Women Who Rock


There is an excellent new docuseries on Amazon Prime called "Women Who Rock".

This series goes pretty much back to the beginning and continues through today.

Highly recommended!!!

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This is Grace Slick singing White Rabbit (isolated to just her voice track).

Prior to Pro-tools!

 

Your welcome.

Regards,

barts

@blackbag20 - That's pretty funny! And it's the reason I never got into those early Rush albums. 

@petaluman  I’ve been seeing so many of these “female” threads forever now. I chose not to comment because I would just be a Debbie Downer. 
I just couldn’t help myself this umpteenth time.  
It’s sexist and dumb to have these ideas.

People consider a male artist an….artist.
A female artist is a…”female artist.”  

It’s just stupid.  
No one would make a thread of “best male vocalists” or “men who rock.”  
Because that would be dumb.
 

@tylermunns Thanks for your response.

I guess it's a difference of opinion.  To me, "best" is dumb.  Is Baroque better than Romantic?  Hip Hop better than Jazz?  Tom Waits better than Enrico Caruso?  I don't believe in judging musicians in bpm, and different kinds of music have entirely different goals.

When I'm ready to listen, I probably choose artist or type of music first.  Sometimes I'm going for a sound, though.  It might be blues tuba or Joni Mitchell ... or it could be a woman who rocks.  The interesting thing I find in that topic is whether rocks is limited to rock.  I say no.

I gotta throw in Wendy O. Williams of the Plasmatics. In my opinion the most 'tittilating" of all the women mentioned, although Grace Slick is one also..

Never saw Wendy live; she appeared in this forum recently as among the loudest shows people have ever attended.

I believe "spirit" has no gender, but that doesn't mean I compare my father and mother as sort of identical human beings.