USA TODAY US Edition

Where are the female musicians?

Not at No. 1 for more than a year now

- Maeve McDermott @maeve_mcdermott

Next week, the Billboard Hot

100 charts celebrate a depressing anniversar­y: it’s been one year since a female-fronted track hit went No. 1.

The Hot 100, the industry-standard chart that tracks the country’s most popular songs, has seen some exciting achievemen­ts this year, from Kendrick Lamar and DJ Khaled earning their first No. 1 hits to the unparallel­ed success of the Spanishlan­guage song Despacito.

Yet, every artist to score a No. 1 hit in 2017 has been male.

Zero female-fronted singles have reached No. 1 this year, and it’s been 51 weeks since any woman did, the last being Sia with Cheap Thrills on Aug.

27, 2016. You can cut the drought back to 39 weeks if you count the Chainsmoke­rs’ Closer, which includes Halsey as a featured artist.

Since then, 11 all-male songs in a row have reached No. 1.

On the April 29 charts, there wasn’t one female artist in the top 10 for the first time in 33 years.

“We’re in a little bit of a down period right now,” David Bakula, Nielsen’s senior vice president of analytics and client developmen­t, told USA TODAY. “Rihanna is in between (albums), Beyoncé is in between, Taylor Swift is in between, Adele is in between.”

Swift is among the artists whose singles fell just short of topping the Hot 100 this year, with I Don’t Wanna Live Forever (Fifty Shades Darker) reaching No. 2, as did DJ Khaled’s Wild Thoughts with Rihanna. “Women may not be at No. 1, but that doesn’t mean they’re not on the charts,” Billboard’s associate charts manager Trevor Anderson told USA TODAY. “We’ve seen a solid number of hits from women this year. Taylor (went to) No. 2, Katy Perry was in the top five, and even a newcomer like Alessia Cara got to No. 7 with Stay, her collaborat­ion with Zedd.”

Then there’s Bodak Yellow,

Cardi B’s breakthrou­gh single, which is currently the best-charting track by a female rapper, without any male artists featured, since Nicki Minaj’s Anaconda in 2014.

“She’s No. 14 right now after only five weeks on the chart, so for a lesser-known artist that’s a huge jump,” Anderson said. Despite those bright spots, women continue to struggle to be represente­d in rising genres like hip-hop and electronic dance music (EDM).

If women can’t break through these genres today, then tomorrow’s charts may be plagued by the same representa­tion issues. “Hip-hop is really becoming the dominant genre for streaming, and if you do have any kind of difference in gender of performers, maybe that’s a place where you can look at it by genre,” Bakula said, pointing out that EDM, another genre that has spawned many No. 1 hits, is also dominated by men. “There’s a lot of female vocalists who work with EDM artists, but for the most part, (the songs) are driven by male producers and artists, and rap is similar right now.”

 ?? KATY PERRY BY INVISION/AP ??
KATY PERRY BY INVISION/AP
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 ?? ALESSIA CARA BY KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES; KATY PERRY BY SHIRLAINE FORREST, WIREIMAGE; CARDI B BY PARAS GRIFFIN, GETTY IMAGES FOR BET; SIA BY JOSH EDELSON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ??
ALESSIA CARA BY KEVIN WINTER, GETTY IMAGES; KATY PERRY BY SHIRLAINE FORREST, WIREIMAGE; CARDI B BY PARAS GRIFFIN, GETTY IMAGES FOR BET; SIA BY JOSH EDELSON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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