Introduction; 1: Rock and masculinity; 2: Gender and indie rock music; 3: Meaning making in the press; 4: Strategies of performance; 5: The riot grrrl network: grrrl power in indie rock; 6: The development of riot grrrl: through zines, the internet and across time; 7: Ladyfest: online and offline DIY festival promotion; Conclusion
Marion Leonard is Lecturer at the Institute of Popular Music, University of Liverpool, UK.
'Gender in the Music Industry explores the ways in which musicians - whether amateur or experienced professionals - negotiate the music industry. More specifically, it explores the way in which Indie rock is produced as a gendered culture and the ways in which this is experienced by UK and US female-centred bands from the early 1990s to the present day. Drawing on 88 personal interviews, Leonard provides a real insight into the experience of being a woman performer within the masculinist tradition of rock. Her analysis of the 'discourses' of rock - how written music histories are established and disseminated, and how musical performance is discussed and valued - will be of particular interest to researchers concerned with constructions of gender. Accessible and scholarly, this book will prove an invaluable resource for researchers and students exploring the complex relationship between gender and the music industry.' Sheila Whiteley, Salford University, UK. '...It will be useful to anyone interested in indie rock music, the riot grrrl network, musical subcultures, or popular music and gender. Recommended.' Choice '... an accessible book which remedies the fact that not only have the voices of musicians been frequently absent from studies of the music industry, but also the voices and work of women have rarely been scrutinised.' Popular Music 'This book furthers understanding of rock and gender by situating the research in the experience of the musicians and other personnel within the music industry. ... This is an impressive piece of research, which demonstrates a scholarly approach to the questions it sets itself, and draws upon a large quantity of primary material. It is also a self-reflective and careful piece of analysis.' British Journal of Music Education '... Gender in the Music Industry is as relevant today in 2010 as it was when it came out in 2007, and should be included in every Cultural Studies university library, as well as music departments. ... an excellent read for anyone interested in the subject ...' Cercles
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