FEATURE:
Trash Talking
IN THIS PHOTO: Garbage’s Shirley Manson in 2022/PHOTO CREDIT: Kathryna Hancock
Shirley Manson’s Blast Against Ageism: A Music Industry Issue Slow to Shift
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I can’t recall when it was…
IN THIS PHOTO: Garbage/PHOTO CREDIT: Garbage
but Pet Shop Boys’ Neil Tennant said that ageism in music wasn’t a think anymore. Although ageism does impact men, it is still an issue very much faced by women. A fresh and sadly unsurprising case of ageism against Garbage from Daily Mail recently provoked rebellion and anger from their lead, Shirley Manson. Labelling the band as “unrecognisable” in their new photos, it did seem very much pointed at Shirley Manson. The fact is that she looks amazing! A remarkable beautiful and vibrant woman who, as she says herself, rocks harder than anyone. A hugely influential musician who has been at the front of one of the greatest bands of their time. Even if the comments came from the bowels of the gutter press, it still can’t be ignored. The fact that there is still this problem of ageism in the music industry. One that exists throughout society. In recent years, artists such as Kylie Minogue and Lady Gaga have addressed ageism levelled at them. These amazing women producing the best and most essential music of their careers. It is sad and a horrible example to set when women are judged on their looks and age. A lot of women who ruled in the 1990s and are still making music today being compared to their former selves. Judged to be unrecognisable or strange because, and how dare they, they have aged! And wonderfully too. However, if a woman doesn’t look like she is in her twenties and is how she ‘should’ look, then she is maligned, criticised or marginalised. I am going to come to some comments Shirley Manson made in a recent interview. Before that, here is her reaction to the Daily Mail article:
“Garbage frontwoman Shirley Manson has responded to “weaponised” comments about her appearance.
Taking to Instagram this morning (April 13), Manson shared a screenshot of a Daily Mail article that claimed the rock band looked “unrecognisable” in new album promo photos for recently shared single
“Quite a header from the Daily Mail yesterday,” her caption began. “What is THIS supposed to mean?!? The Druids look almost exactly the same as they have always done for thirty years so I can’t help thinking this is directed at me.
“Look – I’m nearly sixty years old. Of course I’m not going to look anything like my late twenties self?!?” she continued. “Quite honestly I think it would be a bit creepy if I did but hey that’s just me. Either way – this kind of language is weaponised to put a woman like me in my place.”
Manson’s comments come after Millie Bobby Brown slammed numerous tabloids that criticised her appearance in March, while Lady Gaga also hit out at “ageism” in the music industry the same month.
The ‘Stupid Girl’ singer went on to say she rejected the “gift”, writing: “This gift is a fail. I shall continue to age as I am. I will continue to wrinkle and flub – lose an inch of my height here and gain a new inch or two there – but I will still look cute in my pyjamas with bed head and no make up on and I will always – no matter what I look like – no matter what they say about me – I will always – and forever – rock HARDER than most.”
News of the band’s upcoming eighth studio album ‘Let All That We Imagine Be The Light’ was first shared back in February, when it was confirmed that the band had finished work on the 10-track follow-up to 2021’s ‘No Gods No Masters’. The record is due for release on May 30 (pre-order/pre-save here)”.
In an interview with The Guardian recently, Shirley Manson talked about her experiences as a woman in music in the '90s. Even if the industry has shifted in terms of its misogyny and sexism – not fully but it is not as flagrant as it was back then -, it is clear that things have not changed completely. Ageism still an especially big concern. Sexism evident when we look around the industry: from playlists to festival line-ups to headline acts. It seemed like a brutal landscape thirty years ago:
“The 90s were also brutal to women in the music industry. “I was so young and I was hungry and distracted. I didn’t notice a lot of the micro-misogyny and the micro-sexism at first,” Manson says. “I was blinded by the dazzle of my career. I wasn’t paying attention. Back then, I read my own press, like a fool, and I was reading these horrible descriptions of me, really degrading or sexual in nature, or just nasty shit. It wasn’t just the male writers, although primarily the 90s music journalists were male. It really stung, and I found that hard.”
Critique was often lascivious and slavering, but any amount of objectification was supposedly fine because it was always ironic, and that, in itself, was bullshit. But it morphed into a kind of bitterness and resentment, which I never understood. People would tear into Manson – and everyone: Kenickie, Sleeper, even Salad – and I never really got where the anger came from”.
Ageism shouldn’t have a place in modern music! It is not only tabloids and the garbage press that are offending music royalty. Is there still this invisible line between women in their twenties and early-thirties and those who are older. If you are in the latter camp then are you less relevant? The ludicrous clickbait from Daily Mail. Suggesting a woman in her fifties should be subjected to this toxicity and ageism. Manson and her contemporaries look and are amazing! Some of the finest and most engaging live performers are in their forties, fifties and sixties. Kylie Minogue still delivering five-star sets! Someone, as I argued, who should have headlined Glastonbury this year. Lady Gaga – again, where was her call for this year’s Glastonbury?! -, is someone who has faced ageism. She recently spoke about it at the iHeartRadio Music Awards:
“Lady Gaga has reflected on ageism within the pop industry in an acceptance speech at the iHeartRadio Music Awards.
The US singer, 38, who recently topped the UK album charts for a fifth time with her latest album Mayhem, said she is “just getting warmed up” even though “the world might consider a woman in her late 30s old”.
The Abracadabra singer picked up the innovator award and also won the best collaboration gong, along with US music star Bruno Mars, for their hit single Die With A Smile, which features on her new record.
“I don’t know totally how to think about this, because winning an award honouring my entire career at 38 years old is a hard thing to get my head around,” she said, while accepting the innovator award.
“On the one hand, I feel like I’ve been doing this forever, and on the other hand, I know I’m just getting started.
“Even though the world might consider a woman in her late 30s old, for a pop star, which is insane, I promise that I’m just getting warmed up.
“Innovation isn’t about breaking rules, it’s about writing your own and convincing the world they were theirs all along.
“Like showing up to the Grammys in an egg, or creating an anthem that everyone told us was too controversial until it became undeniable.”
The singer was once carried onto the red carpet in an egg at the 2011 Grammy Awards.
“If I have learned anything in three decades I’ve been at this, it’s that the most powerful innovation is your authenticity,” she added.
“Every time I was the only woman in the room, the loudest voice was inside my own head telling me not to compromise.
“Listening to that voice always showed me exactly where I belonged.
“And tonight I think of my grandmothers, fiercely brilliant Italian-American women who reinvented their destinies with nothing but strength and dreams and determination.
“They didn’t invent technology or art – they invented possibility, shaping the future with nothing more than their minds. And those women, my ancestors, they’re the greatest innovators that I’ve ever known”.
I didn’t really want to leave things at liking and interacting with Shirley Manson’s Instagram post. It is always women calling out ageism. You do not see that many men shouting against those who seem to feel women in music are faded, past it or do not appeal to the eye if they are past the age of thirty. It is always horrible when you see a woman in music have to speak out against comments from the media, fans or someone in the industry. There does need to be this vocal outcry from men in music. One can say artists like Shirley Manson and Lady Gaga have fought back and rightly stated how women their age are in their prime, just getting started and not going to take notice of the kind of crap they are subjected to. However, you feel like the problem of ageism is not going away. Rather than judge women and castigate them if they have the audacity to not stay super-young forever, these queens should be given….
THE respect they deserve.