It's probably just me, but... I found this silly Q & A tiresomely offensive.
→[More:]To save you clicking and bugmenot-ing, it's a throwaway little Q & A about the group 'Celtic Woman' that I read in the Boston Globe over lunch. I'm not a CW fan (in fact, the whole act is so manufactured that I find it offputting), but it was all I had to read. CW is a group of five women who perform under that umbrella 'brand,' which is really what it is. But that's not the tiresome part.
The tiresome part is that the music writer who did the Q & A managed to get all of
two questions out before asking "Have you ever fought over a song?"
When one of the group responds "There's no competition because we all do something different," you would think the case was closed on the fighting thing. Or at least maybe you'd follow up by asking "What are the different things that each of you do?"
But no. The writer can't resist following up with "No catfights, then?"
Please. This isn't your blog or a comedy show on TV, it's a major U.S. daily paper. As a female and a musician, it just kills me to see it suggested, in this day and age, by a
female writer, that a group of women can't collaborate without going at it all hair-and-fingernails. Jeeez! I wrote the Globe about it. The thing is, the reviewer has done a lot of pieces on women in music. It can't be the first time she's ever given thought to gender stereotyping.
I'm just saddened that there was a missed opportunity to talk about what it's really like for musicians to collaborate, because the 'catfight' joke just seemed cuter, or something. Come on. It's not a question you'd ask Aerosmith or the Three Tenors, you know?
Good Lord, this liberation thing is taking forever. *waggles foot impatiently*