Top 50 Women In Rock, Part II: The Best of the Rest? - Page 8

Part of: Sunday Morning Playlist
Author: uaoPublished: Nov 12, 2005 at 3:10 pm 39 comments

46. Ani DiFranco: Not A Pretty Girl
Ani DiFranco: Not A Pretty Girl (1995)
The 90's was a fertile time for women singer/songwriters, equalling their mainstream prominance of the 1970's. The fringe of 90's singer/songwriters, too edgy for the mainstream, was a particularly interesting rock cul-de-sac. Liz Phair and Ani DiFranco represented the alternative-rock DIY ethic the best among women; Buffalo-born DiFranco even more than Phair took DIY beyond its limits in the service of putting together a solid career that was against the odds from the start. She began performing at age 9, and was befriended by Suzanne Vega and Michelle Shocked before she was in her teens; she split from her troubled home in her mid-teens to pursue her muse. At the age of 19, she established her own record company to distribute her records, and built her following in a purely grassroots fashion, barnstorming the country in a VW bus, guitar in hand. Her tattoos, shaved head, piercings, unapologetic bisexuality, and assorted oddities made her a longshot for anything more than cult success, yet since 1996, she has routinely made the album charts; four of her albums were #1 on the Billboard Independant charts.

47. Carole King: It's Too Late
Carole King: Tapestry (1971)
Carole King was already a legend long before her 1971 album, Tapestry, briefly became the biggest selling album in history. Prior to her solo career, she had a prolific and extremely hit-rich career as a songwriter with husband Gerry Goffin, penning songs for everyone from the Shirelles to the Monkees to the Byrds. Tapestry was her second solo album (she had a modest 1962 solo hit with "It Might As Well Rain Until September" before concentrating on songwriting), and is a classic among singer/songwriter albums of the early 70's, yielding hits with "It's Too Late" "I Feel The Earth Move" and "So Far Away". "It's Too Late" a classic divorce song following her own divorce, is a good relic of the tenor of the times in 1971. Strangely, King's solo career never even remotely came close to repeating Tapestry's success; although she had a few more hits, including the children's album Really Rosie, by the late 70's her hitmaking years were over.

48. Dusty Springfield: Son of a Preacher Man
Dusty Springfield: Dusty In Memphis (1971)
The British Invasion brought several women to U.S. shores, among them Dusty Springfield, Lulu, Cilla Black, Petula Clark, and Sandie Shaw (not to mention Honey Lantree, drummer for the otherwise male Honeycombs). Springfield was by far the best, having the most British Invasion-era hits in the U.S. (including "Wishing and Hoping" which features Jimmy Page on guitar). Her hits had stalled by the time the 1970's started, but Dusty in Memphis, recorded with Stax sessionmen and a consciously soul effort was a surprise hit, powered by "Son of a Preacher Man", possibly the most convincing slab of soul ever recorded by a white woman. Her star receded again after that, but she continued to release well-received albums until her death in 1999.

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Article comments

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  • 1 - Sean

    Nov 12, 2005 at 3:26 pm

    Wanda Jackson.

    I'm just gonna keep saying her name till somebody listens

  • 2 - uao

    Nov 12, 2005 at 3:36 pm

    That got me laughing, Sean. I just haven't heard Wanda Jackson enough. I'll check her out today, though.

  • 3 - jones violet

    Nov 12, 2005 at 3:44 pm

    Cat Power's "Good Woman" is the saddest song I know, also one of the best, but I can never listen to it because it just breaks my heart.

    And yes, Pat Benetar! Glad to see her on the list.

    What's your next list going to be?? :)

  • 4 - Sean

    Nov 12, 2005 at 3:58 pm

    Be sure to check out the stuff from the fifties. She went into a brief retirement and came back as a syrupy country singer. That stuff is ok but the stuff from the fifites is white hot rock and roll.

    Great list by the way. I was very happy to see the Slits and X on there

  • 5 - uao

    Nov 12, 2005 at 4:43 pm

    Willdo, Sean, thanks for the tip. I realize now as I type this that she was nominated for Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame induction earlier this year. For that reason alone, her omission is glaring.

    Thank god for peer-to-peer.

    (note to RIAA, I meant peer-to-peer music fan consultation, not file swapping)

    jones--

    If I tell, it'll spoil the surprise. But some surprises will be forthcoming in the weeks ahead. I'm taking a different approach to music these days.

  • 6 - uao

    Nov 12, 2005 at 6:18 pm

    I was winking with that RIAA comment, btw. But I won't say towards whom.

    ;-)

  • 7 - BigLug

    Nov 12, 2005 at 8:47 pm

    I suggest Aimee Mann: I would've put her in the top 25, but, unless I overlooked it, I didn't even see her man in the honorable mentions.

  • 8 - Big Lug

    Nov 12, 2005 at 8:53 pm

    er, "her man"? sorry, temporary dyslexia of some kind I guess, or my butterfingered typing skills.

  • 9 - uao

    Nov 12, 2005 at 8:57 pm

    Aimee Mann is one of a whole lot of singers who lurk around the nexis where rock, pop, r&b meet. I couldn't get 'em all in, but she does deserve a mention.

  • 10 - godoggo

    Nov 12, 2005 at 10:03 pm

    I'm pleased to find that there is now a Castration Squad Home Page. I actually never got a chance to hear them (til nowm I guess; we'll see if the video works on my antique Mac), but one cannot deny that they had a very nice name.

    Other old LA punks: Alleycats/Zarkons and UXA (like their album a lot, kind of a mix of X, Pistols and Sabbath, with a touch of Doorsiness, although they were barely able to stand the one time I ever saw them).

    Oh yeah, and punk/prog/reggae/funk LA allstars Twisted Roots. With the guitarist from the Germs (and some other band that lots of people like)! And the keyboardist from the Screamers! And that hot (in both senses) bassist who married Mike Watt, whatever her name is! And some chick named Maggie on vocals! And a drummer!

    But I guess this would really be for a different list. Anyway, I love women. I really need to go get me one.

  • 11 - Scott Butki

    Nov 12, 2005 at 11:29 pm

    Ah, that's better now that you added them.
    Thanks.

  • 12 - Guppusmaximus

    Nov 13, 2005 at 8:14 am

    Come on, Uao.... Where's Patsy Cline??

    Honorable Mention of The Carpenters? I guess I will be happy that you mentioned them...

  • 13 - uao

    Nov 13, 2005 at 8:30 am

    Aww, Guppusmaximus. You know I can't put Patsy Cline on there. Because then people will say "Where's Aretha Franklin?" or "How come no Dolly Parton?"

    I didn't know you were a Carpenters fan; I have very mixed emotions about them myself, and waffled on their inclusion, ultimately denying them on the grounds that they were less "rock" than anyone else on the list.

  • 14 - Guppusmaximus

    Nov 13, 2005 at 1:31 pm

    Uao,

    Hey...Patsy Cline was Rock in my opinion(Rockabilly) so I don't think people would necessarily question it considering Dolly Parton was Country. Maybe you should've mentioned Mrs. Franklin because R&B was where rock started...

    Why Yes, I am a Carpenters fan maybe not the #1 fan(Funny enough I'm a metalhead)Karen's voice was superb and she played drums while singing which in my book is definately ROCK!!

  • 15 - uao

    Nov 13, 2005 at 2:01 pm

    You know another metalhead who is also a Carpenters fan? Tony Iommi.

    Maybe Pasty could have gone on, but then it opens the doors for so many others. If Aretha Franklin is included, someone will ask where is Diana Ross, which leads us to Carla Thomas, LaBelle, Mary Wells, et. al.

    Then I'd have no room left for Ani DiFranco and LiLiPUT.

    Real estate on my lists is very exclusive; Patsy'll have to be a good sport and wait until I get her on another. Same with Karen Carpenter.

    But thanks for the ideas; the lists people come up with of names left off are often more interesting than the original list.

  • 16 - uao

    Nov 13, 2005 at 2:02 pm

    I meant "Patsy" not "Pasty" Me and my typing.

  • 17 - BigLug

    Nov 13, 2005 at 6:43 pm

    speaking of the Carpenters--guilty pleasure: "Rainy Days and Mondays" despite the fact, dammit, that they always get me down. Now don't get me started on Abba ...

  • 18 - uao

    Nov 13, 2005 at 6:54 pm

    My guilty Carpenter pleasures are their versions of Carole King's "It's Gonna Take Some Time", Herman's Hermits' "A Kind of a Hush" and Klaatu's "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft". I also like "Superstar", but I prefer Delaney and Bonnie's original "Groupie", 'cause it's dirtier.

    As for ABBA, I'm a "Chiquitita" "Name of the Game" "On and On and On" and "Summer Night City" man.

    But I don't like admitting this stuff when the place is crawling with music critics.

  • 19 - BigLug

    Nov 13, 2005 at 6:58 pm

    um, "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft" by Klaatu (the second coming ot the Beatles)? Is that more of a delusionary pleasure? Not there's anything wrong with that ...

  • 20 - uao

    Nov 13, 2005 at 7:06 pm

    "Rainy Days and Mondays" fans ought not be snobs.

    ;-)

    But you're right though; it isn't a guilty pleasure. It's just guilty. :D

  • 21 - BigLug

    Nov 13, 2005 at 8:14 pm

    I felt better when Elvis Costello had mentioned he's a big ABBA fan.

  • 22 - Guppusmaximus

    Nov 14, 2005 at 6:01 pm

    Yeah...Definately "Superstar" especially in that scene from Tommy Boy. You guys are reminding me of that exact moment where David Spade tells Chris Farley that he can change the station when that song comes on...:-)

  • 23 - Baronius

    Nov 14, 2005 at 6:28 pm

    Oddly, this isn't the exact list that I would have come up with - funny how that happens. But I'm glad that Tina Weymouth made it. I wonder if Sheryl Crow will be on this list in 20 years.

  • 24 - BigLug

    Nov 14, 2005 at 9:18 pm

    oops, very sorry uao: Carpenters did cover "Calling Occupants of Interplanetary Craft." Who'd would've thought I'd've thunk it?

    Maybe I should've known better: back in the day when the Carpenters had just come onto the scene (as the kid's say), before anyone got a load of Richard's helmet hair or caught Karen's Mega-Meg White drumming skills, their version of the Beatles "Ticket to Ride" caught FM rawk's fancy, and for a while the song, and this mysterious unfrozen-caveman Carpenters group were the epitome on heaviosity.

    Again, my apologies.

  • 25 - godoggo

    Nov 14, 2005 at 10:04 pm

    The "comments" count should be reimplemented. It was useful.

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