Article 69X50 Why are women so marginalised by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?

Why are women so marginalised by the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame?

by
Courtney Love
from US news | The Guardian on (#69X50)

Barely 8% of its inductees are female. The canon-making doesn't just reek of sexist gatekeeping, but also purposeful ignorance and hostility

I got into this business to write great songs and have fun. I was a quick learner. I read every music magazine I could get my hands on and at 12, after digesting many issues of Creem, I decided to base my personality on Lester Bangs, the rock critic raconteur; his abiding belief in the transformative power of a great rock song matched mine. (I also obsessed over his running arguments with Lou Reed - they confounded me, but I loved it.) Artists and their songs shaped my life, my beliefs, my self-conception as a musician - Patti Smith's growling Pissing in the River, Heart's Barracuda, the Runaways' Dead End Justice, which I still know every word of. But what no magazine or album could teach me or prepare me for was how exceptional you have to be, as a woman and an artist, to keep your head above water in the music business.

The magnificent Chuck D rapped: Elvis is a hero to most, but he doesn't mean shit to me." I concur. Big Mama Thornton first sang Hound Dog, written for her (and possibly with her) in 1952, which later put the King on the radio. Sister Rosetta Tharpe covered it, too, hers being the fiercest version. Her song Strange Things Happen Every Day was recorded in 1944. It was these songs, and her evangelical guitar playing, that changed music for ever and created what we now call rock'n'roll.

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