1990 and years later, it was signed to Columbia Records and Music World Entertainment as Destiny's Child in 1997. Destiny's Child's best-selling second album was The Writing's on the Wall (1999), which included "Bills, Bills, Bills" and "Say My Name."[118] Additionally, the Spice Girls was a British all girl pop group that formed in 1994. The band is composed of Mel B, Melanie C, Emma Bunton, Geri Halliwell, and Victoria Beckham. They signed with Virgin Records; their single "Wannabe" came out in 1996 and was deemed as number one in 37 countries.[119]

2000s–2010s

[edit]
Florence and the Machine performing at the O2 ABC Glasgow during the band's Lungs Tour

In the 2000s, all female and female fronted bands started using their influence to promote feminism and women in the music industry. Bands like The Distillers, fronted by Brody Dalle, influenced the rise of street punk. St. Vincent started gaining more traction and eventually appeared on the cover of Guitar World magazine. St. Vincent wore a T-shirt with a bikini decal on the magazine cover, a comment on how when women appear with guitars, they are usually dressed very minimally, as a marketing tool to sell the instruments. Haim, a band composed of three sisters, is extremely outspoken when it comes to the promotion of women in music, calling out major music festivals for the lack of female-fronted bands on bills and the lack of payment for female artists as compared to male artists of the same level.[120][121] In recent years, the lack of female representation in music has been a major controversial point in the industry. Female musicians and bands are constantly overlooked in favor of male artists; however, many people in the music industry have been making an effort to change this.

2010s–2018

[edit]
Samantha Fish known for her blues-infused rock sound and virtuosic guitar playing

From 2010 to 2018, many girl bands have emerged and became more popular. One of the most famous girl bands is Little Mix (2011), a British band that originated on The X Factor and is composed of Jesy Nelson, Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Jade Thirlwall, and Perrie Edwards. Little Mix is the first all female group since the Pussycat Dolls to reach the US top five with their album DNA (2012). They also broke the record held by the Spice Girls by earning the highest debut US chart position for a British girl group's first release.[122] Additionally, Fifth Harmony is an American female group that is based in Miami and composed of Ally Brooke, Normani Kordei, Dinah Jane, Lauren Jauregui, and Camila Cabello until her departure in 2016. This group was also on the X Factor in 2012. Their three studio albums charted on the top ten of the US Billboard 200.[123]

Jazz

[edit]

Historically, the majority of well-known women performers in jazz have been singers, such as Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Diane Schuur and Dinah Washington. Culture Trip notes that women in jazz have been "too often confined to the role of chanteuse."[124] However, there are many instrumental performers. In some cases, these musicians are also composers and bandleaders:

From left to right: Mary Lou Williams and Sarah Vaughan, two leading examples of well-known jazz performers

There have also been all-female jazz bands such as The International Sweethearts of Rhythm and all-female orchestras such as the Hour of Charm Orchestra. Often, during World War II, these all women's groups would entertain the troops while the male musicians served. However, after the war, these girls groups were thrown aside, as male musicians returned and the public favored the "normalcy" it brought, and the over-sexualization of women in music returned.[125]

Some of these musicians helped shape jazz music and American culture. When June Norton was young, she wanted to pursue classical music, in hopes that one day she could join the opera. However, this did not seem possible, so she began to pursue popular music. Norton became the first black woman in the region of Washington, D.C., to appear singing in TV commercials marketed towards southern states. This led to her accomplishments of many awards including the 1962 Achievement Award from the National Association of Colored Women, the TV Personality of the Year award, the 1962 Emphasis Award from the National Association of Market Development, and the 1962 Singer of the Year Award from the YMCA. She later stepped away from the spotlight and began a career as a counselor and married Thomas C. Cuff. She spent the rest of her working years helping underprivileged youth and female prisoners.[125]

Another female pianist, composer, and vocalist made significant contribution to jazz and the American culture. Shirley Horn (1934–2005) recorded more than 25 albums and worked as a side musician for Stuff Smith, Toots Thielemans, Charlie Haden, and Oscar Peterson. She practiced at the Howard University Junior School of Music, and later received offers from Juilliard University and Xavier University, but opted to remain in Washington, D.C., marry, and have a child. She continued to tour and play gigs constantly. Her first recording was part of Stuff Smith's 1959 release, Cat on a Hot Fiddle. Her debut recording, Embers and Ashes, attracted a large amount of attention and helped her to realize she wanted to be a concert pianist after all. A few months after this, Miles Davis contacted Horn and told Village Vanguard in New York City that he wanted Horn to open for him, and that he refused to play if this was not a possibility. This is when Horn's fame and reputation began to rise. She continued to work with Mercury Records and Verve Records. She received many awards including a Grammy Award in 1999 for Best Jazz vocal album for I Remember Miles, five Washington Area Music Awards, an honorary music degree from the Berklee College of Music, and a 2004 NEA Jazz Master Fellowship and Award from the National Endowment for the Arts.[125]

Classical music

[edit]
Statue of Ethel Smyth unveiled in Duke's Court Plaza, Woking, in 2022

Instrumentalists in classical music may focus on one specific type of playing, such as solo recitals, solo concertos, chamber music, or performing as a member of an orchestra, or they may do different types. Some musicians who play orchestral instruments may do all of these types of performances. Instrumentalists in classical music may do both live performances for an audience and recordings. In some cases, classical performers may do mostly live performances. There has traditionally been a gendered aspect to playing instruments in classical music.

Many album covers for female classical musicians have photographs that emphasize the physical attractiveness of the performer, "often using risqué images."[126] According to Jessica Duchen, a music writer for London's The Independent, classical women musicians are "too often judged for their appearances, rather than their talent" and they face pressure "to look sexy onstage and in photos."[8] Duchen states that while "[t]here are women musicians who refuse to play on their looks,...the ones who do tend to be more materially successful."[8]

Orchestra

[edit]
The Montreal Women's Symphony Orchestra in 1942
Marin Alsop with OSESP
Classical violinist Sarah Chang before performing a 2005 solo concert

Historically, orchestras tended to be almost exclusively male, with the exception of the harp player, as the harp was considered a "women's instrument." The Aeolian Ladies' Orchestra, founded in 1894 by Rosabel Watson in London, was one of the first professional orchestras exclusively for women. A music newspaper editorial in 1917 in England encouraged orchestras to allow women to play the "lighter instruments", with the understanding that these women performers would relinquish their positions to men once WW I was over.[60] In the 1990s, to reduce the likelihood of gender bias, some orchestras began conducting auditions of potential new members behind a screen, so the audition panel could not see if it was a male or female performer. Historically, there has been a tendency for brass sections to be male, and some women brass players have alleged that there is gender bias against female brass players. A study in the 1980s found that women made up 36% of US orchestras; 30% in the United Kingdom, and 16% in East and West Germany.[127] Women tended to be hired by lower paid orchestras and they were less present in major orchestras.[127] In 1922, harpist Stephanie Goldner became the first female member of the New York Philharmonic.[128] One hundred years later, in 2022, the number of women members outnumbered the men in the Philharmonic.[129]

In the past, the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (VPO) argued that "ethnic and gender uniformity" gave their orchestra a better sound.[127] Several male VPO musicians stated in a 1996 interview that classical music has "gender-defined qualities which can be most clearly expressed by male uniformity" in the orchestra.[127] One male VPO member stated that men "carry secrets that are involved with music and tones, just like in Australian aboriginal or Indian cultures where men play certain instruments, and not the women."[127] One male VPO performer stated that "pregnancy brings problems. It brings disorder. Another important argument against women is that they can bring the solidarity of the men in question. You find that in all men's groups."[127]

The Vienna Philharmonic did not accept women to permanent membership until 1997, far later than comparable orchestras (of the other orchestras ranked among the world's top five by Gramophone in 2008,[130] the last to appoint a woman to a permanent position was the Berlin Philharmonic.)[131] As late as February 1996, first flautist Dieter Flury told Westdeutscher Rundfunk that accepting women would be "gambling with the emotional unity (emotionelle Geschlossenheit) that this organism currently has."[132] In April 1996, the orchestra's press secretary wrote that "compensating for the expected leaves of absence" of maternity leave was a problem.[133]

In 1997, the orchestra was "facing protests during a [US] tour" by the National Organization for Women and International Association of Women in Music. Finally, "after being held up to increasing ridicule even in socially conservative Austria, members of the orchestra gathered [on 28 February 1997] in an extraordinary meeting on the eve of their departure and agreed to admit a woman, Anna Lelkes, as harpist."[134] As of 2013, the orchestra has six female members; one of them, violinist Albena Danailova became one of the orchestra's concertmasters in 2008, the first woman to hold that position.[135] In 2012, women still made up just 6% of the orchestra's membership, compared to 14% in the Berlin Philharmonic, 30% in the London Symphony Orchestra, and 36% in the New York Philharmonic. VPO president Clemens Hellsberg said the VPO now uses completely screened blind auditions. She said it chooses "the best we get," implying that full gender equity would take time as older members retire and new ones audition under gender-neutral conditions.[136] The Czech Philharmonic excludes women and the Berlin Philharmonic "has a history of gender discrimination."[127]

In 2013, an article in Mother Jones stated that "[m]any prestigious orchestras have significant female membership—women outnumber men in the New York Philharmonic's violin section—and several renowned ensembles, including the National Symphony Orchestra, the Detroit Symphony, and the Minnesota Symphony, are led by women violinists. Brass, percussion, and string-bass orchestra sections are still predominantly male."[10]

Soloists

[edit]

In classical music, soloists may perform unaccompanied solos on their instrument, as occurs with pianists who play works for solo piano or stringed instruments who play Baroque suites for one instrument (e.g., Bach suites for solo cello). In many cases, though, soloists are accompanied, either by a pianist, a small chamber music ensemble, or, in the case of a concerto, by a full symphony orchestra. In the 2014–2015 season, the majority of concerto soloists who performed with major Canadian orchestras were male. In the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, 67% of the concerto soloists were male. In the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, 74% of the concerto soloists were male. In the National Arts Centre Orchestra, 79% of the concerto soloists were male. In the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, 84% of the concerto soloists were male.[8] When the CBC news story on the gender balance of concerto soloists was released, the conductor of the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, Bramwell Tovey, disputed the accuracy of the news story in regards to his orchestra, arguing that the article only took a single season into account.[citation needed] An internationally famed soloist is Argentina's Martha Argerich who is considered to be one of the greatest pianists of the recorded era.

Singers

[edit]
[edit]
Taylor Swift
Madonna
Lana del Rey
Adele
Shakira
Mariah Carey
Lady Gaga
Björk
Examples of influential pop musical female figures, some of whom are among the best-selling musical artists of all-time

Singers in popular music perform the vocals for bands and other music groups, which may range in size from a duo or a power trio to a large jazz big band. Singers typically do both live performances and studio recordings. Singers who do live performances may sing in small venues such as coffeehouses or nightclubs, or they may perform in larger venues ranging from arts centres to stadiums. Some singers also perform in music videos, which are used to promote the songs. In some styles of music, singers may play a rhythm section instrument, such as rhythm guitar, electric bass or a percussion instrument while they sing. In some styles of pop, singers perform choreographed dance moves during the show. Three well-known examples of pop singers who perform elaborate dance routines in their live shows are Madonna, Beyoncé and Britney Spears. Madonna is a key figure in popular music; critics have retrospectively credited her presence, success and contributions with paving the way for every female artist after her debut, and changing forever the music scene for women in the music history, as well as for today's pop stars.[137]

Singer-songwriter and music producer Björk has commented on how "women's labor and expertise—inside and outside of the music industry—go unnoticed." She has stated that "[I]t's invisible, what women do," and "[I]t's not rewarded as much."[1] Björk states "that her male collaborators are typically credited for the sound of her records; because on stage she mainly sings, there is a widespread assumption that she neither produces [as a music producer] nor plays an instrument."[1] In 2015, "while accepting the Woman of the Year honor at this year's Billboard Women in Music event", Lady Gaga commented on the "difficulties of being a female recording artist." She said it "is really hard sometimes for women in music. It's like a f[uck]ing boys club that we just can't get in to." She stated that she "tried for so long... to be taken seriously as a musician for my intelligence more than my body", yet she felt that others in the industry did not believe that women could have a "musical background... [or] understand what you're doing because you're a female."[2] A University Press of Kentucky book states that customers did not treat a woman who worked at a guitar store like she knew anything about guitars until she would use special guitar terms.[71]: 19  Indie folk singer-songwriter/guitarist Ani di Franco states that for women, in the past, even entering a guitar store was an "act of courage" because it felt like a "boys' club."[71]: 19  Not only do female artists feel the pressure to please their male counterparts but it is also difficult for female DJs to fit in, in a male-dominated field.[138]

Despite funk's popularity in modern music, few people have examined the work of funk women. As cultural critic Cheryl Keyes explains in her essay "She Was too Black for Rock and too hard for Soul: (Re)discovering the Musical Career of Betty Mabry Davis", most of the scholarship around funk has focused on the cultural work of men. She states that "Betty Davis is an artist whose name has gone unheralded as a pioneer in the annals of funk and rock. Most writing on these musical genres has traditionally placed male artists like Jimi Hendrix, George Clinton (of Parliament-Funkadelic), and bassist Larry Graham as trendsetters in the shaping of a rock music sensibility".[139] Funk women include Chaka Khan, Labelle, Brides of Funkenstein, Klymaxx, Mother's Finest, and Betty Davis.

Some of the top-earning female singers since the 2000s were Adele, Angham, Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Madonna, Kylie Minogue, Katy Perry, Rihanna, Britney Spears, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, Jennifer Lopez, Shakira, and Sherine. Almost all of these singers are also songwriters, and some are also music producers.

In East Asian pop music, during the 2010s, Japanese idol girl groups have been very successful in what is the largest physical music market in the world – and second largest overall – with 17 number-one singles just in 2017. The best-selling among all the J-pop idol girl groups, AKB48, is the best-selling act in Japan ever by number of singles sold – and third by total number of records sold – and has had as well the best-selling single in the country every year of the decade so far. Also, the best-selling album ever in the country, First Love, released in 1999, is by a woman, Japanese American singer and songwriter Hikaru Utada. South Korean idol girl groups have also been very successful the 2010s, with Twice having the best-performing single of 2016 in the country, as well as having won a total of 43 awards since their debut in October 2015. Another highly successful Korean idol girl group this decade is Blackpink, reaching the highest place ever for a K-pop girl group on the Billboard Hot 100 as well as being the first K-pop girl group to be number-one on the Billboard Emerging Artists chart.[140][141] They have also won a total of 16 awards since their debut in August 2016. K-pop has become increasingly popular in the US with many idol girl groups climbing their way up the leaderboards. However, most of the popularity is going towards male groups, with female groups being overshadowed by the concept of a boys-only club.[citation needed] Chinese idol girl groups have also recently achieved significant success, with C-pop groups like SNH48 and Rocket Girls 101, with the latter selling over 1.6 million copies of their debut EP in 2018.[142]

Blues

[edit]
Ma Rainey (1886–1939)[143] was one of the earliest known American professional blues singers and one of the first generation of such singers to record.[144]

Classic female blues was an early form of blues music popular in the 1920s. An amalgam of traditional folk blues and urban theater music, the style is also known as vaudeville blues. Classic blues songs performed by female vocalists were accompanied by pianists or small jazz ensembles, and were the first blues to be recorded. The classic female blues singers were pioneers in the record industry, as they were among the first black singers and blues artists who were recorded. They were also instrumental in popularizing the 12-bar blues throughout the US.[citation needed]

Gertrude "Ma" Rainey (1886–1939), known as the "Mother of the Blues", is credited as the first to perform the blues on stage as popular entertainment when she began incorporating blues into her act of show songs and comedy around 1902.[145]: 38 [146]: 34  New York-based cabaret singer Mamie Smith recorded "Crazy Blues" in 1920, which sold over 75,000 copies.[145] Smith became known as "America's First Lady of the Blues." In 1920, the vaudeville singer Lucille Hegamin became the second black woman to record blues when she recorded "The Jazz Me Blues."[145]: 16  Ethel Waters, Alberta Hunter, Mary Stafford, Katie Crippen, Edith Wilson, and Esther Bigeou, among others, made their first recordings before the end of 1921.[147] These blues recordings were typically labeled as "race records" to distinguish them from records sold to white audiences. Nonetheless, the recordings of some of the classic female blues singers were purchased by white buyers as well.[148] Marion Harris became one of the first white female singers to record the blues.

The most popular of the classic blues singers was Tennessee-born Bessie Smith (no relation to Mamie Smith), who first recorded in 1923 and became known as the "Empress of the Blues." She signed with Columbia and became the highest-paid black artist of the 1920s, recording over 160 songs. Other classic blues singers who recorded extensively until the end of the 1920s were Ida Cox, Clara Smith, and Sara Martin. These early blues singers were an influence on later singers such as Mahalia Jackson and Janis Joplin. These blues women's contributions to the genre included "increased improvisation on melodic lines, unusual phrasing which altered the emphasis and impact of the lyrics, and vocal dramatics using shouts, groans, moans, and wails. The blues women thus effected changes in other types of popular singing that had spin-offs in jazz, Broadway musicals, torch songs of the 1930s and 1940s, gospel, rhythm and blues, and eventually rock and roll."[146]: 8 

Country music

[edit]
Dolly Parton
Loretta Lynn
Miranda Lambert
Shania Twain
Examples of leading and pioneer country musical female figures

Gender discrimination and sexism occurs frequently in country music. Starting in the 2010s, a popular subgenre has developed: bro-country, which has lyrics that have been criticized for sexually objectifying women and framing them as assets for men's use.[149] Some popular bro-country artists include Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, and Blake Shelton. Gender discrimination and sexism has become more prominent in this genre over time, going backwards compared to some categories like rap and pop. Dr. Eric Rasmussen, a professor in the College of Media and Communication and Texas Tech University, argues that compared to the 1990s and 2000s (decade), the country music of the 2010s discriminates more against women. Some of the ways they discriminate include, "talking more about women's appearance, [showing] women in tight or revealing clothing, comparing women to objects, referring to women in slang [terms] versus their real names, and portraying women as distrustful and cheaters."[150]

Bro-country may be influenced by historical aspects of Southern culture which have been associated with racism and sexism. Women in country music continue to face these issues and often find no way to directly deal with them. Kacey Musgraves, a recording artist, describes her experience with sexism in country music by stating that if a label fails to get a woman's song off the ground, it is immediately blamed on their personality or the fact that they are female, or that they did not make a radio station program director feel important.[citation needed] Women like Kacey Musgraves, no matter what they do or change, will almost always fall under some form of scrutiny from her male competitors.[citation needed]

A large number of women singers in the country music genre have been influential to the industry through their success. Despite the popularity of male country artists and the discrimination that is displayed throughout their music, many female artists have worked their way past, leading them to achieve multiple accomplishments.

Dolly Parton, a female country singer who has been in the industry for over 55 years, developed a successful career for herself. Parton consistently created new projects to release to her fans and was described as "unstoppable" by Rolling Stone magazine.[151] These projects include over 45 musical albums, multiple film features, a Dollywood theme park, and the creation of a production company.[152]

Carrie Underwood, the iconic American Idol winner, also created a lasting impact in the country music genre. With over 251,000 units sold, Underwood's album Cry Pretty was her fourth album to reach number one on the Billboard 200 list.[153] Blown Away, Play On and Carnival Ride were the other three albums that also reached the top of the charts. These achievements led her to become the first woman singer to have four country albums as number one in the all-genre Billboard 200.[153] Underwood had multiple other number ones throughout her career, surpassing many other popular artists, as she left a strong impact on the female country music industry.

A women's rights activist and animal lover, Miranda Lambert, is another woman known to have a dominating career within the music industry. Her songs titled "Over You" and "Heart Like Mine" took over the Billboard charts and country music radio stations in 2010 and 2011.[154] As a solo female artist, she writes her music through honesty and reality.[155] The messages sent through her music are intended to help other women not to feel alone as they go through difficult life situations. Lambert uses the fame she has earned from the music industry and works with charities like the Humane Society as a way to give back.[156]

Jazz

[edit]
Nina Simone, an influential Jazz musical figure

While women have been underrepresented in jazz as instrumentalists, composers, songwriters and bandleaders, there have been many female singers. Bessie Smith sang both the blues and jazz. Lena Horne first appeared in the Cotton Club as a teenager. Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday were known for their ballads during the swing era. Shirley Horn sang both jazz and blues. Nina Simone sang jazz, folk and Rhythm and blues. Etta Jones sang rhythm and blues and jazz. Anita O'Day is known for her contributions to Bebop. Betty Carter sang during the post-bop era. Mary Lou Williams was a singer and pianist during the swing and hard bop eras. Sarah Vaughan is known for her singing in the Cool jazz era. Other singers include Rosemary Clooney, Diane Schuur and Flora Purim. Contemporary jazz singers include Norah Jones, Diana Krall, Melody Gardot and singer-bassist Esperanza Spalding. Spalding has spoken out and advocated for discussion of the current discrimination in jazz. In 2017, Spalding spent 77 hours straight creating an entire album titled Exposure to help change herself. It quickly became "a display of dauntless prowess and grand ambition" and showed, to thousands of people, a woman working confidently within the male dominated space of a recording studio.[157]

Classical music

[edit]
From left to right: Cecilia Bartoli and classical crossover pop singer, Sarah Brightman

Classical singers typically do both live performances and recordings. Live performances may be in small venues, such as churches, or large venues, such as opera halls or arts centers. Classical singers may specialize in specific types of singing, such as art song, which are songs performed with piano accompaniment, or opera, which is singing accompanied by a symphony orchestra in a staged, costumed theatrical production. Classical singers are typically categorized by their voice type, which indicates both their vocal range and in some cases also the "color" of their voice. Examples of voice types that indicate the range of a singer's voice include contralto, mezzo-soprano and soprano (these go from the lowest range to the highest range). Examples of voice types that indicate both the singer's range and the "color" of her voice type are coloratura soprano and lyric soprano. Whereas popular music singers typically use a microphone and a sound reinforcement system for their vocals, in classical music the voice must be projected into the hall naturally, a skill for which they undertake vocal training.

Black women

[edit]
Marian Anderson in 1940

Marian Anderson (1897–1993)[158] was an African-American contralto of whom music critic Alan Blyth said: "Her voice was a rich, vibrant contralto of intrinsic beauty."[159] Most of her singing career was spent performing in concert and recital in major music venues and with famous orchestras throughout the United States and Europe between 1925 and 1965. Anderson became an important figure in the struggle for black artists to overcome racial prejudice in the United States during the mid-twentieth century. In 1939, the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) refused permission for Anderson to sing to an integrated audience in Constitution Hall. With the aid of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and her husband Franklin D. Roosevelt, Anderson performed a critically acclaimed open-air concert on Easter Sunday, 9 April 1939, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. She sang before a crowd of more than 75,000 people and a radio audience in the millions. Anderson continued to break barriers for black artists in the United States, becoming the first black person, American or otherwise,[citation needed] to perform a leading role at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City on 7 January 1955.[160]

Classical singers

[edit]

A short list of classical singers includes:

World music

[edit]

Women play an important role in world music, a musical category encompassing many different styles of music from around the world, including ethnic music and traditional music from Africa, the Caribbean, South America, Asia, and other regions, indigenous music, neotraditional music, and music where more than one cultural tradition intermingle (e.g., mixtures of Western pop and ethnic music). The term was popularized in the 1980s as a marketing category for non-Western traditional music.[161][162]

Brazilian actress, singer and dancer Carmen Miranda became known in the West as an exotic supplement in Hollywood films in the 1930s, akin to dancer Josephine Baker before, and the voice of exotica, Yma Sumac, after her. In the 1960s Elis Regina was the most prominent female bossa nova singer,[citation needed] which influenced popular music around the world. In the 1960s and 1970s Argentinian folk singer Mercedes Sosa, South African Miriam Makeba, and Greek Maria Farantouri were also recognized for their engagement against the oppressive political situations in their home states. Sosa singing "Gracias a la vida", Makeba's "Pata Pata", and Farantouri's collaboration with composer Mikis Theodorakis were musical icons of the struggle for human rights. The "Queen of Salsa" Celia Cruz immigrated from Cuba to the United States in 1966.

With the rising interest in the then so-called world music in the 1980s old recordings of long established artists were re-discovered for a global audience and distributed worldwide; well known in their home country – sometimes stars with legendary status – like Arabic singers Umm Kulthum, Asmahan, and Fairuz, the Algerian raï singer Cheikha Rimitti, Asha Bhosle – the most prolific playback singer for Bollywood film soundtracks, Romani Esma Redžepova, Mexican ranchera singer Chavela Vargas, and the Mahotella Queens from South Africa; or they were recorded for the first time (by Caucasian males) like Cesária Évora from Cape Verde, Stella Chiweshe from Zimbabwe and Afro-Peruvian Susana Baca.

There are many women world music performers, including: Ann Savoy, Bi Kidude, Brenda Fassie, Chabuca Granda, Chava Alberstein, Cleoma Breaux Falcon, Dolly Collins, Elizabeth Cotten, Frehel, Gal Costa, Genoa Keawe, Googoosh, Hazel Dickens, Jean Ritchie, Lata Mangeshkar, Leah Song, Lola Beltrán, Lucha Reyes, Lucilla Galeazzi (The Mammas), Lydia Mendoza, Maria Tanase, Mariam Doumbia, Nada Mamula, Ofra Haza, Oumou Sangare, Rita Marley, Rosa Passos, Roza Eskenazi, Safiye Ayla, Salamat Sadikova, Selda Bagcan, Shirley Collins, Valya Balkanska, Violeta Parra, Warda, Marta Gómez and Zap Mama.

Eastern music

[edit]

Arabic music

[edit]
A group of musicians, including women performers, from a Baghdad musical theatre group in the 1920s

Arabic music is an amalgam of the music of the Arab people in the Arabian Peninsula and the music of all the varied peoples that make up the Arab world. In Egypt during the medieval era, male professional musicians during this period were called alateeyeh (plural), or alatee (singular), which means 'a player upon an instrument'. However, this name applies to both vocalists as well as instrumentalists. Male professional musicians were considered disreputable and lowly, and they earned their living playing at parties. Female professional musicians in Egypt were called awalim (pl) or al'meh, which means a 'learned female'. These singers were often hired on the occasion of a celebration in the harem of a wealthy person. They were not with the harem, but in an elevated room that was concealed by a screen so as not to be seen by either the harem or the master of the house. The female awalim were more highly paid than male performers and more highly regarded.

In the 9th century, using male instrumentalists was harshly criticized in a treatise[which?] because they were associated with perceived vices such as playing chess and writing love poetry. Following the invasion of Egypt, Napoleon commissioned reports on the state of Ottoman culture. The report reveals that there were guilds of male instrumentalists who played to male audiences, and "learned female" singer/musicians who sang and played for women audiences.

Chinese music

[edit]
A half-section of the Song dynasty (960–1279) version of the Night Revels of Han Xizai, original by Gu Hongzhong;[163] the female musicians in the center of the image are playing transverse bamboo flutes and guan, and the male musician is playing a wooden clapper called paiban.

In Chinese music, music was a major activity for women during ancient times, especially for learnèd women. Women performers were associated with the guqin since ancient times. The guqin is a plucked seven-string Chinese musical instrument of the zither family. It has traditionally been favored by scholars and literati as an instrument of great subtlety and refinement. A woman guqin player was Cai Wenji, associated with the piece Hujia Shiba-pai 《胡笳十八拍》.

Women musicians also play a key role in Chinese folk music. In southern Fujian and Taiwan, Nanyin or Nanguan music is a genre of traditional Chinese folk ballads. It sung by a woman accompanied by a xiao flute and a pipa, as well as other traditional instruments. The music is sung in the Minnan topolect. The music is generally sorrowful and typically deals with the topic of a love-stricken woman.

The Chinese pop (C-pop) music industry in the 1930s and 1940s was dominated by the Seven Great Singing Stars, who were the most renowned singers of China in the 1940s. Zhou Xuan, Gong Qiuxia, Yao Lee and Bai Hong emerged in the 1930s; afterwards Bai Guang, Li Xianglan and Wu Yingyin became popular in the 1940s. After 1949, the early generations of C-pop were denounced by the Chinese Communist Party as Yellow Music as it saw pop music as sexually indecent (the color yellow is associated with eroticism and sex in China). Only after the end of the Cultural Revolution, by the early 1980s, could Yellow Music be performed again.

Nowadays, after China's extensive political and cultural changes of the past 50 years, Chinese popular music has been increasingly emulating and taking inspiration from the styles of popular music of South Korea (K-pop) and of Japan (J-pop), both of which it now closely resembles. As such, during the 2010s, several girl groups have been established based both on the Japanese model, like SNH48 (created in 2012) and its sister groups, as well as on the Korean model, like Rocket Girls, created in 2018 from the Chinese version of a Korean reality television talent competition show. These groups have achieved significant success, with the debut EP of Rocket Girls selling over 1.6 million copies.[142] Despite this, solo Chinese female artists continue to be much more popular overall in the country, as they have traditionally been.[164] Some of the most recently popular solo Chinese female singers include Faye Wong, G.E.M. Gloria Tang, Lala Hsu, 胡66 [zh], Ada Zhuang, Kelly Yu, Chen Li (陳粒), Feng Timo, Bibi Zhou, Shuangsheng [zh] (双笙), Tia Ray, Vanessa Jin (金玟岐) and Jane Zhang.[165]

Indian music

[edit]
Asha Bhosle is an Indian singer best known as a playback singer in Hindi cinema. In 2011, she was officially acknowledged by the Guinness Book of World Records as the most-recorded artist in music history.[12]

Indian classical music is the art music of the Indian subcontinent. The origins of Indian classical music can be found in the Hindu hymns. This chanting style evolved into jatis and eventually into ragas. Indian classical music has also been significantly influenced by, or syncretised with, Indian folk music. The major composers from the historical Indian classical music tradition were men. Modern women vocalists include D. K. Pattammal, M. S. Subbalakshmi, Gangubai Hangal, Hirabai Barodekar, Kesarbai Kerkar, Kishori Amonkar, Malini Rajurkar, Mogubai Kurdikar, Prabha Atre, Roshan Ara Begum and Shruti Sadolikar Katkar. One woman instrumentalist is Annapurna Devi.

In Indian folk music, lavani is a music genre popular in Maharashtra that is traditionally performed by women. Bhangra (Punjabi: ਭੰਗੜਾ) is a form of dance-oriented folk music of Punjab. The present musical style is derived from non-traditional musical accompaniment to the riffs of Punjab called by the same name. The female dance of Punjab region is known as Giddha (ਗਿੱਧਾ).

In the music of Bollywood (the centre of India's film industry) and other regional film industries in India, women playback singers have had a significant role, with the sisters Lata Mangeshkar and Asha Bhosle, who have mainly worked in Hindi films, often referred to as two of the best-known and most prolific playback singers in India. In 2011, Bhosle was officially acknowledged by the Guinness Book of World Records as the most recorded artist in music history.[12]

Iranian music

[edit]
Fātemeh Vā'ezi (Persian: فاطمه واعظی) (born 1950), commonly known by her stage name Parīsā (Persian: پریسا), is a Persian classical vocalist and musician.

Since the Iranian revolution, Iranian female solo vocalists have been permitted to perform for female audiences. Female vocalists can perform for male audiences only as a part of a chorus. Traditionally, it has been difficult for female singers to appear publicly. Women were only allowed to perform for religious rituals, called Tazieh, and men were generally forbidden to listen to women. Before the Revolution, Iranian women could only sing in private, while working, for other women, or during women's celebrations. Qamar ol-Molouk Vaziri (1905–1959) is one of the first female masters of Persian music. Female musicians include Delkash (1923–2004); Simin Ghanem (born 1944); Maryam Akhondy (born 1957), founder of Barbad Ensemble; Persian classical guitarist Lily Afshar; singer Shakila, winner of Persian Academy Award; the conductor Soodabeh Salem; Afsaneh Rasaei; Pirayeh Pourafar, founder of Nava Ensemble and Lian Ensemble; and Mahsa Vahdat.

The classical singer Fatemeh Vaezi (commonly known by her stage name Parisa) has given concerts accompanied by a female orchestra. After 1986 Maryam Akhondy started working with other Iranian musicians in exile. In 2000 Maryam Akhondy created the all-female a cappella group Banu which sung old folk songs that were part of women's activities and celebrations. Singer Sima Bina has taught many female students. Ghashang Kamkar teaches both male and female students. Both Ghashang and Vaezi have criticized the patriarchal power structure in Iran for its treatment of female musicians.[166] Iranian folk-music performers include Sima Bina, Darya Dadvar, Monika Jalili, Ziba Shirazi, Zohreh Jooya, and Shushā Guppy. Iranian pop performers include Googoosh, Hayedeh, Mahasti, Leila Forouhar, Pooran, and Laleh Pourkarim. World music performers include Azam Ali and Cymin Samawatie.

Japanese music

[edit]
The Japanese idol girl group AKB48 is the best-selling act in Japan by number of singles sold.

Japan has the largest physical music market in the world, with US$2 billion in 2014 and the second largest overall music market, with a total retail value of 2.6 billion dollars in 2014.[167] The physical singles market is dominated by Japanese idol women artists, with 9 out of the top 10 best-selling singles in the country in 2015 belonging to either the idol girl group AKB48 or its "sister" and "rival" groups.[168] AKB48 has had the best-selling singles of the year in the country for the past six years[as of?] and the group is also the best-selling act in Japan by number of singles sold.[169] Japanese American singer and songwriter Hikaru Utada has the best-selling album in the country, First Love.[citation needed]

Jewish music

[edit]

There is literary evidence from biblical books such as The Book of Judges that women (including Miriam, Deborah and Hannah), participated in musical traditions that included singing lamentations and playing instruments. However, women are not mentioned in references to liturgy. Women were eventually banned from liturgical worship (kolisha). Though they would continue to have a role in the musical rituals of the domestic sphere at home, burials and weddings, these customs were not documented as liturgical music (and its creators and performers) were.[170]

Music scholars and educators

[edit]

Musicologists and music historians

[edit]
Rosetta Reitz (1924–2008) was an American jazz historian and feminist who established a record label producing 18 albums of the music of the early women of jazz and the blues.[171]

The vast majority of major musicologists and music historians have been men. Nevertheless, some women musicologists have reached the top ranks of the profession. Carolyn Abbate (born 1956) is an American musicologist who did her PhD at Princeton University. She has been described by the Harvard Gazette as "one of the world's most accomplished and admired music historians."[172]

Susan McClary (born 1946) is a musicologist associated with new musicology who incorporates feminist music criticism in her work. McClary holds a PhD from Harvard University. One of her best known works is Feminine Endings (1991), which covers musical constructions of gender and sexuality, gendered aspects of traditional music theory, gendered sexuality in musical narrative, music as a gendered discourse and issues affecting women musicians. In the book, McClary suggests that the sonata form (used in symphonies and string quartets) may be a sexist or misogynistic procedure that constructs of gender and sexual identity. McClary's Conventional Wisdom (2000) argues that the traditional musicological assumption of the existence of "purely musical" elements, divorced from culture and meaning, the social and the body, is a conceit used to veil the social and political imperatives of the worldview that produces the classical canon most prized by supposedly objective musicologists.

Other women scholars include:

Ethnomusicologists

[edit]
Frances Densmore (1867 – 1957) was an American anthropologist and ethnographer known for her studies of Native American music and culture.

Ethnomusicologists study the many musics around the world that emphasize their cultural, social, material, cognitive, biological, and other dimensions or contexts instead of or in addition to its isolated sound component or any particular repertoire. Ethnomusicology – a term coined by Jaap Kunst from the Greek words ἔθνος (ethnos, 'nation') and μουσική (mousike, 'music') – is often described as the anthropology or ethnography of music. Initially, ethnomusicology was almost exclusively oriented toward non-Western music, but now includes the study of Western music from anthropological, sociological and intercultural perspectives.

Women have also made significant contributions in ethnomusicology, especially in the intersection of gender studies and ethnomusicology.[173] Ellen Koskoff, professor emerita at the Eastman School of Music, has done extensive work on gender in ethnomusicology.[174] Koskoff has also served as president of the Society for Ethnomusicology and hosted a radio show called "What in the World is Music?"[174]

In, "An Introduction to Women, Music, and Culture" (1987), Koskoff argues that music performed by women is "devalued" and in some cases, is even considered, "non-music," despite having "musical form".[173]: 15  Koskoff explains that the distinction that men occupy public spheres and women occupy private, domestic ones has, "creat[ed] not necessarily two separate and self-contained music cultures, but rather two differentiated yet complementary halves of culture.[173]: 1  She reasons that because "In most societies, a woman's identity is believed to be embedded in her sexuality," "one of the most common associations between women and music... links women's primary sexual identity and role with music performance".[173]: 6  Based on this association, Koskoff argues that "Four categories of music performance thus emerge in connection with inter-gender relations: (1) performance that confirms and maintains the established social/sexual arrangement; (2) performance that appears to maintain the established norms in order to protect other, more relevant values; (3) performance that protests, yet maintains, the order (often through symbolic behavior); and (4) performance that challenges and threatens established order".[173]: 10 

Deborah Wong, a professor at the University of California, Riverside,[175] is known for her focus on the music of Southeast Asia and Asian American music-making,[175] and has also studied taiko, or Japanese American drumming.[176]

Other women ethnomusicologists include:

Music educators

[edit]
A music teacher leading a music ensemble in an elementary school in 1943

While music critics argued in the 1880s that "women lacked the innate creativity to compose good music" due to "biological predisposition",[7] later, it was accepted that women would have a role in music education, and they became involved in this field "to such a degree that women dominated music education during the latter half of the 19th century and well into the 20th century."[7] "Traditional accounts of the history of music education [in the US] have often neglected the contributions of women, because these texts have emphasized bands and the top leaders in hierarchical music organizations."[177] When looking beyond these bandleaders and top leaders, women had many music education roles in the "home, community, churches, public schools, and teacher-training institutions" and "as writers, patrons, and through their volunteer work in organizations."[177]

Despite the limitations imposed on women's roles in music education in the 19th century, women were accepted as kindergarten teachers, because this was deemed to be a "private sphere." Women also taught music privately, in girl's schools, Sunday schools, and they trained musicians in school music programs. By the turn of the 20th century, women began to be employed as music supervisors in elementary schools, teachers in normal schools and professors of music in universities. Women also became more active in professional organizations in music education, and women presented papers at conferences.

A woman, Frances Clarke (1860–1958) founded the Music Supervisors National Conference in 1907. While a small number of women served as president of the Music Supervisors National Conference (and the following renamed versions of the organization over the next century) in the early 20th century, there were only two female presidents between 1952 and 1992, which "[p]ossibly reflects discrimination." After 1990, however, leadership roles for women in the organization opened up. From 1990 to 2010, there were five female presidents of this organization.[178]: 171  Women music educators "outnumber men two-to-one" in teaching general music, choir, private lessons, and keyboard instruction.[178]: 177  More men tend to be hired as for band education, administration and jazz jobs, and more men work in colleges and universities.: 177  According to Dr. Sandra Wieland Howe, there is still a "glass ceiling" for women in music education careers, as there is "stigma" associated with women in leadership positions and "men outnumber women as administrators."[179]

Individuals

[edit]

Conducting

[edit]
US Army Captain Sharon Toulouse leading a military music ensemble in 2008

The majority of professional orchestra conductors are male; The Guardian called conducting "one of the last glass ceilings in the music industry."[10] A 2013 article stated that in France, out of 574 concerts only 17 were conducted by women and no women conducted at the National Opéra in Paris.[192] Bachtrack reported that, in a list of the world's 150 top conductors that year, only five were women.[193] A small number of female conductors have become top-ranked international conductors. In January 2005, Australian conductor Simone Young became the first woman to conduct the Vienna Philharmonic. In 2008 Marin Alsop, a protégé of Leonard Bernstein, became the first woman to become the music director and principal conductor of a major US orchestra when she won the top job at the Baltimore Symphony.[194] There were "protests from a large swathe of the Baltimore Symphony when she was first named Music Director", but since that time, "plaudits [have] roll[ed] in."[194] In 2014, Alsop was the first woman conductor to lead the Last Night of the Proms concert–one of the most important classical music events in Britain–in its 118-year history.[194]

While there is a lack of women in professional orchestra, more recent studies show that the conducting profession itself lacks gender and racial diversity. There is a clear distinction between the low number of white women in the field compared to that of white men, but there is an even lower number of other racial and ethnic identities. The proportion of non-white musicians represented in the orchestra workforce – and of African American and Hispanic/Latino musicians in particular –remains extremely low.[195] The field of orchestra continues to remain predominantly white. Positions such as conductors, executives, and staff are dominated by white individuals, in particular, white males. In high level executive positions, it remains rare to see women or people of color. However, the gender gap narrowed in the early 1990s, with women musicians making up between 46% and 49% of the total musician pool in the two decades since.[195] The years 1980 to 2014 saw a four-fold increase in the proportion of diverse musicians on stage, driven largely by an increase in musicians from Asian / Pacific Islander backgrounds.[195] Over the years, more attention was brought to gender and racial disparity in the field. This awareness has caused positive impacts in the orchestrating field. Data about conductors from 2006 to 2016 reveals there is a gradual but steady trend towards greater racial and ethnic diversity, with the percentage of African American, Latino/Hispanic, Asian / Pacific Islander, American Indian / Alaskan Native, and other non-white conductors increasing from 15.7% in 2006 to 21% in 2016.[195] Although there has been reconstruction of the whiteness and gender domination of males in the field, there is still work to be done.

Many women within the orchestrating profession experience forms of discrimination whether it be gender, racial, or both. Women, initially, were not encouraged to play professionally because it was deemed inappropriate by society. Women were further considered neither strong enough nor skilled enough to play instruments other than the piano, or to survive grueling rehearsal schedules.[196] Jeri Lynne Johnson was the first African-American woman to win an international conducting prize when she was awarded the Taki Concordia conducting fellowship in 2005. She is the founder and music director of the Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra, the first multi-ethnic professional orchestra in Philadelphia. A graduate of Wellesley College and the University of Chicago, she is a conductor, composer and pianist. From 2001 to 2004, she was the assistant conductor of The Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia.[197] She has led orchestras around the world including the Colorado Symphony, Bournemouth Symphony (UK), and the Weimar Staatskapelle (Germany). Alongside prominent woman conductors Marin Alsop and JoAnn Falletta, Ms. Johnson was heralded on the NBC The Today Show as one of the nation's leading female conductors.

According to the UK's Radio 3 editor, Edwina Wolstencroft, "The music world has been happy to have female performers ...for a long time...[;]But owning authority and power in public is another matter. That's where female conductors have had a hard time. Our society is more resistant to women being powerful in public than to women being entertaining."[9] The low percentage of women conductors is not because women do not study in music school; indeed, in 2009 and 2012 almost half of the recipients of conducting doctorates were women.[10]

The turn for women's rights in music began the feminist movement in America in 1848.[citation needed] The movement fueled  all women to fight for equal rights in a plethora of fields such as voting, education, employment, and marriage. While the women's rights movement meant the start of including women into the orchestrating field, there would still be barriers they needed to overcome. Women of color, in particular, were faced with many stereotypes that challenged the worthiness of their work. In fact, black women's work in the field faced more scrutiny than that of their white counterparts. A classic example of this is seen in a study conducted for the Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, by Elliot Charles, in 1995. "Elliot examined whether race and gender influenced judgments of musical performances. Four trumpeters and four flutists were videotaped performing the same music excerpt. For each instrument, one white man, one white woman, one black man, and one black woman, served as models. To control the audio portion of the study, the researcher used two prerecorded performances, one for the trumpets and one for the flutes. This created the same audio for all trumpets and flute performances. College music majors rated each performance on a Likert-type scale. Results revealed black performers of each genders and instruments were rated significantly lower than white performers. The lowest ratings were given to black male and female trumpet players."[198]

This example demonstrates that gender discrimination was prevalent during this time, but racial discrimination must be accounted for as well.

Conductors

[edit]

Female conductors include:

Music critics

[edit]
[edit]
American pop music critic Ann Powers (pictured in 2007)

According to Anwen Crawford, the "problem for women [popular music critics] is that our role in popular music was codified long ago", which means that "[b]ooks by living female rock critics (or jazz, hip-hop, and dance-music critics, for that matter) are scant." Crawford notes that the "most famous rock-music critics—Robert Christgau, Greil Marcus, Lester Bangs, Nick Kent—are all male."[1]

Sociomusicologist Simon Frith noted that pop and rock music "are closely associated with gender; that is, with conventions of male and female behaviour."[199] According to Holly Kruse, both popular music articles and academic articles about pop music are usually written from "masculine subject positions."[200] As well, there are relatively few women writing in music journalism: "By 1999, the number of female editors or senior writers at Rolling Stone hovered around...15%, [while] at Spin and Raygun, [it was] roughly 20%."[201] Criticism associated with gender was discussed in a 2014 Jezebel article about the struggles of women in music journalism, written by music critic Tracy Moore, previously an editor at the Nashville Scene.[202]

The American music critic Ann Powers, as a female critic and journalist for a popular, male-dominated industry, has written critiques the perceptions of sex, racial and social minorities in the music industry. She has also written about feminism.[203][204] In 2006 she accepted a position as chief pop-music critic at the Los Angeles Times, where she succeeded Robert Hilburn.[205] In 2005, Powers co-wrote the book Piece by Piece with musician Tori Amos, which discusses the role of women in the modern music industry, and features information about composing, touring, performance, and the realities of the music business.

Anwen Crawford, a writer for The Monthly, contributed to Jessica Hopper's book of essays and profiles entitled The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic.[206] Crawford's article "explores women's long struggle for visibility and recognition in the field of rock criticism, even though we've been helping to pioneer it from the start."[206] Crawford states that "[t]he record store, the guitar shop, and now social media: when it comes to popular music, these places become stages for the display of male prowess"; "[f]emale expertise, when it appears, is repeatedly dismissed as fraudulent. Every woman who has ever ventured an opinion on popular music could give you some variation [of this experience]... and becoming a recognized "expert" (a musician, a critic) will not save [women] from accusations of fakery."[206]

Popular music critics include:

Classical music

[edit]
Marion Lignana Rosenberg (1961–2013) was a music critic, writer, translator, broadcaster and journalist. She wrote for many periodicals, including Salon.com, The New York Times and Playbill.

"The National Arts Journalism Program (NAJP) at Columbia... completed a large study of arts journalism in America [in 2005]. They found that 'the average classical music critic is a white, 52-year-old male with a graduate degree, but twenty-six percent of all critics writing are female.'"[207] However, William Osborne points out that this 26% figure includes all newspapers, including low-circulation regional papers. Osborne states that the "large US papers, which are the ones that influence public opinion, have virtually no women classical music critics."[207] The only female critics from major US papers are Anne Midgette (New York Times) and Wynne Delacoma (Chicago Sun-Times). Midgette was the "first woman to cover classical music in the entire history of the paper."[207] Susannah Clapp, a critic from The Guardian—a newspaper that has a female classical music critic—stated in May 2014 that she had only then realized "what a rarity" a female classical music critic is in journalism.[208]

Women classical music critics include:

Other musical professions

[edit]

Record producing and sound engineering

[edit]

A 2013 Sound on Sound article stated that there are "few women in record production and sound engineering."[11] Ncube states that "[n]inety-five percent of music producers are male, and although there are female producers achieving great things in music, they are less well-known than their male counterparts."[11] "Only three women have ever been nominated for best producer at the Brits or the Grammys" and none won either award.[209] "Women who want to enter the [producing] field face a boys' club, or a guild mentality."[209]

Despite this, women haven been taking on the challenge since the 1940s. Mary Shipman Howard was an engineer in New York City in the 1940s. Lillian McMurry was a record producer and founder of Trumpet Records in the 1950s. One of the first women to produce, engineer, arrange and promote music on her own rock and roll music label was Cordell Jackson (1923–2004). She founded the Moon Records label in Memphis in 1956 and began releasing and promoting on the label singles she recorded in her home studio, serving as engineer, producer and arranger. Ethel Gabriel had a 40-year career with RCA and was the first major label record producer.[citation needed]

Trina Shoemaker is a mixer, record producer and sound engineer responsible for producing/engineering and/or mixing records for bands such as Queens of the Stone Age,[210] Sheryl Crow,[210] Emmylou Harris,[210] Something for Kate,[210] Nanci Griffith[210] and many more. In 1998 Shoemaker became the first woman to win the Grammy Award for Best Engineered Album for her work on The Globe Sessions.[211] In addition to Crow, Shoemaker went on to work with artists such as Blues Traveller, Emmylou Harris, the Indigo Girls and the Dixie Chicks.[212]

Other women include:

DJs and turntablists

[edit]
A DJ mixing two record players at a live event
DJ Virgin is a London, UK-based DJ.

Women in music are often seen mainly in singing roles in popular music and there are relatively few women DJs or turntablists in hip hop music, house music, nu metal and other genres where DJs and turntablists participate. Indeed, all of these genres are very male-dominated. Part of this may stem from a general low percentage of women in audio technology-related jobs, such as audio engineering and production. In 2007 Mark Katz's article "Men, Women, and Turntables: Gender and the DJ Battle," stated that "very few women battle; the matter has been a topic of conversation among hip-hop DJs for years."[213] In 2010 Rebekah Farrugia stated "the male-centricity of EDM culture" contributes to "a marginalisation of women in these [EDM] spaces."[214] While turntablism and broader DJ practices should not be conflated, Katz suggests use or lack of use of the turntable broadly by women across genres and disciplines is impacted upon by what he defines as "male technophilia."[213] Historian Ruth Oldenziel concurs in her writing on engineering with this idea of socialization as a central factor in the lack of engagement with technology. She explains: "an exclusive focus on women's supposed failure to enter the field ... is insufficient for understanding how our stereotypical notions have come into being; it tends to put the burden of proof entirely on women and to blame them for their supposedly inadequate socialization, their lack of aspiration, and their want of masculine values. An equally challenging question is why and how boys have come to love things technical, how boys have historically been socialized as technophiles."[215]

Lucy Green has focused on gender in relation to musical performers and creators, and specifically on educational frameworks as they relate to both.[216] She suggests that women's alienation from "areas that have a strong technological tendency such as DJing, sound engineering and producing" are "not necessarily about her dislike of these instruments but relates to the interrupting effect of their dominantly masculine delineations."[217] Despite this, women and girls do increasingly engage in turntable and DJ practices, individually[218] and collectively,[219] and "carve out spaces for themselves in EDM and DJ Culture."[214] There are various projects dedicated to the promotion and support of these practices, such as Female DJs London.[220] Some artists and collectives go beyond these practices to be more gender-inclusive.[221] For example, Discwoman, a New York-based collective and booking agency, describe themselves as "representing and showcasing cis women, trans women and genderqueer talent."[222]

Movements, organizations, events and genres

[edit]

Women's music

[edit]
Bernice Johnson Reagon (born 1942) is a singer, composer, scholar, and social activist, who founded the a cappella ensemble Sweet Honey in the Rock in 1973. She was an important figure in the womyn's music scene.

Women's music (also womyn's music or wimmin's music) is music "by women, for women, and about women".[223][224] The genre emerged as a musical expression of the second-wave feminist movement[225] as well as the labor, civil rights, and peace movements.[226] The movement (in the US) was started by lesbians such as Cris Williamson, Meg Christian and Margie Adam, African-American musicians (including Linda Tillery, Mary Watkins, Gwen Avery) and activists such as Bernice Johnson Reagon and her group Sweet Honey in the Rock, and peace activist Holly Near.[226] Women's music also refers to the wider industry of women's music that goes beyond the performing artists to include studio musicians, producers, sound engineers, technicians, cover artists, distributors, promoters, and festival organizers who are also women.[223]

Organizations

[edit]

International Alliance for Women in Music

[edit]

The International Alliance for Women in Music (IAWM) is an international organization of women and men dedicated to fostering and encouraging the activities of women in music, particularly in the areas of musical activity, such as composing, performing, and research, in which gender discrimination is an historic and ongoing concern. The IAWM engages in efforts to increase the programming of music by female composers, to combat discrimination against female musicians, including as symphony orchestra members, and to include accounts of the contributions of women musicians in university music curricula. To end gender discrimination, the IAWM led successful boycotts of the American concerts of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in the 1990s; the "VPO watch" continues.[227] Advocacy by the organization has contributed to the inclusion of women composers in college music history textbooks.[228]

Women in Music (WIM-NY)

[edit]

Women in Music (WIM-NY) is an American organization based in New York City which was founded in 1985. It aims to "support, cultivate and recognize the talents of women" in music.[229] WIM-NY holds activities and events, including "seminars, panels, and networking events."[229] As well, it gives out annual Touchstone Awards to women in music. WIM-NY members include "record label executives, artist managers, songwriters, musicians, attorneys, recording engineers, agents, publicists, studio owners, music publishers, online and traditional marketers" from "all genres of music and all areas of the [music] industry."[229] As of 2015, the president is lawyer Neeta Ragoowansi and the vice-president is lawyer Jennifer Newman Sharpe. As of 2015, the board of directors includes women from Nielsen Music, Warner Music Group, Ableton, Downtown Music Publishing and the Berklee College of Music.

Women in Music Canada

[edit]

Women in Music Canada Professional Association (WIMC) is an organization based in Toronto, Ontario, that was established in 2012. It is a federally registered non-profit organization that aims to "foste[r] equality in the music industry through the support and advancement of women."[230] WIMC is financially supported by the federal government, the FACTOR program, the Ontario government and Slaight Music.

Women in Music (WIM-UK)

[edit]

Women in Music (WIM-UK) is a United Kingdom "membership organization that celebrates women's music making across all genres of music."[231] WIM-UK works to raise "awareness of gender issues in music and support women musicians in their professional development."[231] WIM-UK's website provides information on competitions and job opportunities.[231] WIM-UK does a survey of the numbers of women composers, conductors and soloists who appear in the BBC Proms, the "largest classical music festival in the world." For the 2015 Proms, women composers made up 10% of the program, women conductors made up 4% of the 50 conductors and female instrumental soloists made up 30%.[232]

Now Girls Rule (Mexico)

[edit]
Elis Paprika, founder of Now Girls Rule, performing at Playtime Festival in Mongolia in 2019

Now Girls Rule is a Mexican feminist organization created for the empowerment and promotion of women artists, and women-fronted acts and bands, that celebrates music created by women, as well generating spaces and expanding the art scene in Mexico by focusing on the creation of new generations of artists through education and inspiration.[233][234] Now Girls Rule was founded by independent Mexican rock musician Elis Paprika in 2014, drawing the name from her single "Now Girls Rule" released that year, where she featured other important Latin American women artists Sandrushka Petrova and Ana Cristina Mo from the band Descartes a Kant, Renee Mooi, and Vanessa Zamora. Throughout her career, Elis Paprika has continuously brought attention to the fact that, despite the enormous number of talented women artists, the Mexican music scene has historically failed in the promotion and creation of appropriate spaces and opportunities for women in music.

Now Girls Rule features several annual events. Girl Camps feature music and fanzine design lessons for young girls ages 7–17; all teachers are established woman artists from the Mexican music scene.[235] The format was created for young aspiring artists to meet and learn from women who have pursued their dreams and worked to make a living from their art, so they can be inspired to develop careers in music and art. Now Girls Rule Nights are a series of live concerts featuring established women artists and women-fronted bands, while inviting up-and-coming women-fronted acts to perform, to reach new crowds. Now Girls Rule Networkings are a space where professional women of various backgrounds and women artists come together to meet and talk about their work in the hopes of joining forces in new ventures and projects. La Marketa, the first-ever all-women artists' bazaar in Mexico, was created so that artists can directly sell their merchandise to their fans and keep 100% of their sales.[236] La Marketa is an all-age, gender-inclusive, and pet-friendly event featuring live performances by some of the artists. Elis Paprika also hosts the Now Girls Rule Podcast, a weekly show through Vive Latino's Señal VL channel, that features music by women artists and women-fronted acts she has met around the world while touring.

Riot Grrrl

[edit]
Carrie Brownstein from the punk-indie band Sleater-Kinney, performing at Vegoose in 2005
Corin Tucker was the lead singer and guitarist for Sleater-Kinney, another band closely associated with the Riot Grrrl movement.

Riot grrrl is an underground feminist hardcore punk movement that originally started in the early 1990s, in Washington, D.C.,[237] and the greater Pacific Northwest, noticeably in Olympia, Washington.[238] It is often associated with third-wave feminism, which is sometimes seen as its starting point. It has also been described as a musical genre that came out of indie rock, with the punk scene serving as an inspiration for a musical movement in which women could express themselves in the same way men had been doing for the past several years.[239]

Riot grrrl bands often address issues such as rape, domestic abuse, sexuality, racism, patriarchy, and female empowerment. Bands associated with the movement include Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, Heavens to Betsy, Excuse 17, Huggy Bear, Cake Like, Skinned Teen, Emily's Sassy Lime, Sleater-Kinney, and also queercore groups like Team Dresch.[240][241] In addition to a music scene and genre, riot grrrl is a subculture involving a DIY ethic, zines, art, political action, and activism.[242] Riot grrrls are known to hold meetings, start chapters, and support and organize women in music.[243]

The use of the word girl was meant to indicate a time when girls are least influenced by societal pressures and therefore have the strongest self-esteem – childhood. The anger behind the movement was noted by the alternate spelling of the word as grrrl, which sounds like a growl.[243]

They partook in a new type of punk feminism that promoted the idea of do-it-yourself, exchanging manifestos and trading mixed tapes of favorite bands to get the word out.[244] They were tired of women being erased from history or having their experiences misinterpreted and ignored by others. In response to patriarchal violence, adultism, and heterocentrism,[245] riot grrrls engage in negative emotional expressions and rhetoric similar to that of feminism and the punk aesthetic. The feminist argument that "the personal is political" was revisited in the image that riot grrrl set forth, similarly to the culture of punk that self-actualization is not to be found in external forces but rather through an individual's true self. By recognizing and reevaluating the institutional structures that affect individual experiences within social situations, an individual can gain the knowledge to better know herself and therefore know how to present herself to others so that they may know her accurately. Riot grrrl termed this movement to self-actualization girl love – "girls learning to love themselves, and each other, against those forces that would otherwise see them destroyed or destroy themselves."[This quote needs a citation]

The accompanying slogan "every girl is a riot grrrl" reinforces the solidarity that women can find amongst themselves. This creates an intimate aesthetic and sentimental politic well expressed in the production of zines (a shortened version of fanzines).[243] Zines are handmade, crafted by individuals who want to connect directly with their readers, with simple items like scissors, glue, and tape. They call out injustices and challenge the norms that typically direct the expression of sexuality and domestic abuse, providing a space for women to exchange personal stories to which many others could relate. They challenge girls and women alike to stand up for themselves in a political atmosphere that actively seeks to silence them.[245] The shared personal stories have been, at times, met with attitudes that reduced the communication to "it's all just girls in their bedrooms, sprawled out writing in their diaries, and then they'll send them to each other",[This quote needs a citation] while the choice to share in that way is an aesthetic one.

In the midst of this raising of awareness, riot grrrls had to address the generalizations that worked for them but that could not apply to women of color. Not all girls could be riot grrrl after all, for lack of privilege barred them from participating in such acts as writing SLUT across their stomach in an attempt to reclaim sexual agency.[244] While the performance is an earnest one, racism had already labeled women of color as that term. As observed by Kearny, "the gender deviance displayed by riot grrrls is a privilege to which only middle-class white girls have access."[245] Another aspect of this need for inclusive discourse arose in the movement's preference for concrete knowledge and a disregard for the abstract that would foster theoretical inquiry.

Festivals

[edit]
Debbie Harry best known as the lead vocalist of the band Blondie, performing at Glastonbury Festival 2023
Ariana Grande headlined the Coachella festival in 2019, becoming the youngest artist ever to headline the event.

Women's music festivals, which may also be called womyn's music festivals, have been held since the 1970s. Some women's music festivals are organized for lesbians. The first women's music festival was held in 1973 at Sacramento State University. In May 1974 the first National Woman's Music Festival was held in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, founded by University of Illinois student Kristin Lems.[246] It celebrated its 40th year in Middleton, Wisconsin, from 2–5 July 2015.[247] As of 2015, it is a four-day event that includes concerts, workshops, comedy, theatre, films and writing events that "promote and affirm the creative talents and technical skills of women" from diverse, multicultural communities, including women with disabilities. While most attendees are women, men can attend.[248] The Michigan Womyn's Music Festival was created in 1976, and became the largest festival in the United States.[249]: 28 

An example of a festival that focuses on music is the Women in Music Festival held by the University of Rochester's Eastman School of Music. The festival began in 2005 as a celebration of the contributions of women to composition, performance, teaching, scholarship, and music administration.[250] From its modest beginnings of Eastman students and faculty members performing music by women composers, the Festival has grown to include additional concerts and events throughout Rochester, New York, and to host composers-in-residence, who have included Tania León (2007), Nancy Van de Vate (2008), Judith Lang Zaimont (2009), Emma Lou Diemer (2010), and Hilary Tann (2011). The festival has presented more than 291 different works by 158 composers.

Many other festivals have been created throughout the United States and Canada since the mid-1970s and vary in size from a few hundred to thousands of attendees. The Los Angeles Women's Music Festival began in 2007 with over 2500 attendees. Events outside the US include the Sappho Lesbian Witch Camp, near Vancouver, British Columbia, in Canada and the Sistajive Women's Music Festival in Australia. Some festivals are focused around the lesbian community, such as the Ohio Lesbian Festival, near Columbus, Ohio, which was created in 1988; Christian Lesbians Out (CLOUT), which holds a gathering in early August in Washington, D.C.; The Old Lesbian Gathering, a festival in Minneapolis, Minnesota; and RadLesFes, an event held in the middle of November near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Feminist-oriented festivals include the Southern Womyn's Festival in Dade City, Florida; the Gulf Coast Womyn's Festival in Ovett, Missouri; Wiminfest in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Womongathering, the Festival of Womyn's Spirituality; the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival, near Hart, Michigan; and the Midwest Womyn's Festival in DeKalb, Illinois.

While women's music festivals are centered on music, they support many other facets of lesbian and feminist culture. Some festivals are designed to provide a safe space for women's music and culture. Many festivals are held on college campuses or in remote rural locations, where attendees stay in campsites. Many festivals offer workshops on arts, crafts, fitness, and athletic events that women may not be able find in mainstream culture. In her book Eden Built by Eves, Bonnie Morris describes how women's music festivals serve women throughout the stages of their lives. Since the festivals are organized by women, for women, daycare and childcare facilities are typically provided. Festivals often provide a safe space for coming of age rituals for young women, adult romance and commitment ceremonies, the expression of alternative perspectives on motherhood, and the expression of grief and loss.[249]

Lilith Fair

[edit]
Lilith Fair co-founder Sarah McLachlan

Lilith Fair was a concert tour and travelling music festival that consisted solely of female solo artists and female-led bands. It was founded by Canadian musician Sarah McLachlan, Nettwerk Music Group's Dan Fraser and Terry McBride, and New York talent agent Marty Diamond. It took place during the summers of 1997 to 1999, and was revived in the summer of 2010.[251] McLachlan organized the festival after she became frustrated with concert promoters and radio stations that refused to feature two female musicians in a row.[252] Bucking conventional industry wisdom, she booked a successful tour for herself and Paula Cole. At least one of their appearances together – in McLachlan's home town, on 14 September 1996 – went by the name "Lilith Fair" and included performances by McLachlan, Cole, Lisa Loeb and Michelle McAdorey, formerly of Crash Vegas.

The next year, McLachlan founded the Lilith Fair tour, taking Lilith from the medieval Jewish legend that Lilith was Adam's first wife. In 1997, Lilith Fair garnered a $16 million gross, making it the top-grossing of any touring festival.[252] Among all concert tours for that year, it was the 16th highest grossing.[252] The festival received several pejorative nicknames, including "Breast-fest" and "Girlapalooza."[253][254]

Issues and approaches

[edit]

Glass ceiling in the music industry

[edit]
Singers such as Bonnie Raitt (left) and Cher (right) debuted in a historically male-dominated industry in their scenes.

Multiple research studies and news articles in recent years have brought to light the lack of women in top executive roles in the music industry, at record labels, music publishers, and in talent management. The industry has itself recognized this issue over the past few decades but little has changed.

In 1982, for example, Cosmopolitan published an article interviewing and profiling six women executives which found that, "For the first time, women are pioneering in the zany competitive, and very lucrative, pop-record industry...."[255][256] Only a few female executives were included in the chapter about women in the business side of the music industry in the encyclopedic book, She Bop: The Definitive History of Women in Rock, Pop and Soul, which primarily focused on women musicians and vocalists.

The New York Times reported in 2021 that, "Three years ago, an academic tallied the performers, producers and songwriters behind hit songs, and found that women's representation fell on a scale between, roughly, poor and abysmal."[257][258]

Despite advances in the 1970s and 1980s, female senior executives are still scarce in the music business today.[259] According to a 2021 Annenberg study, "...across 70 major and independent music companies...13.9% were women."[260] Women fare far better outside the music industry; according to a 2021 report by U.S. News & World Report, "Women held 31.7% of top executive positions across all industries…"[261]

Racism, sexism and discrimination of female musicians

[edit]
Performers such as Beyoncé and Lady Gaga have been vocal about multiple issues, including sexism and gender inequality

Whether in hip-hop, country, or popular music, female musicians and performers from all genres experience discrimination and sexist treatment.[262] The three prominent forms of subtle discrimination experienced by female singers are being mistaken for non-musicians, lack of artistic control compared to their male counterparts, and having their sexuality, age, and femininity constantly scrutinized.[263] In many cases, female musicians are dismissed into inferior roles, such as a "gimmick," "good for a girl," and "invisible accessory."[263] Males lead most of the music projects and female musicians' artistic freedom is constrained by male bandleaders or managers.[263] Another prevalent form of discrimination towards female vocalists and musicians in the music industry is sexual misconduct.[264] Many female musicians are afraid to come out about their experiences with sexual assault because their stories are dismissed as being overly sensitive to what is considered normal in the music industry. In the turn of twentieth century, however, many female vocalists such as Kesha, Taylor Swift, and Lady Gaga and Dua Lipa came forward with their stories, helping shape the anti-harassment movement. Additionally, under the MeToo movement, more stories of misconduct and discrimination in the music industry are being re-examined.[265] Dua Lipa has spoken out about sexism in the music industry, saying that "women struggle to get recognition", as often the success of big female artists is discredited by a "man behind the woman."[266]

Another form of sexism in the music industry appears in the lyrics.[262] There are five major themes in lyrics from all genres that facilitate female discrimination, noted here by Sarah Neff: "portrayal of women in traditional gender roles, portrayal of women as inferior to men, portrayal of women as objects, portrayal of women as stereotypes, and portrayal of violence against women."[262] Utilizing a series of sexist markers, studies have found that countless lyrics entails sexist themes, including "depicting women in traditional gender roles, describing relationships with women in unrealistic ways, and attributing a woman's worth strictly on the basis of her physical appearance."[267] Sexism in music is well-documented for genres such as rap and hip-hop, but with newer research, this holds true for country music, rock, and other genres as well.[267]

Women conductors faced sexism, racism, and gender discrimination throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. "To break down this apparent employment barrier, women created their own opportunities by founding and organizing all-female orchestras"; one example is the Fadette Women's Orchestra in Boston founded in 1888 by conductor Caroline B. Nichols.[196] A number of other all-women orchestras were founded in the early decades of the 20th century, and women conductors led these groups. Writer Ronnie Wooten notes, "It is both interesting and ironic that something that is considered 'universal'  has historically excluded women (with the exception of certain stereotypically defined roles) and more specifically women of color."[268] This comments on the fact that the underrepresentation of women in conducting is seen as a sexism issue, but is an issue of racism as well.

Women conductors continue to face sexism in the early decades of the 21st century. In the 2010s, several male conductors and musicians made sexist statements about women conductors. In 2013, "Vasily Petrenko, the principal conductor of the Oslo Philharmonic and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, provoked outrage when he told a Norwegian newspaper that 'orchestras react better when they have a man in front of them."[269] He also stated that "when women have families, it becomes difficult to be as dedicated as is demanded in the business."[269] Bruno Mantovani, the director of the Paris Conservatoire, gave an interview in which he made sexist statements about women conductors. Mantovani raised the "problem of maternity" and he questioned the ability of women to withstand the physical challenges and stresses of the profession, which he claimed involve "conducting, taking a plane, taking another plane, conducting again."[8] Yuri Temirkanov, the music director of the St. Petersburg Philharmonic, made sexist statements about women conductors in a September 2013 interview, stating that "The essence of the conductor's profession is strength. The essence of a woman is weakness."[8] Finnish conductor Jorma Panula made sexist statements about women conductors in 2014; he stated that "women [conductors are not]... getting any better – only worse", which he called a "purely biological question."[270][271]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ This painting by Artemisia Gentileschi, representing Saint Cecilia, has become identified with Maddalena Casulana since 2010. However, there is no evidence that it is actually a portrait of Casulana.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Crawford, Anwen (26 May 2015). "The World Needs Female Rock Critics". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 9 November 2021. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  2. ^ a b Mizoguchi, Karen (12 December 2015). "Lady Gaga Calls Music Industry a 'F—king Boys Club'". People. Archived from the original on 9 November 2021.
  3. ^ McDermott, Maeve (9 December 2016). "Madonna blasts music industry sexism: 'If you're a girl, you have to play the game'". USA Today. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  4. ^ Smith, Stacy L.; et al. (January 2018). Inclusion in the Recording Studio? Gender and Race/Ethnicity of Artists, Songwriters & Producers across 600 Popular Songs from 2012-2017 (PDF) (Report). Annenberg Inclusion Initiative. pp. 1–31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 November 2021 – via USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism News staff.
  5. ^ Sisario, Ben (25 January 2018). "Gender Diversity in the Music Industry? The Numbers Are Grim". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 9 November 2021. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Schaap, Julian; Berkers, Pauwke (2014). "Grunting Alone? Online Gender Inequality in Extreme Metal Music". IASPM Journal. 4 (1): 101–116. doi:10.5429/2079-3871(2014)v4i1.8en. hdl:1765/51580.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Reublin, Richard A.; Beil, Richard G. (September 2002). "In Search of Women in American Song; A Neglected Musical Heritage". Parlor Songs. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Morreale, Michael (19 March 2014). "Classical Music's Shocking Gender Gap". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 27 June 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  9. ^ a b Duchen, Jessica (28 February 2015). "Why the male domination of classical music might be coming to an end". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d Levintova, Hannah (23 September 2013). "Here's Why You Seldom See Women Leading a Symphony". Mother Jones. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  11. ^ a b c Ncube, Rosina (September 2013). "Sounding Off: Why So Few Women In Audio?". Sound on Sound.
  12. ^ a b c "Singer Asha Bhosle enters Guinness World Records for most single studio recordings". India Today. 21 October 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  13. ^ a b Citron, Marcia J. (1993). Gender and the Musical Canon. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521449748.
  14. ^ a b c Philips, Abbey (1 September 2011). "Spacebomb: Truth lies somewhere in between". RVANews.
  15. ^ Cyrus and Mather, Cynthia J and Olivia Carter (1 October 1998). "Rereading Absence: Women in Medieval and Rennaissance Music". Symposium.music.org. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  16. ^ Bennett, Judith M.; Hollister, Warren C. (2001). Medieval Europe: A Short History (9th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 317. ISBN 9780071121095.
  17. ^ Dowell, Nathan (Spring 2019). "Lesser-Known Virtues: How the Ordo Virtutum Reflects Hildegard of Bingenâ•Žs Monastic Worldview". newprairiepress.org. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  18. ^ Howell, John. "What was the first opera?". Medieval Music & Arts Foundation. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  19. ^ Mirapaul, Matthew (23 July 1998). "The Hildegurls Present an Electronic Morality Play". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  20. ^ "Hildegard von Bingen Resource Page: Hildegard Publishing Company". hildegard.com. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
  21. ^ Maddocks, Fiona. Hildegard of Bingen: The Woman of Her Age (New York: Doubleday, 2001), p. 194.
  22. ^ "Hildegard von Bingen". ABC Classic. 10 March 2019. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  23. ^ Alternative names: Madalena Casulana di Mezarii, Madalena Casula.
  24. ^ Bridges, Thomas W. (2001). "Casulana [Mezari], Maddalena". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.05155. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  25. ^ Bowers, Jane (1996). "Caterina Assandra". Women Composers: Music Through the Ages. Vol. 1. New York: G. K. Hall. ISBN 9780816109265 – via Archive.org.
  26. ^ "Assand2.mid". Early Women Masters. Archived from the original (midi file) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  27. ^ "Francesca Caccini Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More". AllMusic. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  28. ^ a b Glixon, Beth L. (1999). "More on the life and death of Barbara Strozzi". The Musical Quarterly. 83 (1): 134–141. doi:10.1093/mq/83.1.134.
  29. ^ Heller, Wendy (2006). "Usurping the place of the muses: Barbara Strozzi and the female composer in seventeenth-century Italy". In Stauffer, George B. (ed.). The World of Baroque Music: New Perspectives. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 145–168. ISBN 978-025334798-5.
  30. ^ Kendrick, Robert (2002). "Intent and intertextuality in Barbara Strozzi's sacred music". Recercare. 14. Fondazione Italiana per la Musica Antica: 65–98. JSTOR 41701379.
  31. ^ Rosand, Ellen (1986). "The voice of Barbara Strozzi". In Bowers, Jane; Tick, Judith (eds.). Women Making Music: The Western Art Tradition, 1150–1950. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-025201204-4.
  32. ^ Cessac, Catherine (2001). "Jacquet de La Guerre, Elisabeth". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.14084. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  33. ^ Cyr, Mary (Winter 2008). "Elisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre: Myth or Marvel? Seeking the Composer's Individuality". The Musical Times. 149 (1905): 79–87. doi:10.2307/25434573. JSTOR 25434573.
  34. ^ Baldwin, Olive; Wilson, Thelma (24 February 2010) [2001]. "Abrams, Harriett". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.00059. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  35. ^ Huberty, Michel; Giraud, Alain; Magdelaine, F. and B. (1989). Hohenzollern-Waldeck. L'Allemagne Dynastique (in French). Vol. 5. France: Laballery. pp. 162, 172. ISBN 978-2-901138-05-1.
  36. ^ a b Jonsson, Leif; Ivarsdotter-Johnsson, Anna, eds. (1993). Den gustavianska tiden (PDF). Musiken i Sverige (in Swedish). Vol. II. Frihetstid och gustaviansk tid 1720-1810. Stockholm: T. Fischer & Co and Royal Swedish Academy of Music. pp. 302, 373, 402. ISBN 978-91-7054-701-0 – via Swedish Musical Heritage.
  37. ^ Boer, Bertil H. van (2001). "Stenborg, Carl". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.26674. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  38. ^ Sadie, Julie Anne; Samuel, Rhian (1994). The Norton/Grove dictionary of women composers. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 9780393034875. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
  39. ^ Cook, Elizabeth (1997). "Beaumesnil, Henriette Adélaïde Villard de". In Sadie, Stanley (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Vol. 1. New York: Grove (Oxford University Press). p. 366. ISBN 978-0-19-522186-2.
  40. ^ "Composers Biography V-Vz". Dolmetsch Organisation. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  41. ^ a b Berdes, Jane L. (1995). "Anna Bon". Norton/Grove Dictionary of Women Composers. New York: W. W. Norton.
  42. ^ More extensive biography is found in Barbara Garvey Jackson's introduction to her edition of the op. 2 sonatas (Fayetteville, AR: ClarNan Editions, 1989).
  43. ^ a b c Raessler, Daniel M. (2001). "Guest [Miles], Jane Mary". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.00059. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  44. ^ Ballchin, Robert, ed. (1983). "Guest, Jane Mary". Catalogue of Printed Music in the British Library to 1980. Vol. 25. London: K. G. Saur. ISBN 978-0-86291-322-9.
  45. ^ a b Raessler, Daniel M. (3 January 2008) [2004]. "Miles [née Guest], Jane Mary [Jenny] (c. 1762–1846), pianist and composer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/59208. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  46. ^ Fuller, Sophie (1994). Pandora Guide to Women Composers. London: Pandora. pp. 143–144. ISBN 978-0-04-440897-0.
  47. ^ a b Godt, Irving (1 October 1995). "Marianna in Italy: The International Reputation of Marianna Martines (1744-1812)". Journal of Musicology. 13 (4): 538, 541. doi:10.2307/763898. ISSN 0277-9269. JSTOR 763898.
  48. ^ Wessely, Helene; Godt, Irving (2001). "Martínez, Marianne [Anna Katharina] von". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.17913. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  49. ^ Pohl, Carl Ferdinand (1871). Denkschrift aus Anlass des hundert-jährigen Bestehens der Tonkünstler-societät, im Jahre 1862 reorganisirt als "Haydn" Witwen und Waisen-Versorgungs-Verein der Tonkünstler in Wien (in German). Vienna: Selbstverlag des "Haydn". p. 60 – via Archive.org.
  50. ^ Letter of 16 July 1820, in Hensel, Sebastian, ed. (1884). The Mendelssohn Family (1729–1847) From Letters and Journals. Vol. I. Translated by Klingemann, Carl. London: Sampson Low and Co. p. 82. OCLC 1061914545.
  51. ^ Letter to Lea Mendelssohn-Bartholdy, 24 June 1837, in Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Felix (1864). Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Paul (ed.). Letters of Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy from 1833 to 1847. Translated by Lady Wallace. London: Longman. p. 113. OCLC 17521633.
  52. ^ a b Reich, Nancy B. (1986). "Clara Schumann". Women Making Music: The Western Art Tradition. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 250. ISBN 9780252014703.
  53. ^ Tu, Mary-Ann (2012). "About Katherine". Katherine Hoover. Archived from the original on 25 June 2014. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  54. ^ a b c d e Gray, Anne K. (2007). The World of Women in Classical Music. La Jolla, California: WordWorld. ISBN 978-1-59975-320-1 – via Archive.org.
  55. ^ a b c Von Glahn, Denise (2013). Music and the Skillful Listener (eBook). Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253007933. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  56. ^ Larsen, Libby. "Libby Larsen: About". Libby Larsen. Archived from the original on 20 August 2017. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  57. ^ "Jennifer Higdon Biography". Jennifer Higdon. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  58. ^ a b c d e "Songwriters Hall of Fame". songhall.com.
  59. ^ Branigin, William (20 November 2013). "Presidential Medal of Freedom honors diverse group of Americans". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 17 January 2018.
  60. ^ a b Mullen, John (2015). The Show Must Go On! Popular Song in Britain During the First World War. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 9781472441584.
  61. ^ a b c d e Gioia, Ted (12 March 2013). "Five women songwriters who helped shape the sound of jazz". Oxford University Press: OUPblog.
  62. ^ "Show Boat". Rodgers & Hammerstein. Archived from the original on 14 April 2011. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
  63. ^ "Bessie Smith". Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  64. ^ "Dolly Jones | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  65. ^ Daoud, Alexandra (26 September 2017). "Women in Jazz: 10 Ladies Who Changed Music Forever". Project Revolver. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  66. ^ Schoenberg, Loren (2002). The NPR curious listener's guide to jazz.
  67. ^ a b Saur, Kirsten (20 April 2016). "Swing It Sister: The Influence of Female Jazz Musicians on Music and Society". The Research and Scholarship Symposium. 15. Cedarville University.
  68. ^ a b c d e White, Erika (28 January 2015). "Music History Primer: 3 Pioneering Female Songwriters of the '60s". REBEAT Magazine.
  69. ^ a b c Kutulas, Judy (2017). After Aquarius Dawned: How the Revolutions of the 1960s Became the Popular Culture of the 1970s. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9781469632933. JSTOR 10.5149/9781469632926_kutulas.
  70. ^ a b Saal, Hubert (14 July 1969). "The Girls: Letting Go". Newsweek. pp. 68–71.
  71. ^ a b c d Carson, Mina; Lewis, Tisa; Shaw, Susan M.; Baumgardner, Jennifer; Richards, Amy (2004). Girls Rock!: Fifty Years of Women Making Music (1 ed.). University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 9780813123103. JSTOR j.ctt130j6dp.
  72. ^ a b Barton, Laura (26 January 2017). "From Joni Mitchell to Laura Marling: how female troubadours changed music". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  73. ^ a b c d Gioia, Michael (2 August 2015). ""It's Revving Up" – The Next Generation of Female Songwriters Share Their Hopes for the Future". Playbill. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  74. ^ a b Purcell, Carey (7 June 2015). "Fun Home Duo Make History as First All-Female Writing Team to Win the Tony". Playbill. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  75. ^ a b Mantel, Sarah; Snyder, Linda J. (1 May 2013). "Women Composers and the American Musical: The Early Years". Journal of Singing. 69 (5): 527. ISSN 1086-7732. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  76. ^ Griffen, Anders (December 2012). "The Abbey Lincoln Collection, 1949–2008 (MC 101)". Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University Libraries. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  77. ^ Chinen, Nate (14 August 2010). "Abbey Lincoln, Jazz Singer and writer, Dies at 80". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
  78. ^ Wiser, Carl (14 January 2009). "Black Women Songwriters: Song Writing". Songfacts. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  79. ^ "4 Artists Discuss the Realities of Being a Black Woman in the Music Industry". Hypebae. 22 February 2021. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  80. ^ Oglesbee, Frank W. (June 1999). "Suzi Quatro: A prototype in the archsheology of rock". Popular Music and Society. 23 (2): 29–39. doi:10.1080/03007769908591731. ISSN 0300-7766.
  81. ^ a b c Auslander, Philip (28 January 2004). "I Wanna Be Your Man: Suzi Quatro's musical androgyny" (PDF). Popular Music. 23 (1): 1–16. doi:10.1017/S0261143004000030. S2CID 191508078. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 May 2013.
  82. ^ a b Brake, Mike (1990). "Heavy Metal Culture, Masculinity and Iconography". In Frith, Simon; Goodwin, Andrew (eds.). On Record: Rock, Pop and the Written Word. London: Routledge. pp. 87–91. ISBN 9780415053068.
  83. ^ Walser, Robert (1993). Running with the Devil: Power, Gender and Madness in Heavy Metal Music. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press. p. 76. ISBN 9780819562609.
  84. ^ Eddy, Chuck (1 July 2011). "Women of Metal". Spin. SpinMedia Group.
  85. ^ Kelly, Kim (17 January 2013). "Queens of noise: heavy metal encourages heavy-hitting women". The Telegraph.
  86. ^ "Meet the duo dressing Girls Aloud". OK!. 20 March 2009. Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  87. ^ Day, Elizabeth (9 November 2008). "The nation's new sweetheart". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  88. ^ "Girlschool - Biography". IMDb. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  89. ^ "The Hedrons". Belfast Telegraph.[dead link]
  90. ^ Rutledge-Borger, Meredith E. (15 April 2013). "The Fabulous Girl Groups". The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. Archived from the original on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  91. ^ Peneny, D.K. (n.d.). "Girl Groups – A Short History". History-of-rock.com. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  92. ^ For example, vocalist groups Sugababes and Girls Aloud are referred to as "girl bands" Meet the duo dressing Girls Aloud OK magazine, 20 March 2009; The nation's new sweetheart The Observer, 9 November 2008; while instrumentalists Girlschool are termed a "girl group" Biography for Girlschool Internet Movie Database; The Hedrons The Belfast Telegraph, 19 January 2007
  93. ^ a b c Henry, Murphy Hicks (2013). "All-Female Bands". Pretty Good for a Girl: Women in Bluegrass. Music in American Life. University of Illinois Press. pp. 304–315. ISBN 9780252032868. JSTOR 10.5406/j.ctt3fh3cr.50.
  94. ^ "Filipinki. W USA przecierały szlaki, w ZSRR czerwone dywany". Gazeta Wyborcza. wyborcza.pl. 2 November 2013. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  95. ^ "The Billboard Hot 100 1982". Billboard. Archived from the original on 20 October 2006. Retrieved 30 October 2008.
  96. ^ Coon, Caroline (1977). 1988: The New Wave Punk Rock Explosion. London: Omnibus/Hawthorne Books. ISBN 978-0801561290.
  97. ^ Berman, Judy (8 August 2011). "15 Essential Women Punk Rock Icons". Flavorwire. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
  98. ^ "Women of Punk and Post-Punk Music". Biography.com. Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  99. ^ "Why Women in Punk?". Women in Punk. Punk77. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  100. ^ Reddington, Helen (2012). The Lost Women of Rock Music: Female Musicians of the Punk Era. Ashgate/Equinox Publishing. ISBN 978-1845539573. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  101. ^ Woronzoff, Elizabeth. "The Lost Women of Rock Music' Is an Important Work, But a Replay of the Same Old Themes". Pop Matters. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  102. ^ No Future?. No Future Conference. University of Wolverhampton. September 2001.
  103. ^ Reddington, Helen (1977). Introduction: The Lost Women of Rock Music (PDF). London: Ashgate. ISBN 9780754657736. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 December 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  104. ^ Lydon, John (1995). Rotten: No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs. London: Coronet. p. 378. ISBN 978-0312428136.
  105. ^ Petridis, Alexis (June 2014). "The Slits' Viv Albertine on punk, violence and doomed domesticity". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  106. ^ Andrews, Charlotte Richardson (3 July 2014). "Punk has a problem with women. Why?". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  107. ^ "Women Who Rock: 10 Essential Punk Songs". The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Museum. Archived from the original on 2 February 2012. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  108. ^ "Girlschool biography". Girlschool Official Website. Retrieved 27 January 2011.
  109. ^ "Reviews". Classic Rock. Girlschool official website. December 2004. Archived from the original on 7 July 2012. Retrieved 3 September 2010. ...apparently listed in The Guinness Book Of Records for being the world's longest-surviving all-female rock band
  110. ^ Hill, R. L. (2016). "'Power has a penis': Cost reduction, social exchange and sexism in metal—reviewing the work of Sonia Vasan". Metal Music Studies. 2 (3): 263–272. doi:10.1386/mms.2.3.263_7. ISSN 2052-3998.
  111. ^ True, Everett (24 August 2011). "Ten myths about grunge, Nirvana and Kurt Cobain". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  112. ^ Bobbitt, Melissa (6 March 2019). "The 10 Greatest Drummers of the '90s". LiveAbout. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  113. ^ "grunge". Encyclopedia Britannica. 22 December 2023. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  114. ^ "Bonnie Raitt cover story". Guitar Player Magazine. May 1977.
  115. ^ "Bonnie Raitt cover story". Guitar Player Magazine. July 1998.
  116. ^ "Tina Weymouth & David Byrne, The Talking Heads". Guitar Player Magazine. March 1984.
  117. ^ Boder, Christopher (October 1991). "The Hole Story". Buzz. Vol. VII, no. 70. p. 13. Most women in rock are only repeating what men have done. The women in this band are not doing that. We're coming at things from a more feminine, lunar, viewpoint.
  118. ^ "Destiny's Child's Long Road To Fame (The Song Isn't Called 'Survivor' For Nothing)". MTV. 13 June 2005. Archived from the original on 30 November 2022. Retrieved 4 June 2014.
  119. ^ "Simon Fuller: Guiding pop culture". BBC News. 18 June 2003. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  120. ^ Silva, Marsha (13 June 2018). "HAIM Says a Male Group Got Paid 10 Times More by a Festival". Digital Music News.
  121. ^ Larsson, Naomi (12 October 2017). "Live music acts are mostly male-only. What's holding women back?". The Guardian.
  122. ^ "Simon Cowell Congratulates Little Mix After DNA Beats Spice Girls' Record Stateside". HuffPost. 5 June 2013.
  123. ^ Kaufman, Gil (24 August 2014). "See Fifth Harmony Melt Down Onstage After VMA Win". MTV. Archived from the original on 6 October 2022.
  124. ^ Rasch, Mirac (13 November 2015). "The Top 10 Female Jazz Musicians You Should Know". Culture Trip. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
  125. ^ a b c Arnwine, B. (2018). "The Beautiful Struggle: A Look at Women Who Have Helped Shape the DC Jazz Scene". In Jackson, M.; Ruble, B. (eds.). DC Jazz: Stories of Jazz Music in Washington, DC. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press. pp. 117–128. doi:10.2307/j.ctvvnh25. ISBN 978-1-62616-590-8. JSTOR j.ctvvnh25. S2CID 243928638.
  126. ^ Stange, Mary Zeiss; Oyster, Carol K.; Sloan, Jane E. (2011). "Women In Classical Music". Encyclopedia of Women in Today's World. Vol. 1. SAGE Publications. p. 249. ISBN 978-1-4129-7685-5.
  127. ^ a b c d e f g Osborne, William (October 1996). "Art Is Just an Excuse: Gender Bias in International Orchestras". IAWM Journal: 6–14. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  128. ^ "Steffy Goldner – America & The New York Philharmonic (1921–1932)". New York Philharmonic Archives.
  129. ^ Hernandez, Javier C. (22 November 2022). "In a 'Sea Change,' Women of the Philharmonic Now Outnumber the Men". The New York Times. It was not until 1922 that the Philharmonic hired its first female member, Stephanie Goldner, a 26-year-old harpist from Vienna. She departed in 1932, and the orchestra became an all-male bastion again for decades.
  130. ^ "The world's greatest orchestras". Gramophone. 23 March 2010. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  131. ^ Oestreich, James R. (16 November 2007). "Berlin in Lights: The Woman Question". The New York Times.
  132. ^ Musikalische Misogynie [Musical Misogyny] (Radio broadcast) (in German). translation by William Osborne, transcribed by Regina Himmelbauer. Westdeutscher Rundfunk Radio 5. 13 February 1996.{{cite AV media}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  133. ^ "The Vienna Philharmonic's Letter of Response to the Gen-Mus List". Osborne-conant.org. 25 February 1996. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  134. ^ Perlez, Jane (28 February 1997). "Vienna Philharmonic Lets Women Join in Harmony". The New York Times.
  135. ^ "Vienna opera appoints first ever female concertmaster". France 24. 8 May 2008. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  136. ^ Oestreich, James R. (28 February 1998). "Even Legends Adjust To Time and Trend, Even the Vienna Philharmonic". The New York Times.
  137. ^ von Aue, Mary (24 October 2014). "Why Madonna's Unapologetic 'Bedtime Stories' Is Her Most Important Album". Vice Magazine. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  138. ^ Fong, Melissa (10 September 2014). "Female DJs tackle gender bias". Ricochet. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  139. ^ Keyes, Cheryl L. (2013). "'She Was Too Black for Rock and Too Hard for Soul': (Re)discovering the Musical Career of Betty Mabry Davis". American Studies. 52 (4): 35–55. doi:10.1353/ams.2013.0107. ISSN 2153-6856. S2CID 159486276.
  140. ^ Zellner, Xander (25 June 2018). "BLACKPINK Makes K-Pop History on Hot 100, Billboard 200 & More With 'DDU-DU DDU-DU'". Billboard. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  141. ^ "Emerging Artists: The week of June 30, 2018". Billboard. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  142. ^ a b . QQ Music (in Chinese). Tencent. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  143. ^ Oliver, Paul (2001). "Rainey, Ma [née Pridgett, Gertrude]". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.50130. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  144. ^ Southern, Eileen (1997). The Music of Black Americans: A History (3rd ed.). W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-97141-5.
  145. ^ a b c Stewart-Baxter, Derrick (1970). Ma Rainey and the Classic Blues Singers. New York: Stein & Day. ISBN 9780812813173.
  146. ^ a b Harrison, Daphne Duval (1988). Black Pearls: Blues Queens of the '20s. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 9780813512792 – via Archive.org.
  147. ^ Harris, Sheldon (1994). Blues Who's Who (Revised ed.). New York: Da Capo Press. pp. 48, 137, 254, 484, 540, 580. ISBN 9780306801556.
  148. ^ Steinberg, Jesse R.; Fairweather, Abrol (2011). Blues: Thinking Deep about Feeling Low. Hoboken: Wiley. p. 159. ISBN 9780470656808.
  149. ^ McCarthy, Amy (18 June 2014). "Bro Country's Sexism Is Ruining Country Music". Dallas Observer. Archived from the original on 21 June 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  150. ^ Rasmussen, Eric E.; Densley, Rebecca L. (February 2017). "Girl in a Country Song: Gender Roles and Objectification of Women in Popular Country Music across 1990 to 2014". Sex Roles. 76 (3–4): 190. doi:10.1007/s11199-016-0670-6. ISSN 0360-0025. S2CID 255003988.
  151. ^ Nilles, Billy (26 November 2023). "Dolly Parton's Fascinating World Will Have You Captivated From 9 to 5—And Beyond". E! Online. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  152. ^ Rylah, Juliet Bennett (17 November 2023). "The business of Dolly Parton". The Hustle. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  153. ^ a b Caulfield, Keith (23 September 2018). "Carrie Underwood Makes Country History on the Billboard 200 Chart As 'Cry Pretty' Debuts at No. 1". Billboard. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  154. ^ Weiner, Natalie (31 October 2019). "Fine Tune: Inside Miranda Lambert's Brilliant Catalog of Timeless Country". Billboard. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  155. ^ Ramirez, Daniel (Fall 2016). "A Double Shot of Honesty With a Reality Chaser". Texas Lifestyle Magazine. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  156. ^ Leimkuehler, Matthew. "Miranda Lambert's MuttNation helps 'a whole lot of mutts' with $250,000 donation". The Tennessean. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  157. ^ Russonello, Giovanni (1 December 2017). "For Women in Jazz, a Year of Reckoning and Recognition". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  158. ^ "Marian Anderson Biography". Lakewood Public Library. Archived from the original on 29 July 2013. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
  159. ^ Schauensee, Max de; Newland, Marti (reviser) (25 July 2013). "Marian Anderson". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.A2240043. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  160. ^ Gelb, Peter. "Black Voices at the Met". Metropolitan Opera. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  161. ^ Erlmann, Veit (1996). "Aesthetics of the Global Imagination: Reflections on World Music in the 1990s". Public Culture. Vol. 8, no. 3. pp. 467–488.
  162. ^ Frith, Simon (2000). "The Discourse of World Music". In Born, Georgina; Hesmondhalgh, David (eds.). Western Music and Its Others: Difference, Representation, and Appropriation in Music. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520220836 – via Archive.org.
  163. ^ Patricia Ebrey (1999), Cambridge Illustrated History of China, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 148.
  164. ^ 歌手列表. QQ Music (in Chinese). Tencent. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  165. ^ 歌手列表. QQ Music (in Chinese). Tencent. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  166. ^ Fereshteh Javaheri, 'With These Problems of Life, There Is No Time for Art,' trans. Maryam Habibian, Zanan, No. 36 (1997), p. 23.
  167. ^ "The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry Releases Its 2014 Data on the World Music Market". Arama! Japan. 22 April 2015. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  168. ^ "2015年 年間音楽ランキングを発表! 年間シングルランキング 1位~25位". Oricon Style (in Japanese). Oricon. 28 December 2015. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  169. ^ "【オリコン】AKB48、シングル総売上日本一3615.8万枚 秋元氏総売上は1億枚突破". Oricon Style (in Japanese). 9 December 2015. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  170. ^ Dunbar, Julie C. (2011). Women, Music, Culture. Routledge. p. 23. ISBN 978-1351857451. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  171. ^ Martin, Douglas. "Rosetta Reitz, Champion of Jazz Women, Dies at 84", The New York Times, 14 November 2008. Retrieved 19 November 2008.
  172. ^ "Abbate named University Professor". Harvard Gazette. 20 November 2013. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  173. ^ a b c d e Koskoff, Ellen (1987). Women and Music in Cross-Cultural Perspective. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313243141.
  174. ^ a b Koskoff, Ellen (1 January 2019). "My Music". Ethnomusicology. 63 (1): 1–18. doi:10.5406/ethnomusicology.63.1.0001. ISSN 0014-1836. S2CID 239295576.
  175. ^ a b "Deborah Wong". University of California, Riverside. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  176. ^ "Women Who Rock Oral History Archive :: Deborah Wong". University of Washington. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  177. ^ a b Wieland Howe, Sandra (2015). "Women Music Educators in the United States: A History". GEMS (Gender, Education, Music, and Society). 8 (4). Gender Research in Music Education.
  178. ^ a b c d e f Wieland Howe, Sondra (Fall 2009). "A Historical View of Woman in Music Education Careers". Philosophy of Music Education Review. 17 (2): 162–183. doi:10.2979/PME.2009.17.2.162. JSTOR 40495498. S2CID 145805294 – via JSTOR.
  179. ^ Wieland Howe, Sondra (5 July 2012). A Historical View of Woman in Music Education Careers (Slideshow).
  180. ^ Shehan Campbell, Patricia; Klinger, Rita (2000). "Learning". In Koskoff, Ellen (ed.). Garland Encyclopedia of World Music. Vol. 3: The United States and Canada. Garland Publishing. p. 276. ISBN 9780824049447.
  181. ^ Livingston, Carolyn. "Women in American Music Education: How Names Mentioned in History Books are Regarded by Contemporary Scholars". MENC Sessions (April 1994). Archived from the original on 7 February 2007. Retrieved 19 May 2008.
  182. ^ "Garcia's Method of Breathing". Werner's Magazine. December 1889. p. 270.
  183. ^ "Music Educators Hall of Fame Honorees". The National Association for Music Education. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 19 May 2008.
  184. ^ Drechsler, Martina; Scheithauer, Uwe (2016). "Cornelia Schröder-Auerbach". In Josten, Hildegard; YOPIC e.V. (eds.). Frauenspuren II: Porträts fast vergessener Frauen aus Steglitz-Zehlendorf. Berlin: YOPIC e.V. and Bezirksamt Steglitz-Zehlendorf. p. 60.
  185. ^ cf. Schröder-Auerbach, Cornelia (1930). Die deutsche Clavichordkunst des 18. Jahrhunderts (in German) (1st ed.). Kassel: Bärenreiter. OCLC 3547512., simultaneously: Freiburg, Univ., Diss., 1928, 2nd and 3. ed. 1953 and 1959.
  186. ^ a b c d Schüler, Nico (3 February 2024). "Der gebürtige Rostocker Komonist Hanning Schröder (1896–1987): Mit neuer Sachlichkeit zur Zwölftontechnik". In Möller, Hartmut; Schröder, Martin (eds.). Musik, Kultur, Wissenschaft (in German). Vol. 1. Rostocker Schriften zur Musikwissenschaft und Musikpädagogik. ISBN 978-3-89924-307-9.
  187. ^ "Grace Harriet Spofford papers". Five College Archives & Manuscript Collections. Retrieved 20 April 2019.[permanent dead link]
  188. ^ Howe, Sondra Wieland (2014). Women Music Educators in the United States: A History. Plymouth, United Kingdom: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0810888470.
  189. ^ a b Sicherman, Barbara (1986). Notable American Women: The Modern Period: A Biographical Dictionary. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674627338.
  190. ^ Egan, Robert F. (1989). Music and the Arts in the Community: The Community Music School in America. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 9780810821170.
  191. ^ a b "Isbin, Sharon". Juilliard School. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  192. ^ Tribot Laspière, Victor (2 October 2013). "Une main ferme à l'Orchestre national de France". France Musique (in French). Retrieved 17 October 2016.
  193. ^ Pentreath, Rosie (6 March 2015). "11 of today's top women conductors". BBC Music Magazine. Archived from the original on 16 March 2015. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  194. ^ a b c Burton-Hill, Clemency (21 October 2014). "Culture – Why aren't there more women conductors?". BBC. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  195. ^ a b c d American Symphony Orchestra League. Oxford Music Online. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. 2001. 00790.
  196. ^ a b Jagow, Shelley M. (1998). "Women Orchestral Conductors in America: The Struggle for Acceptance—An Historical View from the Nineteenth Century to the Present". College Music Symposium. 38: 126–145. ISSN 0069-5696. JSTOR 40374324. Archived from the original on 21 September 2015.
  197. ^ "Sisters in the Spotlight". Ebony. Johnson Publishing Company. March 2003. Retrieved 18 May 2010.
  198. ^ Van Weelden, Kimberly (2004). "Racially Stereotyped Music and Conductor Race: Perceptions of Performance". Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education (160): 38–48. ISSN 0010-9894. JSTOR 40319217.
  199. ^ Frith, Simon (2001). "Pop Music". In Frith, S.; Stray, W.; Street, J. (eds.). The Cambridge Companion to Pop and Rock. Cambridge University Press. p. 226.
  200. ^ Jones, Steve, ed. (2002). Pop Music and the Press. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 134. ISBN 9781566399661.
  201. ^ McLeod (2002) at 94, quoted in Leonard, Marion (2007). "Meaning Making in the Press". Gender in the Music Industry: Rock, Discourse, and Girl Power. Aldershot, Hampshire, England: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 67. ISBN 9780754638629.
  202. ^ Moore, Tracy (20 March 2014). "Oh, the Unbelievable Shit You Get Writing About Music as a Woman". Jezebel.
  203. ^ Powers, Ann (19 October 2011). "Why I Write: Ann Powers Reflects on Writing About Rock". National Writing Project. Retrieved 19 December 2014.
  204. ^ "Pop music critic Ann Powers searches for the language of rock and roll". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 1 October 2011. Retrieved 19 December 2014.
  205. ^ MacDonald, Patrick (7 March 2006). "Ann Powers named L.A. Times pop critic". The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on 10 March 2007.
  206. ^ a b c Friedlander, Emilie (3 June 2015). "The World Doesn't Need More Female Music Critics". The Fader. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  207. ^ a b c Osborne, William (11 June 2005). "Women Music Critics". Osborne-conant.org. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  208. ^ Clapp, Susannah (28 May 2014). "Time to bring down the curtain on stage critics' sexism". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  209. ^ a b Savage, Mark (29 August 2012). "Why are female record producers so rare?". BBC News. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  210. ^ a b c d e "Trina Shoemaker Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  211. ^ Dunbar, Julie C. (2010). Women, Music, Culture: An Introduction. Taylor & Francis. p. 304. ISBN 978-0415875622.
  212. ^ Massey, Howard (2009). Behind the Glass: Top Record Producers Tell How They Craft the Hits, Volume 2. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 256–257. ISBN 978-0879309558.
  213. ^ a b Katz, Mark (12 December 2007). "Men, Women, and Turntables: Gender and the DJ Battle". The Musical Quarterly. 89 (4): 580–599. doi:10.1093/musqtl/gdm007.
  214. ^ a b Farrugia, Rebekah (2013). Beyond the Dance Floor: Female DJs, Technology and Electronic Dance Music Culture. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-1841505664.
  215. ^ Oldenziel, Ruth A. (1997). "Boys and Their Toys: The Fisher Body Craftsman's Guild, 1930–1968, and the Making of a Male Technical Domain". Technology and Culture. 38 (1): 60–96. doi:10.2307/3106784. JSTOR 3106784. S2CID 108698842.
  216. ^ Green, Lucy (2008). Music, Gender, Education. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521555227.
  217. ^ "Music". Gender and Education Association. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  218. ^ "Female Turntablists on the Rise". BPM SUPREME. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  219. ^ Mitchell, Aurora (7 February 2016). "9 All-Female DJ Collectives You Need To Know Right Now". The Fader. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  220. ^ "Enter". femaledjs.london. Archived from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  221. ^ Rodgers, Tara (2010). Pink Noises: Women on Electronic Music and Sound. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0822346739.
  222. ^ "About – Discwoman". Discwoman.com. Archived from the original on 19 April 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  223. ^ a b Lont, Cynthia (1992). "Women's Music: No Longer a Small Private Party". In Garofalo, Reebee (ed.). Rockin' the Boat: Mass Music & Mass Movements. Cambridge, MA: South End Press. ISBN 978-0-89608-427-8.
  224. ^ Garofalo 1992:242
  225. ^ Peraino, Judith (2001). "Girls with Guitars and Other Strange Stories". Journal of the American Musicological Society. 54 (3): 693.
  226. ^ a b Mosbacher, Dee (2002). Radical Harmonies. Woman Vision. OCLC 53071762.
  227. ^ "VPO Watch". International Alliance for Women in Music. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  228. ^ Baker, Vicki D. (October 2003). "Inclusion of Women Composers in College Music History Textbooks". Journal of Historical Research in Music Education. 25 (1): 5–19. doi:10.1177/153660060302500103. JSTOR 40215274. S2CID 142153524.
  229. ^ a b c "About". Women in Music. 20 June 2014. Archived from the original on 11 May 2016. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  230. ^ "Women in Music Canada". Women in Music Canada. n.d. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  231. ^ a b c "Women in Music – Introduction". Women in Music UK. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  232. ^ "Women in Music – Programming Survey". Women in Music UK. Archived from the original on 27 February 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  233. ^ "Now Girls Rule". Now Girls Rule. 10 December 2020. Archived from the original on 1 February 2021. Retrieved 8 January 2021.
  234. ^ "Facebook: Now Girls Rule". Facebook. 30 August 2014. Retrieved 30 August 2014.
  235. ^ "Now Girls Rule - Girl Camp & Now Girls Rule Night 2016". youtube.com. 18 March 2016. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
  236. ^ "La Marketa by Now Girls Rule-2019 edition". youtube.com. 8 December 2019. Archived from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved 12 December 2019.
  237. ^ Kaye, Deirdre (9 April 2015). "Boston wins 'Most Feminist City' with Riot Grrrl Day – we made a playlist to celebrate". SheKnows Media. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  238. ^ Feliciano, Steve (19 June 2013). "The Riot Grrrl Movement". New York Public Library.
  239. ^ Leonard, Marion (31 January 2014). "Riot grrrl". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.A2257186. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  240. ^ "List of Riot Girl Bands". Hot-topic.org. Archived from the original on 23 February 2009. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  241. ^ Meltzer, Marisa (15 February 2010). Girl Power: The 1990s Revolution in Music. Macmillan Publishers. p. 42. ISBN 9781429933285.
  242. ^ Jackson, Buzzy (2005). A Bad Woman Feeling Good: Blues and the Women Who Sing Them. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-05936-6.
  243. ^ a b c Schilt, Kristen (2003). "'A Little Too Ironic': The Appropriation and Packaging of Riot Grrrl Politics by Mainstream Female Musicians" (PDF). Popular Music and Society. 26 (1): 5. doi:10.1080/0300776032000076351. S2CID 37919089.
  244. ^ a b Nguyen, Mimi Thi (1 July 2012). "Riot Grrrl, Race, and Revival". Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory. 22 (2–3): 173–196. doi:10.1080/0740770X.2012.721082. ISSN 0740-770X. S2CID 144676874.
  245. ^ a b c Kearney, Mary Celeste (1995). "Riot Grrrl: It's Not Just Music, It's Not Just Punk". The Spectator. 16. doi:10.7560/313497-010.
  246. ^ Huttel, Richard (26 March 1974). "UI grad student organizing national women's folk festival". Daily Illini. Retrieved 7 April 2018 – via Illinois Digital Newspaper Collections.
  247. ^ "National Womens Music Festival – July 5–8, 2018 Middleton, Wisconsin". National Women’s Music Festival. Archived from the original on 4 July 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  248. ^ "Membership and Contributions". National Womens Music Festival. Archived from the original on 3 February 2018. Retrieved 7 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  249. ^ a b Morris, Bonnie J. (1999). Eden Built By Eves: The Culture of Women's Music Festivals (1st ed.). Alyson Publications. ISBN 9781555834777.
  250. ^ "Women in Music Festival". University of Rochester. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  251. ^ Pellegrinelli, Lara (19 July 2010). "With Sales Lagging, Lilith Fair Faces Question of Relevance". NPR. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  252. ^ a b c Freydkin, Donna (28 July 1998). "Lilith Fair: Lovely, lively and long overdue". CNN. Retrieved 4 July 2008.
  253. ^ Hilburn, Robert (27 June 1998). "Lilith's last laugh". Vancouver Sun. p. D13.
  254. ^ "ARTS : Music: Popular". GLBTQ.com. Archived from the original on 13 May 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  255. ^ "Women in the Record Industry". Cosmopolitan. November 1982.
  256. ^ Sutherland, Sam, ed. (20 November 1982). "Inside Track". Billboard. Retrieved 13 January 2024 – via Google Books. Sexual equality has been an issue in the music and entertainment fields as much as in other trades, but now Cosmopolitan's on the case. The current edition of the feminine monthly plugs into music biz careers via a long feature on a group of women executives interviewed by the magazine.
  257. ^ Sisario, Ben (8 March 2021). "For Women in Music, Equality Remains Out of Reach". The New York Times. Three years ago, an academic tallied up the performers, producers and songwriters behind hit songs, and found that women's representation fell on a scale between, roughly, poor and abysmal. The starkness of those findings shook the music industry and led to promises of change, like a pledge by record companies and artists to consider hiring more women… But the latest edition of that study, released on Monday by Stacy L. Smith of the University of Southern California's Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, has found that the numbers for women in music have mostly not improved, and in some ways even gotten worse.
  258. ^ O'Brien, Lucy (1996). "Talkin' Business". She Bop: The Definitive History of Women in Rock, Pop and Soul. New York: Penguin Books. p. 425. ISBN 978-0-14-025155-5. …Women have built up a strong presence within the publishing business through a combination of assiduous attention to detail and people management.
  259. ^ Mullen, Caitlin (22 July 2021). "Women's representation shrinks as rank increases in music industry". The Business Journal: Bizwomen. Retrieved 13 January 2024. Annenberg researchers have repeatedly found women artists capture the spotlight, but they have a smaller role in the broader industry...
  260. ^ Smith, Stacy L.; Lee, Carmen; Choueiti, Marc; Pieper, Katherine; Moore, Zoe; Dinh, Dana; Tofan, Arthur (June 2021). Inclusion in the Music Business: Gender & Race/Ethnicity Across Executives, Artists & Talent Teams (PDF) (Report). USC Annenberg. Retrieved 13 January 2024. A total of 70 major and independent companies were examined for their top executives. At the pinnacle of power within these entities..., 86.1% of top executives were men (13.9% women, n=10)
  261. ^ Gilligan, Chris (6 March 2023). "States With the Highest Percentage of Female Top Executives". U.S. News and World Report. Retrieved 13 January 2024. The share of women holding top executive positions in the U.S. has grown steadily in recent years, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. Women held 31.7% of top executive positions across industries in 2021, a near five-point increase since 2015 when it stood at 27.1%.
  262. ^ a b c Neff, Sarah E. (2014). Sexism Across Musical Genres: A Comparison. Honors Theses (Undergraduate honors thesis). Western Michigan University. Paper 2484 – via ScholarWorks @ WMU.
  263. ^ a b c Jordan, Meggan M. (2006). 10x The Talent = 1/3 Of The Credit: How Female Musicians Are Treated Differently In Music (MA thesis). University of Central Florida. Paper 946 – via STARS.
  264. ^ Coopersmith, Tristan (2018). "Leading A Business Through #MeToo: Female Executives Faced Tough Decisions This Year as an Array of Powerful Music Figures Were Accused of Sexual Misconduct. Four Such Leaders Share Their Stories". Billboard. No. 27. p. 108.
  265. ^ Cheng, Ing-Haw; Hsiaw, Alice (2022). "Reporting Sexual Misconduct in the #MeToo Era" (PDF). American Economic Journal: Microeconomics. 14 (4): 761–803. doi:10.1257/mic.20200218. ISSN 1945-7669. S2CID 219347062. SSRN 3506936.
  266. ^ Savage, Mark (29 March 2018). "Dua Lipa talks music industry sexism". BBC News. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  267. ^ a b Rogers, Anna (2013). "Sexism in Unexpected Places: An Analysis of Country Music Lyrics". Caravel Undergraduate Research Journal. University of South Carolina. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  268. ^ Wooten, Ronnie (2017). "Women of Color in the Conducting Profession: Where Are They?". Black History Bulletin. 80 (1): 15–24. doi:10.5323/blachistbull.80.1.0015. JSTOR 10.5323/blachistbull.80.1.0015. S2CID 80533534.
  269. ^ a b Higgins, Charlotte (2 September 2013). "Male conductors are better for orchestras, says Vasily Petrenko". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  270. ^ Vincent, Michael (5 April 2014). "Editorial: CBC Classical music gender gap article poses new questions". Ludwig van Toronto. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  271. ^ "Jorma Panula naiskapellimestareista: "Saahan ne yrittää"". MTV Finland (in Finnish). 30 March 2014. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2024. Mutta naiset... Kyllähän ne yrittää! Toiset irvistää ja rehkii ja präiskyttää mutta ei se siitä parane, pahenoo vain! ... Niin, tämä on puhtaasti biologinen kysymys

Further reading

[edit]
  • Bowers, Jane and Tick, Judith (eds.). Women Making Music: The Western Art Tradition, 1150–1950 (Reprint Edition). Board of trustees of the University of Illinois, 1986.
  • Citron, Marcia J. Gender and the Musical Canon. CUP Archive, 1993.
  • Dunbar, Julie C. Women, Music, Culture: An Introduction. Routledge, 2010.
  • Gates, Eugene. The Woman Composer Question: A Bibliography. The Kapralova Society, 1998–2020, available online at http://www.kapralova.org/BIBLIOGRAPHY.htm
  • Goldin, Claudia and Cecilia Rouse, 2000. "Orchestrating Impartiality: The Impact of 'Blind' Auditions on Female Musicians," American Economic Review, 90(4): 715–741.
  • Pendle, Karin Anna. Women and Music: A History. Indiana University Press, 2001.
  • Solie, Ruth A., ed., Musicology and Difference: Gender and Sexuality in Music Scholarship. University of California Press, 1993.
  • Millar, B. 2008 "selective hearing:gender bias in the music preferences young adults", Psychology of music, vol. 46, no.4, pp. 429–445
  • Schmutz, V., & Faupel, A. (2010). Gender and Cultural Consecration in Popular Music. Social Forces, 89(2), 685–707. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/40984552
  • Barongan, C., & Hall, C. N. (1995). The influence of misogynous rap music on sexual aggression against women. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 19, 195–207.