<\/a>Image
source: www.towntalk.co.uk<\/p><\/div>\n
We like it when people we think are cool come out as feminists, or even just
express views broadly in line with feminist ideas. It makes us feel cool. And
if we can’t feel cool, we don’t wanna be part of the revolution.
More seriously, it’s important to celebrate that folk come to feminism
through all sorts of different routes and in their own time.<\/p>\n
Whenever a person has a feminist revelation of the sort that we might think is
obvious (such as the lack of good female role models in certain music genres),
instead of going “well, duh?!” and getting cross, here at BR
Towers we go “hey, yeah! Grab a drink and join the party.”<\/p>\n
First up, Jade
Puget<\/a>, guitarist for chart-topping emo-punksters AFI<\/a> and one half of EBM\/dance
project Blaqk Audio<\/a>,
realises there are barely
any women in his beloved electronica<\/a>.<\/p>\n
I was reading one of my computer\/electronic music nerd alert magazines
today and I noticed that every one of these acclaimed electronic producers
is male. I realized that the electronic music scene is almost completely
male-dominated. …. we need a lady-led revolution in the scene, girls
making ill breakbeat hardcore, wobbly dubstep basslines, 20 minute psybient
epics.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Next, Hayley
Williams<\/a>, lead singer in chart-topping emo-pop-rockers Paramore<\/a>, declares that
she’s researching Riot Grrrl<\/a>.<\/p>\n
After finishing \u201cCharlie Chaplin\u2019s Own Story\u201d.. I\u2019m
currently reading this
book<\/a>. Mostly to satisfy my thirst for knowledge on the Riot Grrrl
Movement in the 90\u2019s and bands such as Bikini Kill and Bratmobile.
But I\u2019m finding more and more that I wish my 13 year old self
could\u2019ve read it. Girls, women, ladies: check it
out!<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Both posts may have been up a little while, but finding them at the same
time brought a smile.\u00a0 I love that both of these excerpts reveal the
demand for women past and present in the music business, and that rather
than merely noting absences they are positive calls for action, alongside
ways to get involved.<\/p>\n