Showing posts with label Ann Powers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ann Powers. Show all posts

Monday, January 22, 2018

List and You Shall Hear (V): Women Missing, Please Report to NPR



Continuing my extended reaction to NPR's "150 Greatest Albums Made By Women" (see previous posts in this series for all the relevant links) I am now going to discuss some of the more egregious oversights in NPR's list.

Plenty of people have commented on the artists who did not make it onto NPR's list, including some second-guessing by the list's curators, Ann Powers and Jill Sternheimer. Nevertheless, here for the record (album) are the Parrot's picks for:

Worst Oversights in the History of Women's Music Listmaking

a title justified by the fact that quite a few of them are also missing from several other lists of albums by women.

Rock and the like
I will begin by discussing the women whose impact on rock, pop and country music genres is so important that their absence from the list of beknighted "greatest albums made by women" sort of defies words. Each of these artists could have been included on the same criteria that allowed the selection of at least some of the artists who are on the list; but for what seem like utterly arbitrary reasons, the "canon" of women in music has to do without them. So much the worse for such a canon. Who designated 150 as the magic number anyway? But the artists and albums that follow should probably be in the top 100, several of them in the top 20, on any fair list of "greatest" albums by women.

Grace Slick: If the NPR list were confined to albums by solo female artists, or overwhelmingly female bands, or female artists who had overall control of their recorded output, then clearly Jefferson Airplane should not be on it. Even Volunteers, which is largely dominated by Slick, is a joint product of many musicians. And if it were a list of consistently great albums then Conspicuous Only In Its Absence, the release of live recordings by The Great Society after they had broken up, should not be on it. Since neither of these is the case, though, they should both be on it. Slick was not only one of the first prominent women in rock; her voice, songwriting and stage presence had a major role in creating the musical style of a succession of bands. The Great Society lasted only until she left. She then joined the Airplane and later formed Jefferson Starship with Paul Kantner. She played several instruments, and shook up the industry with her vocals, which aside from the raw power of her voice included explicit political statements, sexual references and profanities before any of them were considered acceptable. (I suppose her being a former model made that all the more difficult for the establishment to take.) She wrote  "White Rabbit", the theme song of acid rock and the Airplane's most well-known song. The fact that the list doesn't include her encapsulates the absurd inconsistency of their approach.

Joan Armatrading: Unbelievable! Everyone who knows anything about women in music knows that Armatrading was a game-changer. A prolific songwriter and multi-instrumentalist with a voice reminiscent of Odetta, this black, female, working-class immigrant was so overwhelmingly talented and had such a distinctive style that she was soon claimed to be the British answer to Joni Mitchell. Her work was a statement that women could rock (especially after Me Myself I, her biggest-selling album), while she also managed the melding of musical styles in a wholly original way (cf. Lauryn Hill). Joan Armatrading, her brilliant, eponymous third album, produced and engineered by Glyn Johns, is my first choice. Me Myself I should also be on the list.

Pat Benatar: Hell is for adults who favor teenage pop idols over Pat! Hardly less jaw-dropping than the first two oversights, we have to begin with the fact that the operatically trained Benatar is one of the best vocalists rock has ever had. Secondly, she is one of the best female rockers rock has ever had. The list of her awards, charting singles, platinum albums etc. is too long to get into; what is more important is the musical integrity she brings to everything she records, her willingness to explore taboo subjects in pop songs, and, for the purposes of this list, her outspoken feminism. Once again, though, I have to add a comment about the difficulty of identifying music "made by women": although her albums have been released under her name, her husband Neil Giraldo, one of the finest guitarists in rock, has pretty much created her sound and written a good deal of her music. On a more restrictive definition of "made by women", Pat's recordings might not qualify; they are "Pat and Neil" productions. On the more relaxed operating definition here, Crimes of Passion would be an obvious entry. But I will argue for Gravity's Rainbow, because it's not only a great album but the first one on which she co-wrote almost every song. She is also co-credited as Executive Producer.

Natalie Merchant: Once again, huh? I mean, Eurythmics, B-52's, Pretenders... and not 10,000 Maniacs? Bjork, but not Merchant? Tigerlily, the album with which she started a second musical career that was even more successful than her first; but In My Tribe would be a fine choice too.

Evanescence: An example of critics largely missing the boat: after being dismissed as just another goth-metal band, Evanescence emerged as the essential one, all but knocking their predecessors off the chart. Amy Lee's vocal style has been widely imitated, with top female vocalists like Kelly Clarkson, Avril Lavigne and many others copying her sound on a track or two, making her one of the most influential contemporary female vocalists. (Evanescence ex-pats David Hodges and Ben Moody had a hand in some of these knockoffs.) Fallen is the obvious choice.

Bette Midler: This omission is almost as looney as the others. The Divine Miss M, an epic female vocal album, end of story. Well, not quite the end – she's just finished a run kicking it out on Broadway, to wild accolades. (The Parrot was tempted to squawck something about her being a "Superstar" but thought better of it.)

Dionne Warwick: In the same way that Mariah Carey, Christina Aguilera and Celine Dion would not be who they are if there had not been Whitney Houston to clear a path for them, there would not have been a Whitney without Dionne Warwick. To my ears you can actually hear Dionne's tone and phrasing in some of Whitney's early recordings. Already one of the most familiar voices in popular music before 1967, her album The Windows of the World begins with "I Say a Little Prayer", the first certified gold single for her and for the Burt Bachrach-Hal David songwriting team. It's a remarkable set from beginning to end; the title song was also a hit, and the set includes another famous Bachrach-David song that she was the first to record (though the original version was not released), "(There's) Always Something There to Remind Me".

The Mama and Papas: Did you say Heart? B-52's? Once again the parity-of-reasoning argument: I don't understand what distinguishes these mixed-gender groups with female vocalists from The Mamas and Papas such that the latter don't get on this list. Mama Cass in particular was one of the definitive women in rock throughout the 60's. "Words of Love", "Creque Alley", "Dedicated to the One I Love", and other big M&P hits were showcases for her voice, which sometimes has the most character even on tracks where she is not singing lead. (Like Grace Slick, who could similarly change the character of a tune with her outstanding harmonies.) I'd go with their Greatest Hits, if that's okay with the canon-makers.

Shirley Bassey: "Goldfinger, he's the man / the man with the Midas touch / a spider's touch / Such a cold finger beckons you / to enter his web of sin / but don't go in... Golden words he will pour in your ear / but his lies can't disguise what you fear..." Was this supposed to be about a future American President? Well, read the NPR commentary on some of the albums they picked and you will surely become aware of their efforts to make what seem like personal statements - vulnerable, sassy or just proud – into political statements by their vocalists. Please let Ms. Bassey join the crowd. Aside from that, she made more than 30 studio albums over a 57-year career, so if her contributions to the Goldfinger or Diamonds Are Forever soundtracks don't do it I'm sure one could find something. In fact... Something, her highest-charting album.

Ellie Greenwich: Granted most of her songs were made famous on recordings by others. But so were Carole King's. She was one of the most important songwriters in the history of popular music, aside from doing backup singing for an arm's-length list of major artists, and she did in fact record quite a few of her best numbers. To include groups for whom she wrote the songs that made them famous, but exclude her own quite excellent recordings of her own songs, seems like a miscarriage of justice. Let It Be Written, Let It Be Sung, the greatest album you've never heard of by a female songwriter. (I've owned it for about 30 years and it has never been out of rotation for very long – "Maybe I Know", "Be My Baby", "Chapel of Love", plenty more.)

Joan Osborne: She and Alanis Morisette appeared on the scene at about the same time and had about the same effect; Morisette stayed in the public eye a bit more by sticking with in-your-face hard rock songs while Osborne tended to stick closer to the blues, soul and folk idioms. Relish certainly deserves a place on this list. Incidentally, I like Morisette a lot, but she is a bit more predicatble than Osborne, who once showed up in Downtown Brooklyn to play a spontaneous solo acoustic set on an outdoor stage near my office.

4 Non Blondes: The list is about great albums, right? Not necessarily representative albums by women with long and storied careers, right? But Linda Perry, who sang all the lead vocals and wrote most of the songs on Bigger, Better, Faster, More! has since had a long and storied career, writing and/or producing songs for a long list of contemporary pop stars and recording several solo albums. The 4 Non Blondes album, by a band that originally consisted of four women ( the guitar player was replaced by a male guitarist during the recording) is generally seen as her crowning achievement as a performer. She has said she doesn't like the album, and she's entitled to her opinion. For me it is a package of 11 songs that range from good to great (their revolutionary anthem "What's Going On" being an example of the latter), with Perry's vocals moving from the contralto to soprano registers with equal power. One of the greatest one-off rock recordings I know of.

Maxayn: Like Jefferson Airplane, this terrific 1970's group that brilliantly fuses rock, jazz and soul would not make the list if the term "made by women" were taken seriously. But if ever a female lead vocalist justified that label, it would be Maxayn Lewis. And like Slick, Maxayn Lewis also contributed songwriting and keyboard skills, so that altogether she was a major influence on the sound of the group. Simply put, she is one of the greatest singers popular music has ever had, and greater than many others in that she moved fluidly between rock, soul and jazz. The very first cut on their first album, "Trying for Days", announces a voice that should be as famous as that of just about any soul singer, earlier or later – she has the power, grit, technical abilities and tonal nuance of far better known R&B singers. Or check out her version of "Gimme Shelter", one of the best Stones covers I've ever heard, including a fantastic extended jam by the band, which is fully equal to their brilliant lead vocalist. Maxayn, their first album, is perhaps their strongest, but Mindful, their second, is a jazzrock masterpiece. NPR did a good turn in recognizing little-known Fanny on their list, but they missed the boat with Maxayn, whose three studio albums have finally been released as a CD set and made available on streaming services.

Folk is No Joke
Possibly even worse than the exclusion of A-list women in rock+ and pop is the fact that in spite of several notable entries, women who contributed to folk music and its modern singer-songwriter progeny have been so systematically neglected it casts serious doubt on the value of the list as something other than a popularity contest. These women did something far more courageous and, arguably, musically important than those who made spiffy pop records in search of mass audiences: they continued and expanded a cultural tradition that is in some ways the soul of nations. Overlooking them in this context is embarrassing and unconscionable.

It's nice that the canonizers found their way to one of Cris Williamson's under-the-radar but excellent albums, but left on her own among so many equally worthy but unmentioned folk musicians she looks like the token feminist artist. I'm talking about committed feminism, not the sort of allusive feminist innuendo of so many female pop artists, much less the attribution of stories about cheating men and whatnot as some sort of feminist statement. Feminist music is represented mainly in the folk song movement - see the entry on Holly Near below.

Moreover, I have the distinct impression of a serious lack of what I will simply call taste in the making of the list. For the work of some of these artists seems to me so clearly superior to so many of the beknighted "greatest albums" that I am left struggling to find words. To take one example, Janis Ian seems to me so vastly superior a songwriter to (conservatively) half the artists on the list that I don't how to begin to argue that she should be there and not them, except perhaps to say, "take the cotton out of your ears and then listen". That is to say nothing of the social importance of songs  like "Society's Child", "Seventeen", "Stars", or "Jesse", which argues in a different way for her inclusion. Even leaving aside such obvious oversights, there are surely albums by Shawn Colvin, Beth Orton, Lydia Adams Davis or Dar WIlliams, to take just a few examples, that are no less worthy of being "canonized" than quite a few of those that were obviously selected on the basis of popularity alone; and these are not even my top picks among overlooked folksinger-songwriters. In spite of a few deservingly recognized artists (Joan Baez, Odetta, Tracy Chapman, Gillian Welch) the status of folk music on the list demonstrates emphatically that good judgment, of either a musical or social sort, did not always prevail.

Here are some of the more screaming oversights, though there are plenty of other candidates:

Judy Collins: I can see no rational argument for including Joan Baez and not Judy Collins, as if one prominent female folksinger is just about enough. Judy was also a pillar of the folk revival, songwriter as well as song interpreter, and, like Joan, one of the great voices of the 60's and beyond. True Stories or her "best of" album Colors of the Day, or both, belong on any list of great albums "made by women".

Suzanne Vega: Huh? Do I need to say more? I mean, pick an album. Solitude Standing... there, I did it for you. As with Joni, there must be half a dozen of her albums that would fit the bill. One of the most original and creative female recording artists, with hardly a missed beat in her entire output of studio recordings. How can a woman contribute this much and not get recognized in a list like this?

Janis Ian: Once again, I just don't know what to say, except sqwaaaauck. Not Janis Ian or Between the Lines or Stars or Breaking Silence – just a few of the albums that contained songs of great social and political import and happened to be quite successful to boot? She is one of the most important female musicians of our time, so I mean, if you like Britney and Mariah Carey and Shania Twain and Taylor Swift and their seriously charting pop songs with 200 million hits on Spotify, fine, but at least recognize that for all the $$$ their albums have made, their cultural importance is limited. They never wrote a song that had the musical or social depth of "Society's Child" or "At Seventeen". A tremendous oversight.

Holly Near: She founded Redwood Records in 1972 and used it as a platform to promote progressive music with a decidely feminist slant. She herself recorded about 30 albums, performed with many of the greatest folksingers of the day, and helped promote the careers of several other female, progressive singer-songwriters, including Cris Williamson (the only one who made the list), Meg Christian, and Betsy Rose. I don't know which is the best, but A Live Album contains the first release of her most famous song, "It Could Have Been Me". Near is also an outstanding example of what one woman can accomplish, having been a prominent actress, a writer, a political activist, and a teacher as well as a terrific musician. Another absurd oversight.

Loreena McKennitt: Like Holly Near, she may not be a household name, yet excluding her is really inexcusable, particularly in light of some of the shamelessly commercial pop that is on the list. She blazed a daringly original trail as an indie artist, founding her label Quinlan Road in Canada five years before Ani DiFranco started Righteous Babe records a little below the border. Her complex, original takes on Celtic and Arabic music defy easy genre classification: she is a folk, rock, world and New Age artist all rolled up in one. Her voice is the equal of almost any artist on the list; Joan Baez would be a good comparison. Either The Book of Secrets or The Mask and the Mirror, replacing any number of lightweight pop albums, would give the list more gravity and critical respectability.

Enya: She is the second most popular Irish artist ever, after U2. She has won four Grammies and a host of other awards. More importantly, she almost singlehandedly made New Age music respectable and popular. (I'm not sure Windham Hill on its own achieved either of those.) She is to Ireland everything that Céline Dion is to Quebec. My personal favorite is The Memory of Trees, but there are several other options for Enya albums to put on a list like this. Not putting her on at all is not really an option, though the illustrious judges at NPR seemed to think it was more important to have two Madonna albums, Britney Spears, Janet Jackson, Destiny's Child and Chaka Khan. Dance all you want, then take a rest and listen to some music.

Michelle Shocked: Along with Suzanne Vega, whose first album had come out a year earlier, she helped kickstart the "second folk revival" with her Texas Campfire Tapes, a low-tech live recording that went viral before there was music on the Internet. Shocked and Vega paved the way for mainstream acceptance of new folk artists like Tracy Chapman, Shawn Colvin, Lucinda Williams and a host of others to come. Since becoming a born again Christian she has made some remarks about homosexuality and gay marriage that are ambiguous at best, but I don't get the sense that most of the other artists on the list have been given a litmus test on their social views. Her important role should be recognized.

Neko Case: Okay, the list is trendy enough, with Joanna Newsom, Lauryn Hill, Alabama Shakes, M.I.A., Taylor Swift, Adele, Amy Winehouse, Beyonce , Solange, Alicia Keys and Miranda Lambert representing just some of the post-2000 recordings. (Where, I beseech you once again, is Lana Del Ray, not to mention Katy Perry, Nicki Minaj, Kesha and Ariana Grande? Picky, picky...) Are these artists all supposed to be part of the "canon"? Give me a break; there is no principled distinction here between current popularity and longevity; no serious effort to separate merely good pop tunes from significant creativity. If it's the latter we are after then I'm going to remove about half of these entries and replace them with people like Neko Case and others who are actually trying to do something musically forward-looking. Fox Confessor Brings the Flood is probably the consensus choice for Case, but her follow-up album Middle Cyclone is as good or better.

Malvina Reynolds: Like Elie Greenwich she's known more as a songwriter than a performer, but she nevertheless released numerous albums of her own work. Malvina Reynolds Sings the Truth, for example, contains her well-known song "What Have They Done to the Rain", as well as "Little Boxes" and "God Bless the Grass", both made famous by Pete Seeger, and the once-popular children's song "Magic Penny". As I have emphasized, "greatest" depends on many things; Reynolds' unique gift for musical social commentary makes her a standout artist who should be recognized in a list such as this.

Nanci Griffith: Other Voices, Other Rooms is one of my favorite albums in any genre; it is all covers, but one could certainly pick from other albums of hers with great originals. Like Neko Case, she is one of those folk musicians who transcends the genre.

Kate Wolf: She would be one of the first names to roll off the tongue of anyone who really knows the recent history of folk music: there are tribute albums and even a music festival devoted to work she recorded on 10 albums in her short life. The title song of Give Yourself to Love was something like an anthem of the folk movement in the 1980's. Not including her suggests ignorance of the history of contemporary folk music.

Christine Lavin: Funny they left her off, seriously funny. Don't know what I'm talking about? Well, there's Google, Wikipedia and YouTube to explain it.

Maria Farantouri: If she had done nothing but champion the songs of Mikis Theodorakis she would merit a place next to Mercedes Sosa, another expressive contralto who was happily discovered by the somewhat nearsighted makers of this pop list. But aside from her many other musical recordings she has truly stuck her neck out for justice in Greece and elsewhere. I'd pick her first album Songs of Freedom, with John Williams and featuring music by Theodorakis, but only because it's the one I know best; there is much else to choose from.

Make Our Country Great Again
Mary Chapin Carpenter: How about instead of some of those ladies with the blockbuster country albums we recognize this thoughtful and socially engaged songwriter? She has written almost every song on more than a dozen albums, including many great ones. Somewhat like Roseanne Cash, who was happily included, she has enough Nashville hits to be a household name but is also capable of setting record sales aside and making albums of honest integrity just for the sake of the music and what she has to say. I'm going to go with A Place in the World, but among her 13 studio recordings there are other possible choices, including her excellent breakout album, Come On Come On.

Faith Hill: She is similarly bedecked with country music awards and billion-selling albums, like Shania Twain and Reba Macentire; why they made the list instead is once again beyond the limits of my understanding. I happen to like her voice better. Breathe is the album I know best, and would be happy to see it on the list.

Carrie Underwood: If American Idol had done nothing else, discovering Carrie Underwood and her stunning vocal capabilities would have been a singular contribution to popular music. If her voice has any defect at all it is that it is possibly too good, making quite a few other leading lights of country music sound like they could be her students. I'm not as thrilled with her material as I am with her voice; it tends to be formulaic and lead her into predictable vocal moves. She also seems a bit obsessed with songs about taking revenge on cheating lovers. None of that is quite enough to remove the pleasure of hearing her bang out a tune with everything from coloratura melismas to throaty growls. I don't know which album of hers should be on the list: Some Hearts was her breakout recording, but in later albums she took more of a role in the songwriting. I'd go with Blown Away because her own material is acutally some of the best on the album and the best she's recorded.


Round-up

Also Worth Considering

Those are some of the more obvious oversights, the ones where it either boggles the mind how a list of the greatest albums by women could be thought complete without them, or where there seems to be no reasonable argument for including some of the artists who were included and not including those who are either their peers or in some sense superiors. Of course, there were plenty of opportunities for the listmakers  to step up and recognize some artists who are not names on the tip of anyone's tongue. Were I to construct my very own list with an all-female cast of musicians, one of the things I would try to do is find under-recognized artists whose work deserves greater recognition, for example: Julia Holter, Lili Haydn, Jane Siberry and Melanie DeBiasio among others. They would all replace a lot of dubious pop selections on my list. Blossom Dearie recorded more albums than almost any three of the listed artists put together; I don't really know them (I've heard individual songs), but she had a fanatical following well into her 60's and continued recording at least through her early 70's. Tania Tagaq is an Inuit throat singer who won both Canada's Polaris Prize in 2014 and Juno Award in 2015 for her album Animism; if we are looking for women who make a musical statement that gives voice to a culture (like Mercedes Sosa or Umm Kulthum) this is a good place to look. In the rock category, there's a parade of M's that seems to have dropped through the cracks, including Minnie Riperton, Maria Muldaur, Melanie and Melissa Manchester; in addition to Phoebe Snow, these are popular names from an earlier era who made memorable albums that are not commonly heard today. If they are not worthy of "canon"-ization it suggests that some of the many pop, hip-hop and country stars who landed a spot may not be worthy of it either, and if they are, well, then they are. Suzi Quatro is another odd oversight, a prolific and influential role model for the duly recognized Joan Jett and one of the first women to go it alone as a hard rocker.

In the folk category, an older generation of singing-songwriting women await recognition for their important contributions to American culture, including Peggy Seeger, Jean Ritchie and Faith Petric. I don't have the time or resources to figure out which of their many albums might be among the greatest recordings made by women; perhaps none, because for the most part they were well on in years before they made solo records. (I have suggested that a better approach than the "greatest albums" effort would be a "Lifetime Achievement" list, where these artists would be more likely to get fair representation.) Singer-songwriters like Cindy Kallet, Pat Humphries, Bev Grant, Lydia Adams Davis and Priscilla Herdman, among many others, have given us memorable albums that anyone seriously researching a "greatest" list rather than a popularity contest might have found.

I decided long ago...

Never to spend six months critiquing a list? Oh well, another New Year's resolution out the window. (Anyone concerned about my sanity will be pleased to know that during that time my literary efforts have also included a draft of a short story, a piece of micro-fiction, some poetry, work on a novel, a memoir and a couple of philosophical essays. So, you could say I'm obsessed with this list stuff; but only between roughy 11:30 p.m. and 1:00 a.m. on weeknights.) But let's put some kind of cap on this at last. Here are my final squawcks:

Ranking: It is a fine thing to draw the attention of the public to women's contributions to popular music, but a much less fine thing to try to order one's selection according to some notion of "greatness". It is really of almost no interest that this group of judges thinks that Blue is the greatest album made by a woman, that The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill is the second greatest, etc. So maybe Pride and Prejudice is the greatest novel written by a woman, Jane Eyre is the second greatest, and Middlemarch is the third greatest...? Or should To the Lighthouse or Ship of Fools, or something else, be in there? On what basis do you make judgments like this? You can make some very broad generalizations about entire bodies of work, in which case Joni Mitchell's stands out so far above Lauryn Hill's that they belong miles apart, while that of Pauline Oliveros looms far greater over contemporary classical music than anything the makers of most of the 100-odd albums in front of hers ever accomplished in relation to rock, pop, etc. Even rankiing the artists' overall contributions is only possible in a few cases. It is easy to say that Bob Dylan is the greatest singer-songwriter in modern times, but it is not so easy to say who is second, third, etc. Rankings also tend to lose their force as soon as they are challenged. For example, The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is probably the consensus choice for the greatest album ever made; but I know more than one rock critic who believes it is not even a good album, much less the greatest ever made. They too can give reasons for their views, and make it seem like myth is doing more work than quality in upholding the album's status. Powers, NPR and their friends would have done a greater service by doing without rankings at all and just bringing to our attention the most interesting and important albums in which women had the most prominent roles.

So my comments on what is not included on the list are made without regard to any ranking. But that does not mean I can permanently resist the temptation to offer a list of what I think are the greatest albums made by women! I will do so in the next post, but with enough caveats to make clear just how little is being claimed in that list.

Quality: In the end, my biggest beef with the list is that it seems to treat quality as an afterthought. Quality comes in many forms, but it can certainly be distinguished from sales and popularity, to say nothing of marketing. Originality, importance in various ways, influence, musicianship, lyrical depth, complexity, intensity of feeling, the fit of words and music, and many other factors can contribute to quality in addition to the basic factors of performance chops and songwriting skill. On the other hand, excessive use of standard musical formulas, clichéd lyrics, sentimentality and over-reliance on technical production tricks may contribute to an album's popularity but not to its quality. Taking this distinction seriously would have eliminated many very well-known and popular albums on the list and replaced them with music that deserves the name "greatest". That is what critical responsibility is all about, but it seems to have been largely abandoned here.

Quantity: As if 150 were not a generous enough number of "greatest" albums by women, TheFader.com has graciously contributed another 150 such disks for our perusal. I have never heard of many of the albums, or even quite a few of the groups, on TheFader's list, but it ranges from the obvious move of adding every big contemporary female pop star (Lady Gaga, Rihanna, Katy Perry, Nicki Minaj, etc.) to the highly speculative inclusion of albums like the Pharmakon effort mentioned in my previous post. This may be more of a comment on the nonsense of modern listmaking than on perceived gaps in NPR's "canon", for in the end it is hard to tell which list is the primary one and which the supplement.

Since I might seriously question whether there are 300 truly great albums altogether in the history of popular music, the idea that there are 300 made by women is a little hard to wrap my mind around. But if we take "greatest" in its purely relative sense, such that albums after the first 100 or so may be boring, irritating, or trite but greater than the next group of albums, I guess we could find another 200 and make it an even 500 Greatest Albums Made By Women. Then I might have a hard time keeping Britney and other lightweight Top 40 nonsense off the list.

Or maybe not. I haven't mentioned every worthwhile but overlooked female artist I know of yet. Take Bonnie Koloc for instance: one of the best voices among folksingers in the early 70's and after, she never got much attention outside the Chicago area. You can Spotify her (if that's a verb now) though they have only a couple of her later efforts. How many other little-known names might there be? Friends of mine who are music critics know an awful lot of artists and albums that I don't know, and I suspect they would rate quite a few of them higher than most of the NPR list. With the help of some like-minded souls it's not impossible we could at least have a 500-album list of recordings by women that did not compromise on quality or pander to any formulaic pablum.

Oh well, when I started this I thought I was done. But there's one more post to go; the one in which I produce
The Greatest List of All

But my next post really will be The Last Post of All on the "150 Greatest Albums Made By Women".

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

List and You Shall Hear (II): NPR's "150 Greatest Albums Made By Women"



In this post I continue my critique of NPR's "150 Greatest Albums Made By Women"; scroll down to the previous post for the first part.

Whose Rankings? Which Recordings?

(The heading is a reference, no doubt too obscure for many, to a book on ethics by Alisdair McIntyre, entitled Whose Justice? Which Rationality?")

It was a choice, not a necessity, to make a list of albums rather than bodies of work. It was a second choice to list them albums according to a ranking of "greatness". Both of those choices were mistaken, in my view.

First of all, choosing one or two albums by outstanding artists is very arbitrary. As mentioned below, I'm happy with ranking Joni Mitchell at the top of the heap; but I disagree with both the album choices made on her behalf, even if they happen to be critically popular choices. The problem is the same throughout popular music. For example, there is some kind of critical consensus that The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is one of the two greatest albums ever made; the other common choice is The Beach Boys' Pet Sounds. But I know rock critics and other music fans who think Sg.t Pepper is not even a good album, and certainly not The Beatles' best album, though they would agree that The Beatles are the greatest rock group ever. Ditto Pet Sounds – some think it is highly overrated, though I have yet to meet (and would fight) anyone who thinks the Beach Boys are not at least one of the greatest American rock groups (for me, hands down the greatest). So why honor this or that album when the real achievement is the artist's corpus of work?

Had this caution been taken, it would have been clear, for example, that whatever the merits of Lauryn Hill's 2.The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, it is a bit bizarre to find this effort, which was followed up with nothing, as second in a list of the greatest popular music by women. The work of artists who were excluded from the list, like Joan Armatrading and Grace Slick, would be much harder to ignore if bodies of work were the subject. Picking individual albums opens the door to not only very arbitrary choices but to sidelining women whose overall contributions are greater, whether or not they have an individual album considered to be one of the "greatest".

Having decided to select albums, it was certainly not necessary to rank them #1 through #150. What does it mean to place Liz Phair's 31. Exile in Guyville 63 places higher than Sheryl Crow's 94. Tuesday Night Music Club? It seems odd in itself, but meaningless in the context of all the other possibilities. Why shouldn't Sade's 22. Diamond Life be closer to #1? Why is Bobbie Gentry's 83. Ode to Billie Joe ranked higher than Marianne Faithfull's 129. Broken English? Virtually every entry in this ranking seems debatable when compared with other entries. So what was the point?

My feeling is that the classical, folk, rock, Hip-hop, world music and jazz albums are all incommensurable with albums in the other categories. There's no picking a Pauline Oliveros recording and comparing it with Shania Twain or any such thing, no way Mercedes Sosa can be ranked in greatness with No Doubt. This is all just a big mashup: there really is no order to speak of, though you can speak of a very broad consensus that certain albums are among the greatest ever, some are among the most important, some are among the most original or unique in some way and some are of great interest to women's rights, causes, self-esteem and the like.

Lists of "greatest albums" are in general a lot of nonsense, as is obvious from a comparison of NME's "500 greatest" with Rolling Stone's "500 greatest": neither the top 10, the top 50, the top 100, nor any other grouping is even remotely the same from one list to another. NPR's list has no added legitimacy for being a list of only albums by women; it's an absurdly arbitrary ranking of women's album rather than an absurdly arbitrary ranking of all albums. This is not exactly a great leap for womankind.

Sung (mainly) By Women

The idea is that the list represents albums "made by women"; but that phrase is never defined, and no more than a handful of the selections would actually fit a strict definition of it. Just about all of the choices are collections of "songs sung mainly by women", albeit with male vocals in various harmony and sometimes lead roles, while in some cases the songwriting, production, instrumental performance, engineering, mastering, and just about every other aspect of the album was done by men. It's not the case with all the selections, but having been largely, in reality, "made by men", was obviously not reason enough to avoid including some of these in a list of albums "made by women".

Let's discuss some of the actual levels of involvement women have with these albums:

Overall artistic control by women: In some cases a woman clearly has overall artistic control of the final product - Tori Amos, Mariah Carey and Madonna are good examples. On some of her albums Sheryl Crow wrote the songs, sang lead, played about a dozen different instruments, produced the album and had female recording and technical engineers. That is clearly an album "made by women", even if there were also men involved in various important roles. Later so-called "girl groups" (I guess this NPR initiative might suggest that we re-think that term?) like The Bangles, The Go-Gos and Indigo Girls substantially controlled most artistic aspects of their recordings. I can't say exactly how many of the albums on the list fit into this category but my suspicion is that more than half do not.

Limited artistic control by women: Here the situation is more mixed. Take The Ronettes, who released just one studio album (in 1964): they were clearly in command of the vocals, and among the songwriters who contributed to the album were two women, Ellie Greenwich and Cynthia Weil. The producer, of course, was Phil Spector, whose influence on the final product was enormous, and the other songwriters, all the session musicians, and many other participants were male. On Shania Twain's zillion-selling album Come On Over she sang all the lead vocals and co-wrote all the songs. The other writer was her husband Robert "Mutt" Lange, who produced and had overall artistic control over the album, and virtually all other musical and technical personnel were male.

Women as more or less equal partners: Many of the mixed gender groups in the list – The B-52's, the Cocteau Twins, Fleetwood Mac, No Doubt, etc. – are more or less equal partnerships between male and female members. As I point out below, if these groups belong in the list, then the #1 group in this category is Jefferson Airplane, due to Grace Slick's foundational role among women in rock; but they are not even recognized in the list. (They are, however, in the similar ListChallenges list mentioned in the previous post, where Surrealistic Pillow is #19 out of 100.) On the other hand, Evanescence is largely dominated by Amy Lee, but they are not included either. It seems that the canonizers have simply appropriated groups or albums they liked as "made by women" without any consistent criteria for what that means.

Sung by women and that's just about all: Albums that are all but the opposite of "made by women" are also represented in the list. There is little reason to question the fact that the #14 choice, Whitney Houston, introduced one of the greatest and most influential voices in the history of popular music – perhaps the greatest pop vocalist ever. That surely deserves recognition, but her own vocal style is virtually all she was responsible for on the album. Clive Davis made the executive decisions, Jermaine Jackson and a bunch of Michaels - Masser, Walden, Kashif (born Michael Jones) – teamed up to write and produce songs for Whitney to sing; add three more Michaels (Barbiero, Mancini, O'Reilly) in the engineering and mixing room, and a host of mostly male studio musicians and vocalists, and you have an album. Britney Spears had practically nothing to do with ...Baby One More Time other than singing the lead vocals (and not with one of the greatest voices of all time, either); she did not select the songs or make other key artistic decisions about the album. On her eponymous Aaliyah the singer did little other than sing: while she gets "Executive Producer" credit, almost all the songwriting and actual production were handled by men. (Missy Elliott penned the lyrics to one song and had some artistic input on the project.) Nico's Chelsea Girl was written, produced, arranged and engineered entirely by male former Velvet Underground members as well as folkies like Dylan and Tim Hardin. Nico did not even like the album, as it was far from the sound she hoped to project, and if she had fans they did not show up in droves to buy it. You could call it one of the 150 Albums Most Inappropriately Dominated By Men, but not really an album "made by women".

So the notion of "made by women" needs clarification, to say the least. Of course, an album with a female lead vocalist gives the impression that she "made" the album, but while the contribution of the lead vocals is of course very important, it can also give a misleading picture of the extent to which it is the lead singer's album. When The Monkees turned out to have done nothing but sing on their first two albums they were ridiculed for it (unfairly, since the session musicians who had played the instruments had done the same for hundreds of other recordings, without any outcry). Singing a song is quite different from the kind of artistic control that deserves the "made by" label.

Here, then, are a few options for a tighter definition of "greatest albums made by women":

1. Albums on which a woman was among the featured performers and had overall artistic control.
2. Albums on which a woman was the featured performer and is credited with writing most of the music.
3. Albums that were almost completely created by a team of women that included the performers, songwriters and key production and recording personnel.

Some of the albums chosen by NPR would not meet any of these sets of conditions, and very few would meet all of them, leaving the impression that "made by women" really came down to having prominent female vocals.

It's not always possible to know how much a female lead vocalist deserves credit for an album. Reba McEntire has recorded 29 albums, on each of which she has written at most one song and almost never plays an instrument. She occasionally receives credit for production, and I suppose the listmakers were careful to select an album (Rumor Has It) on which she is credited as producer. She presumably selects at least some of the songs she will record; or does she only exercise veto power? It would take some research to figure out exactly how much control she has over her albums, and whether they deserve the "made by a woman" label. (She at least gets the blame for both singing and "acting" on her insufferable "Back to God" video.)

1964: It Was a Very Good Year, But...

The decision to begin in 1964 and include only albums (as opposed to a body of work in any recorded format) has the odd effect of eliminating a very large number of black women who set the standard for women in music. Ma Rainey, Bessie Smith, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Eartha Kitt, Mahalia Jackson and Marion Anderson, among many others, seem like they are being relegated to a sort of fuzzy background role for no other reason than that Powers et al. thought it would be best to only consider albums from 1964 on. Not a few critically important white women, like Patsy Cline and Mother Maybelle Carter, are apparently excluded on similar grounds.

On the other hand, some albums seem to have made the list merely because they were post-1964; how else do you explain the relatively unimportant Nina Simone album I Put a Spell On You dropping into the #3 slot, replacing the much better sung and played The Amazing Nina Simone (1959) and other earlier choices? I'm really not sure how the choice of 1964 is motivated. For example, had 1963 been chosen, the list might have included Heat Wave by Martha Reeves and the Vandellas, He's So Fine by The Chiffons, and about a dozen other albums by artists who were either left off the list or are represented by later and not necessarily better work. The so-called "album era" in pop music was really ushered in by the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds in 1966; but artists have made albums since the early 1950's at the latest, and made them regularly since the late 50's, so the argument that the list should be confined to "album era" recordings has no particular force and is not actually captured by the choice of 1964.

Nor does the list of "greatest albums" consistently show a choice of great albums, as the above point about Nina Simone demonstrates. For another example, Tammy Wynette's single "Stand By Your Man" is certainly one of the most important (and perhaps "greatest") country music songs (albeit, ironically, a target of feminist ire) but the album of the same name on which the song appeared is of no special importance, being filled out largely with naive tearjerkers about emotionally wounded children and other pap; it is there simply because the single is on it. It's clear that the ill-defined criteria for being on this list could not even guide the selection of albums, leading to many mediocre recordings that contain a notable song or two getting on the list.

To return to the first point, if you want a new canon you can't exclude many of the most canonic musicians because they didn't make albums. For what exactly is a canon of albums? Something like a canon of novels? Which naturally will not include Chaucer, Flannery O'Connor or Alice Munro, since none of their most celebrated works are novels. But a canon of albums seems more arbitrary than one of novels; for even in the so-called "album era" an album may have been more than a collection of songs – a form of composition, in a sense – but it certainly was not always. An album does not have to hang together like a novel (squawck... the Parrot has perused a contemporary novel or two that hangs together about like jungle mist, but forget that for a moment). I suspect we shall soon see a companion list of "25 Greatest Pre-Album Era Recorded Legacies of Women" or some such silly acknowledgment that 1964 is not a cutoff with any real historical merit.

That albums of the woman, by the woman and for the woman shall not perish...

Why not require that the albums really be in some sense for or about women, or that they lend support to the advancement of women's rights or equality or recognition, or somehow make a statement of importance to women, or enhance the position of women in music... or something like that? Now, clearly there are albums on the list that do this; and just as clearly, there are many that do not, and have nothing more to say about women than some very boilerplate expression of a woman's side of romantic relationships. Some of these albums sold a lot of copies; but even if every household in the Western world had one they would have little to say that had not been said before, either musically or lyrically. A truly new and liberating voice in country music is hard to come by. The Dixie Chicks might be on this kind of list, maybe Iris DeMent, but most of the Nashville crowd would not be. Shania Twain, for example, makes some feints in the direction of feminist talk, but the sort of feminism that sells between 30 and 40 million copies is not going to push any buttons or break through any glass ceilings.

Some of the most clearly and consistently feminist sentiments are expressed by worthy folk artists not on the list. What sort of list is this without Holly Near or Peggy Seeger or other outspoken feminists who also have a huge recorded legacy? The idea that the list should favor albums or artists that have something to say about women's rights and struggles seems not to have occurred to the Powers That Be. Reorganize it along these lines and many things would be quite different. Tori Amos would get more than a 27th-place nod for her first album; she does everything but explicitly proselytize about women's issues in her music, and she does that in other ways. Suzanne Vega would not have been overlooked (which is unaccountable on almost any grounds anyway), and even Ferron might have been recognized. Christina Aguilera, bizarrely omitted from the parade of superstars, might have had a better claim to a slot than Mariah Carey, and any of half a dozen country singers could have replaced Reba McEntire (Carrie Underwood and Mary Chapin Carpenter would be two good choices).

To put it in a nutshell, the apparent feminist impulse behind the list and the feminist content of the albums themselves seem to diverge far more than had to be the case.
Nothing would have been lost, and some moral ground might have been gained, by at least taking into consideration what an artist or an album has done for women.

Gratuitous "Greatness"

There really is nothing to the term "greatest" in the list's title, which is why a lot of the comments I have heard both on public forums and in private are, to be nice, dismissive of the whole undertaking. To be not so nice, a good deal of the list appears to be nothing but pop fluff, recordings with absolutely nothing to speak for them other than female lead singers and high chart positions or album sales. The lack of taste exhibited in the selection of various Z100-type pop stars, country divas and disco queens leaves one guessing as to why some of these superficial recordings made the list while other equally, or perhaps less superficial recordings of the same type and caliber failed. Thumbs down on Katy Perry, Lady Gaga and Rihanna, for some reason, each of whom has recorded material that ought to be of some interest to creators of a women's music "canon", while others who hardly seem like apostles of anything except Gold, in all its forms, somehow adorn the list. There's no accounting for taste, but there is for judgment, and there doesn't seem to have been much of that exercised here.

In the previously mentioned exchange between Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham, Morris comments that "I think that the list is trying to strike a balance between greatness and importance. But sometimes, I think it assumes that importance is a form of greatness." To which Wortham says (a little later in the exchange), "It’s literally called the 150 Greatest Albums Made by Women." Well, that's just it, and I think Morris is being overly charitable: while selling itself as a "greatest" list it tries to strike a balance between greatness, importance, fairness and mere popularity. A popular album, no matter how popular, is not necessarily either important or great. The two commentators then seem to agree that a recording by Destiny's Child doesn't really merit inclusion. But the other question is why they chose The Writing's on the Wall rather than Survivor, with its feminist anthems? (I agree that neither of these has the degree of inventiveness one finds in BeyoncĂ©'s later solo work.)

In general: if you are going to do a list like this – a curated list, not the results of an online poll or the choice of a specialized audience – it ought to have some clear criteria for "greatness", which this list doesn't. Here is one example of criteria for a list of "greatest" albums by women:

1. It should be important for its musical and lyrical qualities, not merely another blockbuster entry in a tired genre.
2. The level of women's contributions should be considered carefully: being sung by a woman is important, but songwriting, production and any other significant contribution are important too.
3. It must have some quality – in the lyrics or any other way - that speaks to the liberation of women in some important respect or other: emotionally, economically, sexually, politically, even musically, but in any case it must have something significant to say about women per se.

This is just one example of a set of guidelines for critical judgment. The choices should be based on something more than record sales, or having been listened to enthusiastically by your friends at college. Or being boldly presented by someone in the selection group and receiving nods of assent, which, I suspect, is something like how many of these choices and rankings came to be.

Political notes

The last of these guidelines deserves some comment. What I do not mean by it is that in order to be on a list like this an album should have some explicit feminist content. My worry is that Powers and her associates think that many of these albums already do. But if so, I suspect that what counts as being a feminist statement is something like Lemonade, and I have to demur from that view. A woman stating forcefully and eloquently how hurt she is by a man's infidelity, and poetically describing the pain, anger, recovery, reconciliation and redemption that follows is a great thing in itself, but it is not a political statement at all. A sensitive male who has been similarly hurt could express the same set of feelings, go through the same emotional process. (I know I have; I don't suppose I have any claim to uniqueness in that respect.) Many, many other descriptions of relationships gone bad pepper these albums, and popular music in general, but have no feminist political content on account of that.

The country song "What Hurts the Most" describes in aching detail the aftermath of a breakup: written by two men, it was recorded by both male and female groups and solo artists without change of content. Another example is "Since U Been Gone", the Max Martin-Dr. Luke song made famous by Kelly Clarkson but also covered by various male vocalists. The song is also a bit of an emotional echo of Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright". Emotions like "I can breathe for the first time" and "You just kind of wasted my precious time" are not political statements. Infidelity, emotional abuse, control issues, and the like, are gender-neutral hazards of relationships.

Political claims for music have to be judged according to the context in which they are made. Neither "Respect" nor "The Greatest Love of All" are necessarily statements either about either racism or the oppression of women, but they came be perceived that way due to the larger social context. "Respect" was written by a man (Otis Redding), about a man looking to get little respect at home for working to support his family. The lyrics to "The Greatest Love of All" were written by a woman, but as the theme song for a biopic about Muhammed Ali, who had long ago adopted the title "The Greatest". But in an era when there were still serious limitations on the respect a woman could expect either at work or at home, Aretha's forceful (and slightly rewritten) version of the song rang out with an unmistakable message. So did Whitney Houston's version of the Michael Masser-Linda Creed composition, at a time when the oppression of minority women had begun to be recognized as a struggle with its own dynamics. But though this can happen, it does not mean that every time a woman sings of respect or self-fulfillment a political statement is being made. Plenty of women, like plenty of men, are too full of themselves already to be honored as apostles of feminism for being independent, sexually explicit, or critical of something perceived to be a male defect.

What my third criterion suggests (and as with the other two I do mean they are simply suggestions, conversation-starters) is that the album either (1) represents a particularly original aesthetic accomplishment that focuses attention on what women can contribute to popular music (this, I would argue, is why Lemonade belongs on the list; ditto for Horses and many others); or (2) turns our attention to the experience of being a woman (which might include explicit political issues like rape and abortion, but need not), to issues of sex role stereotypes, or to women's efforts at self-realization and the challenges that faces, in a forceful and original way. I don't know how many of the albums on the list would survive this requirement, but I do know that several albums not on the list would do so. A lot of them come from the folk music genre, whose severe underrepresentation is one of the worst things about the list. Joni Mitchell's "Roses Blue", Janis Ian's "At Seventeen", and Suzanne Vega's "Luka" are subtle but intense contemplations of particularly female experiences. The first song is on neither of the selected Joni Mitchell albums, and the latter two artists are not even represented.
*****
Well I guess I have made enough noise about the general considerations that went into making the list. In the next (and last) post I turn to consideration of specific selected albums, and to some omissions.