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Title details for How Women Made Music by National Public Radio, Inc - Available

How Women Made Music

A Revolutionary History from NPR Music

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The audiobook edition of How Women Made Music: A Revolutionary History brings listeners closer than ever to their creative heroes. Featuring rare interview excerpts with Nina Simone, Sinead O'Connor, Lucinda Williams, Joni Mitchell, Taylor Swift, Solange, and many more.

NPR's launch of the multi-platform series Turning the Tables in 2017, suddenly pushed more women onto "Best of" lists and into the Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame. With How Women Made Music, acclaimed critic and TtT co-founder Ann Powers and contributor Alison Fensterstock draw from every Turning the Tables season and the full 50-years of NPR archives, to bring a vibrant, entertaining history of women in folk, rock, rap, hip hop, salsa, bubblegum pop, and much more.

The audiobook version features:

  • Joan Baez discussing nonviolence as a musical principle in 1971
  • Nina Simone, in 2001, reflecting on how she developed the edge in her voice as a tool against racism
  • Patti Smith describing art as her "jealous mistress" in 1976
  • Taylor Swift, in 2012, talking about early uncertainty in her music career
  • Odetta, in 2005, explaining how shifting from classical to folk music allowed her to express her fury over Jim Crow
  • Destined to become a classic, this audiobook is not only a vital record of history, it will spark creativity, inspiration, and awe in hearing how musical lives are maintained and favorite songs are born.

    Supplemental enhancement PDF accompanies the audiobook.

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    • Reviews

      • AudioFile Magazine
        Alison Fensterstock and Ann Powers deliver an ambitious, sprawling, almost overwhelming project. That's by design. The history of music traditionally revolves around men and their recordings, with women as afterthoughts. This audiobook is not just about inclusion. It's a corrective recentering. The origin story of the song "Hound Dog" is a focal point. It's often attributed as Elvis Presley's signature song. Yet the 1953 single, performed by Big Mama Thornton, is the true original. From there, listeners move through time and genres. Often, performers' own voices are present, providing their perspectives directly. It's exhilarating to hear Dolly Parton, Nina Simone, and Queen Latifah in the mix, giving listeners this mosaic of music history. The impact is undeniable. S.P.C. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine
      • Library Journal

        March 1, 2025

        Drawing upon NPR's acclaimed program Turning the Tables, editor Fensterstock and music critic Ann Powers, together with five additional narrators, present an epic history of the women who shaped popular music. The narrators offer animated readings of biographical sketches of the featured artists, from Bessie Smith to Taylor Swift. The vibrant production is further enhanced with 55 audio excerpts from luminaries such as Joan Baez and Alicia Keys, who describe their creative process, key works, and musical journey.

        Copyright 2025 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

      • Kirkus

        Starred review from September 15, 2024
        A wide-ranging exploration of the role of women in popular music over the last century. The book draws on the NPR project "Turning the Tables," created by Ann Powers, Jill Sternheimer, and Alison Fensterstock, to document how women have been "musical pathfinders, innovators, and standard-bearers." The text of the book consists mainly of segments from that show, along with bits from other NPR shows like "All Things Considered," some only a few sentences long. They cover female artists from 1920s pioneers like Bessie Smith and Mother Maybelle Carter to midcentury icons including Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, and Barbra Streisand, rock stars Janis Joplin and Diana Ross, right up to modern-day chartbusters Beyonce and Taylor Swift, with lots of others from every school of music. And there is a fair bit of attention paid to non-U.S. performers such as South Africa's Miriam Makeba, Iceland's Bj�rk, and Brazil's Gal Costa. Of the longer essays, some are largely biographical, while others record the artist's impact on the writer's own life. The shorter ones vary between interview snippets and comments on specific records, the latter drawn from two lists created for the radio show (and included in the book) of "greatest albums" by women--one covering the whole history of recording, the other from the 21st century. Omissions are inevitable in such an ambitious project, but almost every reader is likely to find a host of new names to check out. Recommended for anyone who takes music--especially women's music--seriously. An indispensable survey of the too-often neglected role of women in creating the music we all listen to.

        COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • Booklist

        Starred review from October 15, 2024
        How Women Made Music highlights and expands the work of the series Turning the Tables, an NPR initiative started in 2017 by veteran music writers Ann Powers and Alison Fensterstock and music producer Jill Sternheimer. The project endeavors to correct the persistent marginalization of women and nonbinary artists in the music world. NPR's Marissa Lorusso describes the series as "a means to question the very framework by which greatness gets defined--and then, to fill that framework with so much paradigm-shifting, era-defining, boundary-breaking art that the whole thing collapsed, so that we could start to build something entirely new." Turning the Tables publishes groundbreaking lists like "150 Greatest Albums Made by Women," produces live musical performances, and features essays about influential artists. This volume includes substantial material from the series as well as excerpts from archival NPR interviews with seminal performers like Dolly Parton, Joan Baez, Chaka Khan, and Odetta, which weave a powerful thread of oral history through this stunning anthology. Full of photographs and other visuals, this is not a book on women in music; it is the book on women in music.

        COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    Formats

    • OverDrive Listen audiobook

    Languages

    • English

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