Free Rock She Wrote: Women Write about Rock, Pop, and Rap Book in PDF and EPUB

Rock She Wrote: Women Write about Rock, Pop, and Rap

Rock She Wrote: Women Write about Rock, Pop, and Rap

ISBN: 0815410182

ISBN 13: 9780815410188

Publisher: Cooper Square Publishers

Authors: Evelyn McDonnell, Ann Powers, Joan Morgan, Lori Twersky, Donna Dresch, Kim Gordon, Patti Smith, Marianne Faithful, Ellen Willis, Mary Gaitskill, bell hooks, Jaan Uhelszki

4.03 of 184

Click the button below to register a free account and download the file


Download PDF

Download ePub

Brings together music criticism, fan experience, and performers' first person accounts from more that 60 women writers for 1960s to the 1990s.

This intelligently compiled, wide-ranging volume provides exciting evidence of women writers' inroads made over the past three decades into the still male-dominated field of popular music criticism. Pioneers such as 1960s New Yorker columnist Ellen Willis and Jazz & Pop editor Patricia Kennealy-Morrison (better known, tellingly, for her marriage to rock icon Jim) are grouped with younger counterparts, from novelist Mary Gaitskill to cultural critic bell hooks in sections broken down loosely by topic. In "I Am the Band," female performers such as Sonic Youth bassist Kim Gordon, offer touring testimony; critic Jaan Uhelszki, meanwhile, finds herself onstage with Kiss, makeup and all, for a 1975 Creem magazine assignment. The latter instance points up one of the book's most fascinating aspects: in a rock-and-roll world where boys wear lipstick and girls increasingly get to make lots of noise, the effects of gender on both performer and listener are far from straightforward. Many of Rock She Wrote's strongest pieces? Joan Morgan's story on her love/hate relationship with Ice Cube's misogynist rap; Lori Twersky's musings on familiar images of the "female teenage audience" as screechy and sex-crazed?find their writers at the intersection of conflicting reactions to the subjects at hand. A remarkable collection, Rock She Wrote makes clear both the difference women writers have brought to music writing and the impossibility of any attempt to nail that difference down once and for all.