Why 2015 was actually a terrible year for women in music
It certainly seems like women in pop music are doing great right now. They’re performing at sold-out stadium shows. They’re selling three million albums in a week. Their hit songs fill radio airwaves. When 2015 began, the number one song in America was Taylor Swift’s “Bad Blood.” The number one song as this year ends is Adele’s “Hello.” While the women of Hollywood have been vocal about being underrepresented and getting paid less than their colleagues, women in music seem to be fine. But they’re not.
Sure, some of the biggest names in popular music are women. If I asked you to list six female performers, you could probably do it without really even trying: Beyoncé, Rihanna, Nicki Minaj, Taylor Swift, Adele, Katy Perry. If I asked you to list the five most famous performers in popular music, you’d probably end up with at least 3 women.
Highly visible, very vocal, strong, independent female artists are powerhouses of pop music in this decade. But they are, by far, in the minority of 2015’s popular artists.
With the last Billboard chart of the year publishing this week (dated December, 26, 2015) we looked back at a year of Top 40 music and broke down exactly how women have been represented.
This year, only 25% of the 178 songs in the Top 40 were sung by women.
25.8%, to be exact. Even if we include the songs that featured at least one woman (20 of them, or 11.23%) songs with a female perfomer only made up 37% of the tracks being played around the country.
I have looked at data for women in the Top 40 for this entire year. Even though the monthly data for the first half of the year indicated and predicted this kind of gender disparity in the Top 40, I still expected—wanted—the end-of-the-year results to be better.
Adele, Beyoncé, Rihanna, Taylor Swift, Katy Perry and Nicki Minaj are on magazine covers and gossip sites. They’re in the spotlight, and the perception is that there are plenty of women in pop music. But it’s a lie. They’re ubiquitous, and it makes us believe that 25% of the top performers is a lot of women in the Top 40. But women make up 50% of the United States population. So why do they only make up a quarter of the music that Americans hear the most?
For comparison: Consider the fact that 46% of the songs in the Top 40 this year were performed by non-white artists. That’s a pretty diverse mix. The Top 40 fails to represent women in a just and fair way.