The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is set to announce its 2020 inductees Wednesday. And while this year鈥檚 nominees include three woman-driven acts, critics have long chided the Rock Hall for the low percentage of women in its pantheon of performers.
, Janet Jackson threw down the gauntlet.
鈥Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, please, 2020, induct more women,鈥 she said.
Her co-inductee, Stevie Nicks, also criticized the Rock Hall that night for its low female representation. Rock Hall Foundation CEO Joel Peresman said he鈥檚 heard that complaint before.
鈥We're trying to make this as gender-neutral as possible and just look at as the criteria of being inducted is quality of work,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd if it's male or female, that's the criteria.鈥
Joel Peresman is President and CEO of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's Board of Directors [Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]
Former Rock Hall board chairman Jann Wenner echoed that sentiment in a Billboard interview this past fall, adding 鈥渞acially-neutral鈥 to the judging criteria.
鈥That's a very easy thing for a white man to say,鈥 said Evelyn McDonnell, director of journalism at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. Last year, and found a problem. For every female bandleader inducted, her male band mates also go into the hall of fame. McDonnell discovered that, over the course of 34 years, the process yielded 69 women out of 888 inductees 鈥 less than eight percent.
Evelyn McDonnell, Director of Journalism, Loyola Marymount University [Tim Maxeiner]
鈥Since the dawn of the recording industry, there have been prominent women, sometimes women who were dominant,鈥 McDonnell said. 鈥淏ig Mama Thornton sang the original, and to me, still the best version of 鈥淗ound Dog,鈥 and she's never been inducted.鈥
Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thornton circa 1965 singing "Hound Dog," a song written for her, but made famous by Elvis Presley
The Rock Hall鈥檚 Peresman acknowledged that a glut of all-male bands has skewed the induction numbers.
鈥淚t's not an empirical process that's like chemistry,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f an act is Joan Jett and the Black Hearts and the committee looks at the people that were involved with her from the beginning - and that made a significant contribution to the creative process - how do you not induct them?鈥
A nominating committee of about 30 artists, scholars and record industry insiders draws up the ballot each year. Craig Werner was on that committee for 18 years. An emeritus professor of Afro-American studies at the University of Wisconsin, Werner is also a music writer and he has no problem with the nomination process.
鈥The issues are much more what happens to that ballot once it goes to the larger electorate,鈥 he said with a sigh. 鈥淲ell, I'm just going to say it: I think that the electorate makes dumb decisions on a regular basis.鈥
Craig Werner, professor emeritus, Afro-American studies, University of Wisconsin [Craig Werner]
There are about 1,000 people who get to vote on the ballot, although there鈥檚 no accounting of exactly who they are. Peresman said they include record company people, writers and performers. But, the voting pool also includes every living person who鈥檚 ever been inducted, which is largely a population of white men.
鈥The nominating committee, I think reflects a good sense, a contentious sense, sometimes of what rock and roll history is,鈥 Werner said. 鈥淭he electorate, I think, does not. I think that it adheres to a very, white-boys-with-guitars and hip-hop that fits into that mythology. It marginalizes women. It marginalizes artists whose core audience is in the African-American community. And it almost entirely ignores Latins.鈥
Yale scholar Daphne Brooks has written extensively on race and gender in relation to popular music, and, while critical of the Rock Hall鈥檚 past induction practices, she鈥檚 encouraged by some recent changes.
Daphne Brooks, professor of African American studies, Yale University [Daphne Brooks]
鈥淪o for instance, a couple of years ago now, we have the induction, posthumously, of Nina Simone and Sister Rosetta Tharpe,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat's a kind of work that should continue, I think, to be done.鈥
Rosetta Tharpe's solo in the middle of this 1960s TV appearance
Tharpe finally got her spot in the hall of fame 32 years after it started inducting performers, even though one of the first inductees, Chuck Berry, always cited Tharpe as a major influence. Brooks sees the Rock Hall as a piece of the country鈥檚 historic and cultural memory and said it needs to do better.
鈥淚f we can start from that point, then I think we can understand why the hall is important and also why we have to fight for it to be a place where we can all hear and see ourselves and see America in its bold, heterogeneous self,鈥 Brooks said.
Wenner recently stepped down as chairman of the Rock Hall Foundation鈥檚 board of directors. His replacement, , which has two women and no members of color.