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You're History

The Twelve Strangest Women in Music

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Raucous, sensual and sublime: how twelve pioneering female artists rewrote the rules of pop.
From Kate Bush to Nicki Minaj, from Janet Jackson to TLC and Taylor Swift, pop's greatest female pioneers are simply strange: smashing notions of taste and decorum, and replacing them with new ideals of pleasure.
Instead of rehashing biographies, Lesley Chow dives deep into the music of these groundbreaking performers, identifying the ecstatic moments in their songs and finding out what makes them unique.
You're History is a love letter to pop's most singular achievements, celebrating the innovations of women who are still critically underrated. It's a ride that includes tributes to Chaka Khan, Rihanna, Neneh Cherry, Sade, Shakespears Sister, Azealia Banks, and many more...
 
“The slim, sharp book considers a range of female artists from Janet Jackson and Taylor Swift to TLC and Nicki Minaj, a group that the Australian cultural critic Chow views as ‘outliers, marking moments where the culture might have swerved to incorporate their influence, but somehow contrived not to.’” — New York Times summer reads
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    • Library Journal

      April 9, 2021

      Though Cardi B and Billie Eilish rule the airwaves, it is still rare for many music critics to take women pop, hip-hop, and R&B artists seriously. Chow (associate editor, Bright Lights) aims to correct that bias. Highlighting 12 women (among them Chaka Khan, Sade, Taylor Swift, and Janet Jackson), many of whom have been written off as vapid and unimportant due to their catchy music or seemingly lightweight lyrics, Chow argues that her subjects' music has an overlooked profundity. Delving equally deeply into TLC's Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes and critical darling Kate Bush, Chow is most concerned with the feeling of strangeness, or elements that bristle against the conventional ideals of pop music but nonetheless create sublime soundscapes. The author's definition of strangeness is inevitably subjective, and it's a shame that artists such as Bj�rk and Annie Lennox are left out of the mix. Yet Chow possesses a rare ability to describe in words how sound feels, resulting in dazzling observations about sound, breath, and the human voice. VERDICT Those interested in music criticism will enjoy this in-depth study of unique women voices in pop music.--Amanda Westfall, Emmet O'Neal P.L., Mountain Brook, AL

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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