Saturday, October 13, 2012

Ellen Willis on rock's alienation of women

"[...] the pretension, competitiveness, and abstraction from feeling that go along with emphasis on technique are alienating to most women. (This may be why there are relatively few female jazz fans.) In an overwhelmingly male atmosphere, female performers have served mainly as catalysts for male cultural-revolutionary fantasies of tough chicks, beautiful bitches, and super-yin old ladies. Janis Joplin half-transcended this function by confronting it, screaming out the misery and confusion of being what others wanted her to be. But she was a genius." 
Ellen Willis wrote this in 1971. The gender essentialism in the first sentence is problematic, to say the least, and I'm a huge Ellen Willis fan. That women (as music fans) are inherently more emotional, less focused on technique -- because worrying about things like chord changes and time signature are anathema to "art" of making music -- is, unfortunately, a trope still employed today. Maybe one of the most prevalent, yet unspoken, "truths" in music fandom. Men = intellectual, women = passionate. It's an easy, though disappointing, claim to make when you consider all the ways women are alienated as fans and as creators of music. Why not examine why women are dissuaded from the more technical aspects of music? Maybe this is only anecdotal evidence, but from the stories I've read of women who form bands, they get a later start than guys, and the "boys' club" mentality is often downright inhospitable to women, so there's no sense of camaraderie or community. There are a lot of ways women are alienated from music; I don't think a lack of competitiveness or pretension is one. (Believe me, I can "nerd out" with the best of them.)

The latter is, sadly, still accurate. Women are still too often seen as "muse," not artist. And for women who manage to transcend the popstar model , only certain archetypes are provided as alternatives: witch (Tori Amos. Kate Bush), badass (Chryssie Hynde) or feminist shrew (riot grrrl), for example. And those archetypes serve as the examples for every subsequent female singer-songwriter or frontwoman.

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