Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

How 3 female stars rose above Nashville’s obstacles

- By Mae Anderson

Women have always played a major part in country music, from the Carter Family to Dolly Parton, but in recent years you’d be hardpresse­d to hear that on country music radio.

In “Her Country,” Marissa R.

Moss chronicles how three singers — Kacey Musgraves, Maren Morris and Mickey Guyton — found ways to circumvent the traditiona­l Nashville Music Row country music industry path and its “good ol’ boy” mentality to chart successful paths of their own.

In the 1990s, female country music stars seemed to dominate the airwaves: Shania Twain, Faith Hill, the Chicks (formerly the Dixie Chicks) were mainstream stars. But after the Chicks were essentiall­y blackliste­d in 2003 for criticizin­g George W. Bush, a chill for women settled over the industry. Even today, women are rarely played back to back on country radio, and they account for less than 20 percent of airtime.

But as Morris shows, the women in “Her Country,” have managed to produce some of the most creative, inclusive and successful country music of the moment despite obstacles. Musgraves, Morris and Guyton all started out in Texas as talented singers from a young age, each eventually making their way to Nashville to pursue a career in country music.

Musgraves strove for inclusiven­ess, both in her lyrics and by making sure her co-writers Brandy Clark and Shane McAnally took the stage when she won the Country Music Awards song of the year honor in 2014 for “Follow Your Arrow.” It was the first time that two openly gay people stood on the CMA stage to receive an award.

Morris found success by self-releasing her songs and then working with Spotify to launch them in 2015. Her songs were a hit on the platform and left labels scrambling to sign her. Next, she became a crossover success with the worldwide pop hit “The Middle,” with producer Zedd and musical duo Grey in 2018. She joined the country music supergroup The Highwomen in 2019.

And Guyton overcame years of discrimina­tion as a Black female singer in the country music business to receive a Grammy Award nomination in 2020 for her song “Black Like Me” — the first Black female solo artist to receive a Grammy nomination in a country music category.

“I realize that not only am I walking through these doors as a Black woman, I need to hold the door open for many other Black, brown, LGBTQIA+ artists that have the same dreams,” she said backstage.

 ?? ?? “Her Country” by Marissa R. Moss (Henry Holt, $28.99)
“Her Country” by Marissa R. Moss (Henry Holt, $28.99)
 ?? ?? Kacey Musgraves
Kacey Musgraves
 ?? ?? Mickey Guyton
Mickey Guyton
 ?? ?? Maren Morris
Maren Morris

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