Oh dear - revisiting Jewel's brief, allegedly ironic turn as a pop diva in her video for "Intuition" I'm fascinated by the raced and gendered elements white pop stars use against their black counterparts. There was recently an article in USA Today about these so-called serious women artists and their struggle for relevance post Lilith fair.
<br><br>The author of said article [below] makes no attempt to evaluate the relative quality of any artists affiliated with Lilith Fair. Worse, she uses the old "rockist" canard dictating the importance of artists writing their own material [this is pretty bogus and would rule out a lot of good music made by men and women.] Sillier still, she buries the lede w/r/t the disappearance of A&R, something that has probably affected a disproportionate number of "serious" [her term] artists, men and women alike.
<br><br>I'm actually waiting for the Stefani v. Jewel lawsuit over stylish acronyms: P.R.A.G. v. L.A.M.B.<br><br>
Serious female singers harder to find on the charts<br>
<br>
By Elysa Gardner, USA TODAY<br>
It has been 10 years since a young female singer/songwriter named Sarah<br>
McLachlan organized Lilith Fair, the festival tour that came to symbolize<br>
the increased visibility enjoyed by female artists in the mid- to late<br>
'90s.<br>
<br>
Launched in 1997, Lilith was pegged by some as a showcase for tender,<br>
earnest folk-pop minstrels. But over its three seasons, the tour also<br>
featured a variety of rock, hip-hop and alternative acts, old and new.<br>
Radio<br>
playlists reflected a growing interest in a variety of creatively<br>
autonomous<br>
female musicians, as did seemingly countless articles on "women in rock."<br>
<br>
Listen to top 40 radio these days, though, and you're not likely to find<br>
as<br>
many of these artists — or their would-be successors. Some suggest that<br>
commercial success has become a more elusive goal for women with strong,<br>
singular voices.<br>
<br>
Recent weeks have seen a few such women re-emerge on the *Billboard 200*<br>
pop<br>
albums chart, where hip-hop/folk/world music fusionist Nelly Furtado and<br>
neo-soul songstress India Arie are, respectively, at No. 2 and No. 3.<br>
Furtado, whose *Loose* topped that chart previously, also has a No. 1 top<br>
40<br>
single with *Promiscuous*. But overall, the current Hot 100 boasts fewer<br>
women in the top 10, especially women who play dominant roles in crafting<br>
their tunes, than the July 20, 1996, top 10, which was led by Alanis<br>
Morissette and Tracy Chapman and included other songs by Morissette, Jewel<br>
and Mariah Carey.<br>
<br>
On the chart for July 22, 2006, Furtado, Beyoncé and Shakira are the only<br>
female solo acts also credited as writers in the top 10, and their songs<br>
each feature at least three additional co-writers.<br>
<br>
Certainly, superstars such as Beyoncé and Gwen Stefani offer strong,<br>
singular presences. But their singing and their songwriting — which<br>
tends to<br>
be heavily collaborative — rely less on idiosyncratic expression than<br>
savvy,<br>
splashy production, executed with the same high style as their dance<br>
routines and fashion statements. Kelly Clarkson, praised as the most<br>
independent-minded *American Idol* grad, also depends on vocal flash and<br>
experienced co-writers.<br>
<br>
Other young female icons include those alluded to in the video for Pink's<br>
recent single *Stupid Girls*, which features apparent parodies of tabloid<br>
regulars — and major-label recording artists — Jessica Simpson and<br>
Lindsay<br>
Lohan.<br>
<br>
"Right now, the cultural emphasis is more on our bodies than our minds or<br>
talents," Pink says. "The media has absolutely pushed that. Respected<br>
artists, like Sheryl Crow and Melissa Etheridge, are older."<br>
<br>
*Women 'run into a bit of a wall' *<br>
<br>
Linda Ronstadt, who earned recognition decades ago for both her vocal<br>
prowess and her pulchritude, agrees. "The women's movement has run into a<br>
bit of a wall," says Ronstadt, who teamed with Cajun star Ann Savoy for<br>
*Adieu<br>
False Heart*, due July 25. "You almost can't be successful now if you're<br>
not<br>
a babe."<br>
<br>
Says Fiona Apple: "A pretty face always sells, but now it matters more,<br>
for<br>
everybody."<br>
<br>
Like Apple, who as a teen newcomer was marketed as much for her<br>
Lolita-like<br>
sexuality as for her prodigious talent, many of the new female<br>
singer/songwriters being trumpeted are notable not only for their comely<br>
looks but also for their extreme youth.<br>
<br>
At 18, the silver-throated Kelly Sweet, whose debut *We Are One* is due<br>
Sept. 12, already has three years on blond MTV star Cheyenne Kimball,<br>
whose<br>
new CD, *The Day Has Come*, arrived Tuesday.<br>
<br>
The past few months have brought albums from more mature<br>
singer/songwriters,<br>
admired under-the-radar voices and rising favorites such as Allison<br>
Moorer,<br>
Jen Chapin, KT Tunstall, Anna Nalick and Corinne Bailey Rae.<br>
<br>
Lilith alumnae such as Apple, now 28, and McLachlan, 38, sustain the<br>
interest of core fans and media who discovered them in the '90s.<br>
<br>
But Moorer, whose new CD *Getting Somewhere* has garnered good reviews but<br>
little commercial airplay, feels that commitment was short-lived. "After<br>
Lilith, there was a big backlash in the music industry. All these guys<br>
understood for the first time the power that women have in speaking to<br>
other<br>
women; then you had all these angry boy bands like Limp Bizkit come along.<br>
It was a total 180."<br>
<br>
That trend toward testosterone-driven rock and rap was followed by a tidal<br>
wave of bubblegum pop, led by Britney Spears. But as the new millennium<br>
settled in, it seemed for a while that a fresh crop of more<br>
independent-minded, creatively engaged role models was emerging.<br>
<br>
Artists such as Arie, Furtado, Pink, Michelle Branch, Alicia Keys, Norah<br>
Jones, Shakira and Dido earned significant sales and airplay, though not<br>
without confronting some of the same obstacles faced by generations before<br>
them.<br>
<br>
"Many male producers or executives often brushed me off, or were more<br>
concerned with the possibility of a personal relationship than a working<br>
one," Keys recalls. "That's when I knew I had to write, produce and<br>
arrange<br>
for myself to even get anywhere."<br>
<br>
Arie notes that her first single, *Video*, "really was an affirmation I<br>
wrote for myself, to introduce myself and to make a lane for myself in the<br>
music industry. I knew I didn't look or sound (like what was) the popular<br>
taste, but that I had something very beautiful to offer." On her new<br>
album,<br>
*Testimony Vol. 1: Life and Relationship*, "I have gone even deeper into<br>
expressing myself exactly the way I choose."<br>
<br>
Keys, Arie and others acknowledge that the freedom they have enjoyed was<br>
built on precedent. Pioneering singer/songwriters such as Joni Mitchell<br>
and<br>
Carole King were followed in the '70s and '80s by women from post-punk<br>
poet<br>
Patti Smith to lyrical folk-rocker Chapman.<br>
<br>
Furtado also nods to the hip-hop/soul stars who preceded Keys. The title<br>
of<br>
Furtado's new CD was inspired by the trio TLC, whose members would adorn<br>
their clothes with condoms. "They were taking back their sexuality,<br>
showing<br>
they were complete women," Furtado says. "There was such a freshness to<br>
artists like them, or Mary J. Blige, who has such a strong voice and<br>
image.<br>
I miss that."<br>
<br>
Some argue that the dilemma of the troubled troubadour isn't<br>
gender-specific. Many allude to the dismantling of artist development at<br>
major record companies, and what Rosanne Cash calls "the *American<br>
Idol*consciousness" — an emphasis on culling quick hits from malleable<br>
young<br>
artists rather than nurturing long-term careers.<br>
<br>
"I don't think women are being singled out," Cash says. "It's a difficult<br>
time in the business. It used to be that a label would sign an artist and<br>
stick with them through three or four albums. That so seldom happens now,<br>
if<br>
at all."<br>
<br>
Jewel, whose latest album, *Goodbye Alice in Wonderland*, entered in the<br>
top<br>
10 in May but has since slipped to No. 142, says: "You don't have a lot of<br>
kids now saying, 'I want to grow up to be a songwriter.' It's 'I want to<br>
be<br>
famous.' Kids will sell their right arms to be famous, and the industry<br>
enables that and is happy to make money off it."<br>
<br>
Granted, female artists confront certain gender-specific issues.<br>
Motherhood<br>
can be a complicating factor, particularly for those who tour, as<br>
McLachlan<br>
acknowledged when she brought Lilith to a close, citing a desire to start<br>
a<br>
family.<br>
<br>
Branch, who followed up her solo success by forming The Wreckers with<br>
fellow<br>
singer/songwriter Jessica Harp, says she "felt a lot of pressure" after<br>
giving birth to a daughter, Owen, last August. "Though no one from my<br>
label<br>
came out and said it, it was: 'You're going to lose the baby fat, right?'<br>
"<br>
<br>
Like Cash, a mother of five, and that most ferocious multitasker, Madonna,<br>
Branch and McLachlan have managed to continue recording and performing.<br>
Furtado, who credits her 2˝-year-old daughter, Nevis, with adding extra<br>
energy to her new CD, echoes many female artists raising children when she<br>
describes the experience as "empowering. A woman can have her cake and eat<br>
it, too."<br>
<br>
k.d. lang uses fertility as a metaphor in assessing the challenges and<br>
opportunities facing "both our sexes. The focus has shifted to fast food,<br>
fast culture. But cultural oppression can cultivate great, great art. In<br>
the<br>
street, at any drastic time, things are incredibly fertile, and I think<br>
there's a tremendous opportunity right now."<br>
<br>
Alice Peacock, whose CD *Who I Am* was released July 4 on her own Peacock<br>
Music label (distributed by Universal Music Group), is trying to seize<br>
that<br>
opportunity. "Being on an independent label, I have more freedom," says<br>
Peacock, who had previously recorded for a major. "Women can have more<br>
impact if we have time to grow."<br>
<br>
Kim Buie, vice president at Lost Highway, a smaller label that is home to<br>
roots mavericks such as Lucinda Williams and Mary Gauthier, believes that<br>
more options exist for women with the initiative, and patience, to pursue<br>
them. "Someone like Lucinda, whose career has been built as a songwriter,<br>
can always tour successfully and consistently builds an audience," Buie<br>
says. Buie points to other iconoclasts such as indie heroine Ani DiFranco<br>
and Aimee Mann, who despite repeated label struggles has sustained an<br>
enviable track record as tunesmith and soundtrack artist.<br>
<br>
*Moving to Nashville *<br>
<br>
But many others seeking wider exposure find the available channels,<br>
literally and figuratively, limited. The dearth of tunes by female<br>
singer/songwriters on pop radio "was one of the main reasons" that Branch<br>
decided to relocate to Nashville and form The Wreckers. The duo titled its<br>
recent debut, with obvious sarcasm, *Sit Still, Look Pretty*.<br>
<br>
The country music capital has bred a number of relatively feisty female<br>
acts<br>
in recent years, from the Dixie Chicks to earthy superstar Gretchen<br>
Wilson.<br>
<br>
"I never wrote a song before I moved to Nashville," Wilson says. "I had<br>
tried to write one or two, but then I came here and started working with<br>
the<br>
Music Mafia and Big and Rich. And there are many talented female<br>
songwriters<br>
here."<br>
<br>
More experienced artists are similarly hopeful that, drawing on both new<br>
media and old-fashioned camaraderie, sisters will keep doing it for<br>
themselves.<br>
<br>
"There's a lot of exciting mentoring going on, with people showcasing<br>
other<br>
artists," says Bonnie Raitt, citing Emmylou Harris' support of longtime<br>
cult<br>
favorite Patty Griffin. Raitt has championed Maia Sharp, and can list a<br>
number of aspiring female musicians she admires, including some who send<br>
her<br>
their demos directly.<br>
<br>
Raitt, who is now touring, has thought about starting a new trek modeled<br>
after Lilith Fair.<br>
<br>
"The mix of styles and generations was great, and there was a palpably<br>
different vibe backstage, with no pecking order or jockeying for position.<br>
It was the cool part of what women do for each other. I hope to do<br>
something<br>
with a brand name, and that kind of camaraderie and fellowship, that might<br>
happen every summer. Something inspired by Lilith Fair, because that's one<br>
of the things I'm proudest to have been a part of."<br>-- <br>J T. Ramsay<br>1626 S. 2nd St. #2<br>Philadelphia, PA 19148<br>cell: 267 252 0852<br><a href="http://blackmailismylife.com/blog" title="http://blackmailismylife.com/blog" target="_blank" onclick="return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)">
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