ALL THINGS MUSIC PAGE 6 • GO! MAGAZINE THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 2021 • THE BULLETIN Oregon musicians launch She’s Speaking Virtual series features female songwriters writing about women who inspired them BY BRIAN MCELHINEY The Bulletin I nspired by the life and work of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sis- ters songwriter Beth Wood wrote the song “One Step at a Time.” The song became the catalyst for the virtual series She’s Speak- ing. “It was a song that was inspired by RBG that got me thinking about this whole direc- tion,” Wood said. “Wouldn’t it be really cool to invite women songwriters to write songs about women that inspire them? And so not only are we amplifying women’s voices, but also women’s stories.” “One Step at a Time” is the first song fea- tured in the March 8 launch video for the series, which is dedicated to female song- writers writing about the women who in- spired them (and named for Vice President Kamala Harris’ now-famous “I’m speaking” quip during the Vice Presidential debate). Wood teamed with Salem’s Kristen Grainger and Portland’s Bre Gregg for the project, which will feature different performances five days a week, Tuesdays through Satur- days. “When we started this we were hoping for like 10 videos, but instead we got 50- some,” Gregg said. “So now we’re going back through and we’re doing artist highlights.” The launch video featured 16 performances. Wood cited a graphic listing the percent- age of women in different roles in the music industry, including artists (22% women), songwriters (13%), producers (3%), engi- neers (3%) and label owners (15%). The graphic was posted to Instagram by Amplify Her Voice, an online platform “dedicated to helping advance the careers of women in music through educational, networking and creative opportunities.” “My interest is in helping to lift wom- en’s voices,” Wood said. “And there are so many amazing women artists out there that are what I like to call blue-collar musician. women, just in general? in Bend, that doesn’t seem to be necessarily I think when you have a male-dom- proving true all the time? inated industry it can be difficult on I guess you’re right. … My boss — I had women no matter what. But I try not to focus a bunch of bosses — but my boss in the on that stuff. I mean, personally, I always try promotion department (at Atlantic) was a not to focus on that; I just try to do the best woman, and I think she always tried to sup- job that I could do. But there’s that kind of port women as much as she (could). So I feel attitude and sexism and misogyny in every like we had a lot of women on our staff, which industry, every single one. … At Bend Radio was really great. Group, I feel like our owner, Jim Gross, and I just try not to look at people as gender. Mike (Flanagan), who’s our program direc- I try to look at people based on who they tor, I feel like they respect everybody — man, are as a person, and in the job setting, how woman. Mike and I have deep, deep discus- well they do their job. I feel like I’m such a sion about music and I don’t think he ever music head in general and I’ve always been thinks of me in any other way than as a peer passionate about music and the bands that who loves music. I think I’ve been pretty for- I love. I’m not stupid. I just feel like the jobs tunate in the jobs that I’ve had. that I’ve had, I’ve earned them. RINDY ROSS … But I am very pro-women. I feel like we get the backseat so Vocalist and saxophonist often. I just heard this story Ross, along with her husband, on NPR the other day about Marv, started the band Jones the pandemic, and how an Road in Bend in the 1970s. X amount of the women After relocating to Port- in the workforce are not land, the group changed in the workforce anymore. its name to Seafood Mama And the numbers are such and then Quarterflash, that it’s the same as it was and scored a No. 1 Bill- in 1982, because the women board Mainstream Rock hit are staying home with the kids with “Harden My Heart” in who have to be homeschooled. 1981. The Rosses retired Quar- And that just broke my heart. terflash and their long-running Rindy Ross From your perspective hav- folk group, The Trail Band, in ing been in the music industry for a 2019 to focus on duo performances. long time, do you think it’s better in the music What have your experiences been in an industry or worse in the music industry for industry that has a reputation for being, Continued from Page 3 A: A: Q: Q: There’s this whole sector of working musi- cians that are not on the charts, they’re not on the radio, they’re not on the Grammys. They’re working people. I love taking song- writers that I think are amazing and show- ing them to other people, and being like, oh my gosh, check her out, she’s so good. And that’s one of the fun things about this chan- nel too.” Wood, Grainger and Gregg have sourced performances from a “very curated list of songwriters,” but have discussed opening it up to anyone who wants to submit a song. Featured artists so far include Mare Wake- field, Anna Tivel, Shireen Amini and Lady A, who hosted the launch video. Submissions are limited to original songs, and for now they are sticking to the theme of women writing about women who in- spired them, though they may expand to other themes in the future. “It’s a platform channel that’ll exist for- ever,” Grainger said. “We hope that it will continuously grow, and there will be more women’s songs and tribute songs added to it, and different campaigns — maybe we do young women or girls or some other kind of theme to it.” They’ve also thought about hosting a live event tied to the series when things start to open up more. “Just judging from the energy of having us all together on Zoom the other night (for the launch video), I just can’t imagine a live event, how inspiring and celebratory that would be,” Wood said. “That’s something that I would love to work toward. … That really was for me a part of the seed in reach- ing out, is that I have missed collaborating so much. You can’t harmonize on Zoom. So that has been one of the biggest gifts of this whole thing, is being able to collaborate with friends and also new songwriters that I’d never heard of before.” People can follow She’s Speaking on You- Tube (youtube.com/channel/UCoVBT- kpT-dWRQxqhe3c1eVw), Facebook (facebook.com/shesspeakingsongs) and Instagram (instagram.com/shesspeaking- songs/). e e Reporter: 541-617-7814, bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.com at times, difficult for women to be in? less of that, that women have more of a voice, It’s interesting. I think women have which is how it should be, that women’s — women in the music indus- voices are just as valued and re- try have greatly changed since spected as a man’s voice. I was that girl who plays the BETH WOOD saxophone. I mean, it was just so unusual, and that Singer-songwriter is less of a big deal that a Wood is well known to woman is playing an in- Sisters Folk Festival audi- strument. And in fact just ences, and in April 2020 she relocated to Sisters the Grammys (on Sun- from Bend (before that she day), it was kind of swept lived in Portland and by women and women song- Eugene). She recently writers. So I think much has launched the virtual perfor- changed and I’m so glad to see Beth Wood mance series She’s Speaking that, but yeah, it’s been a progres- alongside songwriters Kristen sion, as women in the workplace in Grainger and Bre Gregg (see sidebar for general has been a progression over the ages. ertainly had my experiences in record- more information). ing, et cetera, where — I know one par- What have your experiences been in an ticular producer that we worked with that, I industry that has a reputation for being, won’t mention his name. On our third record, at times, difficult for women to be in? we were actually making the record in France I’ve been doing this for almost 25 years and he was English. And he would only take now. There have been multiple times in feedback from Marv. I could say something my career where I have been told, “We can’t like, ‘Well, you know, I think blah blah blah, add your song because we already have too this song needs this,’ and he would sometimes many women on the radio this week.” Or, I not even acknowledge I was speaking, and was in the final stages of negotiating with a then other times just kind of nod his head and national publisher about being an on-staff completely ignore it. And then Marv could writer with them, and they came to us the fol- come and say the exact same thing and he’d lowing week and said, “Ah, I’m so sorry we go, ‘Oh, done deal, bro.’ So it was very interest- can’t do this; we have too many women writ- ing and extremely nerve wracking for me, and ers already.” It was maddening. There’s noth- I just learned to speak through Marv. I had to ing I could do in either of those situations. speak through my husband, which is never an e e Reporter: 541-617-7814, bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.com ideal type situation. I think there’s a whole lot A: I c Q: A: