The Post

Celebratin­g her potted history

Melissa Etheridge has come a long way from the days when she couldn’t be played on the radio, finds Dani McDonald.

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Two-time Grammy awardwinni­ng musician Melissa Etheridge was told by various radio stations that they couldn’t play her new song because ‘‘we’re already playing a woman’’.

It was the late 1980s, and despite receiving glowing reviews for her self-titled debut album, the rock musician struggled to have her song played on the radio.

‘‘It was the way of the industry in the 80s. When we went to the rock stations they’d say, ‘oh I’m sorry we can’t put you on the radio because we’re already playing a woman. That’s just how it is. You should understand that’,’’ she recalls.

Times have changed, thankfully. Now, fans have the chance to listen to two female rock musicians smash out their classics in Wellington tomorrow, as Etheridge joins nine-time Grammy award-winning musician Sheryl Crow.

The pair have been planning this first tour for some time.

‘‘I remember being at Madison Square Garden and talking with her about it in 1994 or something,’’ Etheridge recalls. ‘‘We’ve been talking about it for a long time. It was so great to finally be coming down there and I’m really excited about it.’’

Speaking from Los Angeles before her tour, Etheridge says she couldn’t be happier to leave the States, describing the rise of the Trump and #MeToo era as ‘‘so much noise’’.

‘‘These are trying times, it’s very easy to get weary. We’re moving ahead, we’re doing great things here, but it’s a little tiring so it will be nice to go down there, especially at the end of your summer,’’ she says.

Not that she’s complainin­g about the #MeToo campaign. In fact, it was because of that movement that she shared her trying experience of being shunned as a young musician during the 1980s, a story she shared at the She Rocks awards when accepting the Icon Award.

‘‘We soon broke down those doors, but it’s hard, especially on rock and roll radio to hear any women back-to-back. It’s a bit unusual here in the States, you know, we’re still moving through that,’’ she said.

The Bring Me Some Water singer isn’t averse to challenges. Etheridge announced she was a lesbian in 1994, calling herself the ‘‘other gay singer’’, at the time, nodding to Canadian Grammyawar­d winning artist k.d. lang.

Speaking to the Washington Post that year, Etheridge said it wasn’t a premeditat­ed announceme­nt. ‘‘I’ve always played women’s festivals and I was discovered in a women’s bar, so it’s never been a big secret. I never said I was anything other than that,’’ she said.

‘‘I was at the gay-lesbian ball, the Triangle Ball, the most fun ball of all ... and k.d. got up and said, ‘Coming out was the best thing I ever did’. And then she introduced me and I said, ‘I’m glad to say I’ve been a lesbian all my life’. I thought everyone there knew that I was and that it was no big deal. But a huge roar went up and I thought, gee, I guess I came out.’’

Last November, while travelling through North Dakota she was charged with possession of marijuana. Investigat­ors found a vape pen on her tour bus as it crossed from Canada into the US, Billboard reported.

Commenting on New Zealand’s Green MP Chloe Swarbrick’s medicinal cannabis bill that failed in its first round, Etheridge says legalising cannabis was a smart move. ‘‘When I went through breast cancer 14 years ago, it was a big part of my recovery and a big part of getting through chemothera­py and I understood it as medicine and understood why access to it is so very important. It’s an important thing to do for our societies,’’ she says.

‘‘Legalising cannabis is a big step forwards, in our general health as a society.’’

Anyone saying marijuana is a ‘‘gateway drug’’ is ill informed, Etheridge says. ‘‘Here in America we have such an opiate problem – it’s is horrific, and it has been shown over and over that cannabis can help people get off opiates,’’ she says.

‘‘It’s a safe alternativ­e for pain relief. A lot of times people who are so against cannabis are uneducated about it. They believe in an old story about it being a gateway drug it being addictive. There’s this stereotypi­cal stoner thing and it’s time to get educated about it and move past it.

‘‘To do so requires smart, intelligen­t people who use it to come forward and come out to really discuss it and educate about it.’’

The 56-year-old has just come off her Australian tour with Crow. The Sydney Morning Herald gave the performanc­e three-and-a-half stars, noting Etheridge ‘‘dominated’’ her Sydney show.

Just last month, she was in Puerto Rico for seven days on her own cruise with fellow musician Sarah McLachlan.

‘‘This is me finally saying, ‘OK, I’ll get into this cruise stuff, let’s see what it’s like’, and we did one in 2016 and I had a blast,’’ she said. Along with her wife, Nurse Jackie producer and writer Linda Wallem, Etheridge took fans and fellow musicians on board the Royal Caribbean Internatio­nal’s Serenade of the Seas.

Surely it must have been hard work performing every night? ‘‘You know what? I thought so too, and yet when I’m doing it to be among the kind of fans who would pay that much money to go on a boat with me, it’s pretty amazing, it’s kind of a delightful experience,’’ she says. ❚ Melissa Etheridge and Sheryl Crow perform at Wellington’s TSB Arena tomorrow night. Tickets from Ticketmast­er.

 ??  ?? Melissa Etheridge joins Sheryl Crow on stage tomorrow night.
Melissa Etheridge joins Sheryl Crow on stage tomorrow night.

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