Women in music  

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-Some of my fave female [[disco divas]] include Loleatta Holloway, Grace Jones, Rochelle Fleming, Jocelyn Brown, Taana Gardner | Fonda Rae, Gwen Guthrie and Christine Wiltshire. +Some of my fave female [[disco divas]] include [[Loleatta Holloway]], [[Grace Jones]], [[Rochelle Fleming]], [[Jocelyn Brown]], [[Taana Gardner]], [[Fonda Rae]], [[Gwen Guthrie]] and [[Christine Wiltshire]].
See also: [[women in punk]], [[Women's music]] See also: [[women in punk]], [[Women's music]]
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Revision as of 17:16, 27 July 2019

"Disco was an extended conversation between black women female divas and gay men. Straight men were welcome to join the party, but only if they learned the lingo. Some did, but for many, this new demand aroused a kind of "castration anxiety," as Alice Echols put it in a 1994 essay. Disco symbolized a world where straight men were not only expected to engender the female orgasm, but to incorporate it. --"The Last Days of Gay Disco, Peter Braunstein, June 30, 1998

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Some of my fave female disco divas include Loleatta Holloway, Grace Jones, Rochelle Fleming, Jocelyn Brown, Taana Gardner, Fonda Rae, Gwen Guthrie and Christine Wiltshire.

See also: women in punk, Women's music




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