Re: Why Aren't there More Female Guitar Players, Especially Electric?
I think it is impossible to turn the whole industry around. But you can control the piece of it that you have. Jennifer Batten, a great player, was popular in 1988. There are unique female players (with their own voice) out there. They probably could use a little support.
I don't know if asking a bunch of guys is going to get you the right answer to that. How about asking a bunch of girls the same question? In an industry that caters to either teenage males (who want to one day be rock stars) or middle-aged men (who want to relive the fantasy of being young and 17), it is difficult to erase the last 30 years of stereotypes and sexism that continues. Now, in an age where electric guitar music is not popular (and may never be as popular again), you have to convince females to 1. listen to guitar-dominated music and 2. Sort through the prevailing sexism and macho posturing that exists in the electric guitar world. I think the window has passed for that. Nita Strauss may be a popular female guitarist, but young girls are not listening to Alice Cooper. And you know as well as I do that she wasn't hired because she is the type of player so unique that no one else could do what she does.Though this is slightly off topic, let me turn your question back towards you and the rest of the forum: is there any woman out there, who, if her name was on an SD product, would make you more likely to purchase it?
I think it is impossible to turn the whole industry around. But you can control the piece of it that you have. Jennifer Batten, a great player, was popular in 1988. There are unique female players (with their own voice) out there. They probably could use a little support.