The Standard Journal

‘Time’s Up’ for Nashville country radio now

- By Kristin M. Hall Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Female musicians in Nashville have long complained about the lack of representa­tion on country radio, but now a collective of female songwriter­s are singing “Time’s Up.”

The Song Suffragett­es were formed in 2014 in response to a growing concern that women were being excluded by labels and radio and spurred by comments by a radio consultant that compared women to tomatoes in a salad. Only 18 out of the top 100 country singles of 2017 had a female artist featured, a percentage that has been stagnating in the genre for years.

Kalie Shorr is one of the original members of the collective that plays in a writer’s round every Monday night at the Listening Room Cafe, just a couple of miles away from Music Row.

“We had all individual­ly gone into a stuffy Music Row office and had someone say, ‘No,’ followed by ‘because you’re a woman,’” said Shorr. “I have even had label executives say, ‘I am just really burned out on women right now.’”

But Shorr and her fellow singers said the #MeToo and Time’s Up movements that started in Hollywood and spread to other industries is a critical step forward in a conversati­on that has always been a secret in many industries. Shorr, along with another Suffragett­e singer Lacy Green, were inspired to write “Time’s Up” after watching the scores of actresses dressed in black at the Golden Globes.

The music video for “Time’s Up” features the 23 singers dressed all in black, linked arm in arm, singing lyrics like “The scales are tipping, the veil is ripping and the clock is ticking ‘cause the time’s up.” Proceeds from the sale of the song will go to the Time’s Up organizati­on, which has establishe­d a legal defense fund.

It’s one of the few signs that more artists in country music are willing to address sexual harassment. Keith Urban played a song “Female” on the Country Music Associatio­n Awards last November that seemed to address the #MeToo movement. The Country Radio Seminar, an annual gathering of the top country radio stations in the country held this week in Nashville, will have a panel on sexual harassment.

But other signs suggest that the genre still has a long way to go. For example, a radio host who was fired after he lost a groping lawsuit to superstar Taylor Swift got a new gig at a Mississipp­i country station this year. And a country singer named Katie Armiger is in the midst of an ongoing lawsuit with her former label Cold River Records, in which she has alleged sexual harassment by unnamed radio personnel. Cold River Records has denied they were aware of the harassment.

The movement has affected some of the Song Suffragett­es personally and directly.

“It’s one thing to see artists come out about it, but actually a few weeks ago, one of my family members came out and said that she had been sexually assaulted,” said Tiera, who goes by her first name as an artist.

Shorr said that those women who have shared their stories about harassment or assault have helped to change the attitude about what was once a very secretive topic.

“I 100 percent understand why no one would want to share their story, but now it’s like we’re creating this culture where it’s OK to speak about it,” Shorr said. “That’s why I really love this movement, because everybody is just sticking together.”

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