FEMALES
IN THE INDUSTRY
Whether survivors
of a lifetime in the trenches or thrust more recently
into the mainstream music industry, these women have
done it their way. And luckily, with some good men
on the sidelines. Kathy McCabe talks to Marcia Hines,
E.J. Barnes, The Veronicas’ Lisa Origliasso, Operator
Please’s Amandah Wilkinson, Abby Dobson and Jade MacRae
about being performers, songwriters and roadies.
MARCIA HINES
Marcia Hines often gets asked if it has been tough
being a woman in the Australian music industry.
In her fourth decade as a performer, recording artist
and more recently again a television personality,
Hines epitomises the survivor.
“I never thought it was tough being a woman my whole
life,” she says.
“I think it’s as tough as you want it to be. Work
with the difficulty, I say.”
While she has been married four times, the men in
her musical life have been steadfast, including manager
Peter Rix and agent Tony Grace.
“It’s a great think tank. We just sit around a table
and yell at each other.”
Hines may be accused of being the “good and gentle”
judge on Idol but her steely determination and old
fashioned manners are not to be trifled with. Bandmates
have been dressed down for rudeness to roadies and
she will leave business meetings when she starts to
feel like “a piece of meat in a butcher shop”.
“You have to earn respect and you earn it by standing
shoulder to shoulder. I am a great believer in taking
good care of my band and we all take great pride in
having a great gig, no matter what. Gender doesn’t
come into that, it should always be a team. And team
doesn’t have a sex.
“And you know when to leave the room when they get
blokey. By that time, the singer should be getting
some sleep.”
Hines says the highlight of her year was being inducted
into the ARIA Hall Of Fame, only the eighth female
solo artist or band member to be honoured since it
began in 1988.
“It really made my year. That’s the first and only
ARIA I had ever received. But it’s a good one,” she
says.
“And there are a lot of other women who deserve it.
What about Dinah Lee? She was a rebel, man. She was
hardcore.”
EJ
BARNES
Growing up in the Australian music industry has given
EJ Barnes an insider’s view of its colourful characters
and seedy underbelly.
As a child star with her siblings in the Tin Lids,
the second eldest daughter of Jimmy and Jane Barnes
was too young to appreciate the considerable success
of selling 100,000 copies of their Hey Rudolph debut
album.
But as she readies her debut solo release, There And
Back, EJ is armed with her childhood experience and
the two and a half year apprenticeship she served
with her father’s band after leaving school.
“I think it is definitely a male-dominated industry,
especially in Australia. But I have had a sheltered
experience of things because my Dad would bash anyone
who messes with me,” she laughs.
“I toured with him for two and a half years so everyone
was looking out for me and since I’ve toured with
great friends like Liam Finn.”
She says most men on tour are of the gentleman variety
and she has to insist to literally carry her weight.
“I make a point of lugging the kick drum around,”
she laughs. “They are always trying to be gentlemanly.
Half the fun is setting up and packing up, I enjoy
it, it’s therapy and it’s good to know which lead
is going where when something goes wrong.”
The 22-year-old singer songwriter said she completed
a SAE course after school in double time to prepare
herself for touring and recording.
“It was to help make me feel more comfortable in the
studio. I don’t like not knowing what’s possible and
what’s going on. I didn’t go to university so this
was a shorter option.”
Recording There And Back with family – her uncle Mark
Lizotte – and her co-writer Richie Goncalves made
the process even more enjoyable.
“It was the ultimate easy first album. Richie was
the first person I showed any of my songs too and
Mark was the first person to show me how to play guitar
so it was warm and protected, a womb-like environment
in the studio,” she laughs. “Yeah, I don’t know how
they’ll feel about that.”
AMANDAH WILKINSON –
OPERATOR PLEASE
Silverchair managed to escape any suggestion that
they were not the authors of their smash hit breakthrough
song Tomorrow and album Frogstomp. But young teen
bands now – particularly those fronted by women –
are immediately assumed to be the products of a manager
or producer svengali.
Operator Please’s frontwoman Amandah Wilkinson is
shocked that their well documented formation at high
school to compete in a Battle Of The Bands competition
seems to be ignored by the less media savvy members
of the music industry or fans.
To many, their ARIA award and impressive performance
of their breakthrough hit Just A Song About Ping Pong
at the ceremony last month were revelations.
“Some people think we have been plucked from somewhere
and all this has happened overnight,” Amandah says.
“It’s highly insulting that anyone would suggest we
are manufactured. After you see us live, you quickly
find out that’s not true. I do kinda laugh at it because
all you can do is laugh.”
Despite their teen years, Operator Please have managed
to serve their time on stage, thanks to Wilkinson’s
persuasiveness and the undeniable catchiness of their
sound and look.
“We got up there at the ARIAs and did what we’ve been
doing for two and a half years.”
Amandah said the band have treated the learning the
business of showbusiness like cramming for exams.
“We’ve had to learn quickly,” she says.
“People can be quite condescending to us and assume
we are clueless. When we first went into contracts,
it did our heads in.
“So we took time out and went to talk to as many people
as we could and paid total attention to the fine print
to make sure our best interests were at hand. That’s
probably why it took so long for us to sign something.
“It’s hard working with young people and five opinionated
young people is harder.”
ABBY
DOBSON
On tour with Leonardo’s Bride, a support band and
associated crew often meant Abby Dobson was one woman
among 18 men. So she adapted.
“I didn’t understand at the time; it was only after
I left Leonardo’s Bride that I started to become really
girly,” Dobson laughs.
“I guess I subverted that so as to not be treated
any differently. Now I am celebrating my femaleness.
But sometimes I look at radio airplay or music magazines
and it will just occur to me that ‘Wow, there’s no
females,’ Sometimes it strikes me there are still
a ways to go. There’s still a bit of an antiquated
gender divide.”
Like the majority of the Australian music sisterhood,
Dobson has found plenty of like-souled blokes to make
music with. Her former Leonardo’s Bride bandmate Dean
Manning, Paul Mac and Jackie Orszaczky guest on her
debut solo album Rise Up which was produced by Sarah
Blasko’s chief collaborator Robert F Cranny.
“I have been very lucky. Like all work situations,
it’s about the relationships you build with people
and one on one relationships are the ones I work on,”
Dobson says.
“I have great relationships in my orbit. I’m sure
there are dickheads out there but I don’t have anything
to do with it.”
And she is happy after enough years in the business
to admit her limitations when it comes to adapting
to life on the road again.
“Oh, I used to lift everything; I really wanted to
be seen to be as strong as them. Now my strength doesn’t
lie in that place,” she laughs.
“I have pulled muscles heaps of time and for me now,
loading gear would be sheer stupidity. I am happy
to sit there in a pretty dress.”
LISA ORIGLIASSO – THE
VERONICAS
Lisa and Jess Origliasso are two of the sweetest people
you’ll meet on a red carpet, but they are fiercely
proud and incredulous in equal measure that the word
“difficult” has been bandied around boardrooms among
those who would impose their will on the twin sisters.
Signed as teenagers to a reputed million dollar deal
with Warner Music, they were adamant their opinions
would be heard when it came making their second album,
Hook Me Up, released this month.
“We were two young girls from Brisbane signing this
big international deal and we felt we had to listen.
We were prepared to compromise and take on board other
people’s opinion but the one thing we have learnt
going through the whole thing of being The Veronicas
is to grab everything by the horns and realise your
opinion is as important as the head honcho in the
big office in New York,” Lisa says.
“We were once told to just shut up and sing!
“It’s insane that they sign you and are telling you
how awesome you are and the next minute they are running
through a list of things they want to change.
“We have had to fight quite strongly for what we believe.
If they want to sign puppets they can go find someone
else.”
And that includes fighting for their guys, their beloved
band members who have toured the world with the girls
since the release of their hit debut record, The Secret
Life Of The Veronicas.
Lisa and Jess had to insist their band members be
flown to Los Angeles to appear in the video for Hook
Me Up when it was suggested actors play their roles.
But the girls admit that sharing the tour bus with
a bunch of blokes has its limits.
“There’s absolutely nowhere to change except for this
tiny cubicle toilet. When you are on the tour bus,
you turn into a dude,” she laughs.
JADE MACRAE
Any young female Australian singer songwriter working
in the pop milieu, long dominated by beautiful young
femmes thrown up by the hitmaker factories, can expect
a barrage of cynical questions about their songwriting
and musical abilities. Or did they grow up singing
into a hairbrush?
Jade MacRae has heard them all being young, female
and pop.
“To be honest, in my experience, it hasn’t been that
bad for me. The one thing I have had happen is dealing
with men who are surprised or shocked you have skills
to back up what you are doing,” she says.
“When I was working with Jimmy (Barnes), you meet
some of the old rock guys from the old school and
they would express huge surprise when they find out
you write your own songs. ‘Oh you co-write the lyrics,
right?’ That was another common misconception.
“I have encountered that from some producers and songwriters
too but it seems to be less in America. I found they
were more open-minded.”
MacRae said she did find it disappointing that a female
artist with producer and songwriting credits was a
“novelty”.
“There are so many of us out there who are active
in the whole process, not just in writing but in producing,”
she says.
“In some interviews people comment on the fact I did
the vocal production for my record. I’m a singer so
of course I am interested in how the vocals are going
to sound. It’s great people are excited by women doing
these things but it shouldn’t really be a novelty.”
Like her fellow frontwomen, MacRae said her male peers
were always respectful. And she said the Australian
press continued to strongly support female artists
who might struggle for notice in commercial electronic
media.
“I am constantly reading about multi-talented female
artists. You would think that all that good promotion
would get it out there to people,” she says.
“But in the end, you just have to do what you do;
you don’t want to get in people’s faces. I’m not going
to wear a T-shirt that says “I Write My Own Songs
And Play My Own Instruments.”