It’s still a man’s world
Being a female artist in pop music is a ‘lonely’ field, USC study discovers
NEW YORK A new survey of top pop charts over the past six years finds that men overwhelmingly dominate the ranks of artists and songwriters and that only two per cent of producers in music are female.
The University of Southern California study shows women comprised just 22.4 per cent of artists and 12.3 per cent of songwriters on the Billboard Hot 100.
Rihanna, Nicki Minaj and Taylor Swift dominated the charts during this period but the survey found relatively fewer other women in the music industry are employed behind those superstars.
“For women, pursuing music as an artist is largely a solo activity, and appears to be a lonely one,” the researchers wrote. Some of the more eye-popping numbers were that only two women of colour were among the ranks of the 651 producers listed in the charts while nine male songwriters were responsible for one-fifth of the songs in the sample.
“What’s really problematic about this is that those many men and their views of the world are setting an agenda for pop culture,” Dr. Stacy L. Smith, founder and director of the Inclusion Initiative, said in an interview Thursday.
She called the handful of powerful men in music “gatekeepers” who may not reflect the “dynamic world in which we live.”
The Inclusion Initiative also previously examined gender disparity in films and found a bias in favour of men seems to be the reason female directors aren’t tapped to helm major motion pictures.
Some of the biggest gender disparity data was shown in 2017, a year in which the researchers note women “forcibly took hold of the cultural conversation.”
In 2017, a mere two per cent of producers of 300 popular songs were female and only four female producers worked on the 100 top songs. Females comprised just 16.8 per cent of popular artists on the top charts.
The researchers also looked at Grammy Award nominees. A total of 899 people were nominated for Grammys between 2013 and 2018. Of those, 90.7 per cent were male and 9.3 per cent were female.