
She Bop
The Definitive History of Women in Popular Music
Lucy O'Brien(Author)
Jawbone (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 23. October 2020
Book
Paperback/Softback
440 pages
978-1-911036-67-8 (ISBN)
Description
Since She Bop was first published in 1995, digital downloading has transformed the music landscape. But has issue of gender inequality changed too? For She Bop, Lucy O Brien conducted over 250 interviews with female artists and women working behind the scenes in A and R, marketing, music publishing, and production to write a groundbreaking exploration of sexism in the music industry. Fusing many untold stories, O Brien presents a feminist history of women in popular music, from 1920s blues to the present day. Talking to iconic artists from Eartha Kitt and Nina Simone to Debbie Harry, Poly Styrene, and Beyonce, she charts how women have negotiated old boy power networks to be seen and to get their music heard. This revised edition updates that story through many fresh interviews and new perspectives. In a new introduction and additional closing chapter, O Brien asks why, in 2020, women own just 13 percent of music publishing and are still a minority among festival headliners. She celebrates the rise of unique women such as Lizzo and Billie Eilish who are bursting through and creating new possibilities for female artists, while also looking at the struggles of artists like Kesha and Aaliyah, and wondering whether the pop industry has had its #MeToo moment. When she first wrote She Bop, O Brien questioned the way the music press lumped female artists together under the term Women in Rock , saying that the ultimate goal was to make that phrase redundant. Now, despite the gender inequalities that still exist, greater awareness means few magazine editors would dare to feature women in such a derogatory way. Published to celebrate the original book s 25th anniversary and in the year that also marks the 50th anniversary of Women s Liberation this new She Bop will appeal to a huge cross-section of readers, from music fans to the LGBT audience and women of all generations.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Outline Press Ltd
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 149 mm
Thickness: 35 mm
Weight
724 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-911036-67-8 (9781911036678)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Lucy O'Brien
She Bop
The Definitive History of Women in Popular Music Revised and Updated 25th Anniversary Edition
E-Book
11/2020
Jawbone Press
€9.49
Available for download
Person
Lucy O Brien is a writer, academic, and broadcaster. She is the co-writer of the new memoir by Skin, the lead singer of rock band Skunk Anansie (published in September 2020), and is also the author of Dusty: The Classic Biography, Annie Lennox, and Madonna: Like An Icon, which has been translated into 13 languages. She has contributed to Q, Mojo, The Guardian, The Sunday Times, and The Quietus, and numerous anthologies such as Mute Records: Artists, Business, History (2018) and Voicing Girlhood In Popular Music: Performance, Authority, Authenticity (2016). She played in all-girl band The Catholic Girls, and is currently working on a memoir about punk and feminism.
Content
Prologue
Introduction
Riffin' The Scotch
Stupid Cupid
The Real Thing
Can the Can
Final Girls
Ladies of the Canyon
Lipstick Traces
She Wears Trousers
I Wanna Dance with Somebody
In Search of our Mother's Gardens
Oye Mi Canto
Talkin' Tough
Talkin' Business
Girlpower!
The Fame
Future Feminism
Notes and Sources
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Riffin' The Scotch
Stupid Cupid
The Real Thing
Can the Can
Final Girls
Ladies of the Canyon
Lipstick Traces
She Wears Trousers
I Wanna Dance with Somebody
In Search of our Mother's Gardens
Oye Mi Canto
Talkin' Tough
Talkin' Business
Girlpower!
The Fame
Future Feminism
Notes and Sources
Index
Acknowledgements