¡FORWARD RUSSIA! opinion

When I tell people I’m in a band, I get a couple of textbook reactions. The most common is “Are you the singer?” and another is “Is it an all girl band?” The numerous occasions I’ve heard a guy tell someone they’re in a band, the response in return is usually “What do you play?”

So, if a girl could give Kerry King a run for his money, I hope she’d eventually have a reputation for being as good on guitar.

It’s common knowledge that gender, appearance, race, class still affects at least the tiniest part of peoples opinions, whether they know it or not. But did we realise it’s still such a massive issue in peoples views of the music industry today?

If I think about the response people give me, of “Are you the singer?” I can see where they are coming from. Everybody is born with a voice, you only need yourself to sing [to a certain point] whereas playing an instrument requires you to first have an instrument before you can even begin the basics. So do we think girls might be tight with money? Or their parents are? Fair enough we do have to buy those bras and tampons! But really, how often do you see an image of a teenage girl in her bedroom practising the guitar for hours on end? I don’t think you do.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot recently, and I think an underlying factor, why we don’t see images of girls practising drums and guitars, might be a combination of peer pressure and the lack of role models girls have to look up to.

Women with [powerful] voices have been in the media since sliced bread was invented. In the past, there have been women such as Billie Holliday, Dusty Springfield, Lulu, Diana Ross, Siouxsie Sioux, Debbie Harry, (just a few that sprung to mind) who have created strong female role models for adolescent girls. (It would be easy to assume that having a girl front your band, would gain you more exposure.)

So, as a young girl playing the guitar, bass, or drums, who do you look up to for your inspiration? Until the 70’s, there was virtually nobody, and even then you’d have to look hard. Once the punk and indie scene started to develop on both sides of the Atlantic, girls seemed to take matters into their own hands, and started to be involved in the music scene from the stage, rather than from the crowd.

It's girls like Poison Ivy (The Cramps), Kira Roessler (Black Flag), Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth), Samantha Maloney (Hole, Motley Crue, Peaches) that I feel have really opened up the world for girls like me. These women aren’t all glammed either, and it angers me that the media seem to only put girls in the spot light if they reveal some skin, wear a bit of lipstick, or most of all, are fronting the band.

It's a fact, whether you’re a girl or a guy, the front person is the main focus. But if you hear a record with a face melting guitar solo, or the fastest hi-hat beat, or funkiest slap bass, would you assume it's a guy playing? I think most people would, but I think this is our starting point.

Bands and musicians have always been in the media for being different and wacky, but I’d like to believe that there was a time when bands were exposed because they were good. So, if a girl could give Kerry King a run for his money, I hope she’d eventually have a reputation for being as good on guitar. This is my plan; if girls practise twice as hard, to be twice as good as any man, perhaps we might get an equal amount of exposure.

What I’m trying to say is, boys do smell, girls can be stupid, but working together is surely the best option for creating music for the new generations. Gender should in no way be an obstacle or mean free access to a musical career, in the same way that race and class shouldn’t. Sometimes I think, well maybe there just aren’t many girls who want to be in bands? And perhaps the ones that are good do get the exposure and the credit they deserve?

I really don’t know, but I like playing drums more than anything else.

  • Artrocker Lover Sun, 2009/10/18 - 2:45pm

    Couldn't agree more with this

    Couldn't agree more with this article, as a guy I often get frustrated with female music fans who are more preoccupied with a bands image or the attractiveness of its members than their musical ability and depth. The girls who genuinely care about music though is made to seem less because of this stereotype which is an unfair assessment of the opposite sex.

  • missyel Wed, 2008/05/28 - 11:09pm

    "Being a Girl"

    There are moments where I do believe that that "being a girl" is completely divorced from my passion for music and the manner in which others perceive that passion. But for the most part, I can't help but recognise that my musical skills, knowledge and passion have been undermined for that very reason.. and I think I've figured out why.

    Think of the footage of the thousands of hysterically sobbing, hormonally charged teenage girls, watching the Beatles perform at Shea Stadium. These images have become so seminal because they've reinforced this very idea - this cliche that a girl's attachment to music is so trivial. That it is purely motivated by sexual attraction. The idea that a girl can become intellectually engaged with music becomes so far-fetched that even the label for a female fan is a derogatory term. We are "groupies" or "fangirls" or "band sluts". You can never just be a girl who loves music.

    All of that might seem so distant from what we perceive to be happening now, but I really do believe that this is still such a relevant issue. We don't even realise it's happening anymore. As long as we decide to do this, we will always be asked why we aren't assuming our traditional position. Why we aren't behind the barricades, hysterically sobbing for the real musicians.

    C&CM

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