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Is female domination of the charts here to stay?

2013-06-03 08:23:34

While female artists rule the pop charts, many still conform to long-held music

industry stereotypes. Miranda Sawyer asks if change is on its way.

This is an era where female performers dominate music as never before: I give

you Beyonc , Rihanna, Taylor Swift, Katy Perry, Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez,

Jessie J, Adele, Florence and her Machine not to mention poor, sad Britney

and the never-ending saga that is Madonna. These are women whose music tops

charts across the world, whose dollar sales are well into seven figures and,

perhaps most importantly, who understand that a music career can amount to more

than just singing songs. Rihanna, for instance, shifts perfume like she s a

department store saleswoman. Jennifer Lopez acts in major films and appears on

American Idol. Jessie J is a judge on British TV talent show The Voice. And all

of them help sell whichever publication puts them on its cover.

But and this may seem a silly question why now? Why are there so many women

artists around? After all, in the early days of this millenium, female singers

weren t the thing: music was about the white boy rock band. Coldplay, Maroon 5,

Green Day all were having their moment in the sunshine. Still, consumers are

quickly bored, and so the major labels A&R departments began to look

elsewhere. And when, in 2006, Amy Winehouse (and Lily Allen in the UK) suddenly

flooded public consciousness like a drug we never knew we wanted, they thought

they d discovered the answer. An A&R guy, then at Sony, told me that labels

were actively looking to sign young female solo singers because, according to

him, they were less expensive (only one of them) and easier to manipulate (no

support from the rest of the band, plus, you know, they re just girls). Poor

guy. Put him in a room with Beyonc et al, and he d be whimpering as they

force-fed him those words.

Change the record

Given that for many years the majority of A&R people have been straight males,

it s interesting to consider what kind of woman gets a record deal. Shows like

American Idol demonstrate that there are more than enough talented vocalists

out there. There are hundreds, thousands, ready to sing their hearts out and

shake up the world (or at least the world s Saturday night TV). But only a few

will make it and when it comes to women, for decades only the good-looking

got through the door. Thus many of the most powerful female musicians in the

industry are stone cold foxes, gorgeous women whose looks would dazzle you into

submission before they even let loose their voices.

Why is this? Despite its reputation as a rebellious outsider, rock and roll has

long been dominated by convention and archetypes. Serious-minded indie boys,

sexy r n b chicks, tougher-than-thou hip-hoppers, all singing-all-dancing boy

bands: it can seem as though music is on an endless loop of clich . Each artist

slots into a ready-made box. It can make a music fan rather depressed, being

presented with yet another new sensation that is exactly like an old one, but

with a more contemporary haircut.

And the music business standard for a solo woman singer is that she has to be

pretty. Sure, there are those artists who operate on the outside, alternative

females, from Siouxsie Sioux, to Peaches, from PJ Harvey to Deep Vally. They

like to play with their looks, use their sexuality to challenge or illustrate a

particular idea. But if you re aiming for conventional chart success then you d

better scrub up well. Think of Celine Dion, an ordinary-looking woman with an

extraordinary voice. Discovered young, her husband/manager removed her from the

limelight whilst she had her teeth fixed, her hair straightened and worked on

her English: all image upgrades deemed necessary before she smashed into the

mainstream.

Going Gaga

Of the top ten biggest selling female artists of all time, only Lady Gaga

completely confounds this stereotype. Gaga uses her appearance as a statement:

her choice of clothing, make-up and shoes are all designed to provoke a

reaction other than, ooh, doesn t she look nice . By dressing herself up as an

artwork, she prevents us from judging her by tedious contemporary conventions

of beauty. She is the living embodiment of how alternative, anti-establishment

attitudes - treating gay people the same as straights; women using their bodies

as they wish have come into the mainstream. But she is the exception.

Still, considering their obsession with trends, does this mean that when A&R

departments get bored once more, that solo female artists might not be so

prominent? I wonder. The digital age has made the music business less sure of

itself and its know-it-all taste. Consumers have more freedom to discover music

than ever before: they don t wait to hear a track on the radio, they stumble

across artists on YouTube, via music sites or blogs. Artists themselves don t

wait to be signed before releasing their work: Tinie Tempah, amongst others,

released his own, very successful, mix-tapes before being signed by Sony. This

means that major labels have been forced to become more open-minded when it

comes to their signing policies. Even a decade ago, an out-there act such as

James Blake would not have been signed by a major: but he has his own label,

put out via Universal.

Realising that music fans are more open-minded than they assumed has forced the

major labels to shake up their pre-conceptions and perhaps with them, those

clich d rules about solo female artists. Well, hooray to that. It s rather nice

to think of labels having to re-jig their attitudes towards female singers.

Quirkier characters such as Lianne LeHavas, Laura Marling, Savages and Haim are

slipping into the limelight. They are all lovely but don t sell themselves on

their looks. And Lady Gaga and Lagerfeld-baiting Adele, smash successes both,

seem to disprove the old theories. It doesn t look as though pop s infatuation

with women is over yet.