www.continuumbooks.com
She Bop 2: The Definitive History of Women in Rock, Pop and
Soul
by Lucy O'Brien
Continuum Books
September 2002, 512 pages, $24.95 U.S.
By D.R.Peak
PopMatters Book Critic
Pop Culture Classic, Revisited
In the mid-nineties, at a time when women were making their biggest impact ever
in popular music and culture, it was only inevitable that the publishing
industry would inundate the market with book after book about the phenomenon. It
seemed as if a million books all hit the marketplace at once, all claiming to be
the best or the first or the only book about the subject you'll ever read. ("Not
another book about women in rock!" exclaimed feminist band Le Tigre in 2000.)
There were so many poorly written, hastily construed, thrown-together books
filling the bookstore shelves that it wasn't long before they began showing up
in the discount bins or sent back to the publisher for shredding. But a
few--always too few it seems--such as Lucy O'Brien's book, She Bop, were
so good they were sought after and plucked greedily from the shelves not just by
curious and thoughtful readers, but also by many in the music biz themselves.
Such was the simple power and majesty of O'Brien's tome.
What's that? Did I write "tome"? At just over 500-hundred-plus pages, O'Brien's
book definitely qualifies as a tome, both in word and deed. More than an
encyclopedia of women in music, this book is a well written and researched
account of the actual going-ons of a little heard from side of the music
industry.
O'Brien starts her story at nearly the beginning of the Twentieth Century, with
oft-overlooked female blues shouters and musicians, details what it was like to
be a women in the big band era trying to break into the business, shows us jazz
players and country singers, dancers and songwriters, punkers and rappers, tells
the sad story of doomed songbird-drummer Karen Carpenter, the rise of Madonna,
shows us less famous wonders such as the Raincoats, fills us in on what really
happens behind the scenes at music videos and at music industry boardrooms, lets
her musician subjects rant and speak and have their say, and leaves very little
out of the story, so detailed, yet concise, is O'Brien's book. She gives us a
tell-all without being a tattletale. She's that rare thing nowadays: a
forthright, professional, trustworthy journalist.
A keyboardist in various late seventies and early eighties bands and initially
influenced by the revolutionist punk band, Gang of Four, O'Brien began work on
her book well before her subject matter became trend worthy while writing for
British music magazine, New Musical Express. O'Brien interviewed hundreds
of musicians and pop icons, throughout the years, many of which make up the bulk
of her book. She may write with a decidedly and most attentive feminist bent,
but she's smart enough to let each person tell their own stories, knowing when
to play devil's advocate, always giving the reader plenty of background to make
their own judgments.
With this re-release of O'Brien's book, the publisher has allowed the author to
tack on an entirely new concluding chapter to reflect the changes the new
millennium has brought, ("Girl Power!" A 32-page chapter on the rise of the
Spice Girls, Britney, Lillith Fair, etc.) as well as to rewrite several other
chapters, updating the stories therein. A wise move for them, fortuitous for us.
Let's hope O'Brien continues to update it every few decade or so (her take on
Fox Television's recent American Idol would be most welcome), hers is a
voice worthy of being heard for many moons to come.