Martina McBride on Spotifys Female Representation: Im Frustrated for My Sisters


Martina McBride pointedly addressed Spotify on Monday, posting a series of Instagram stories that asked some tough questions of the streaming giant and its ratios of male and female performers. McBride even reached out to her Twitter followers to follow along.

Check out my insta story if you havent already. Im fired up this morning! she wrote.

The whole thing began when McBride, who was praising the title track from Sara Evans 1997 album Three Chords and the Truth, decided to make a playlist called Country Music. The recommendations that came up were all songs by men, including Luke Bryan, Thomas Rhett, Eric Church, and Florida Georgia Line.

Come on Spotify, you can and should do better, she wrote.

Martina McBride

She refreshed the recommendations again and again, claiming to have done it 14 times in total before another woman Carrie Underwood finally popped up in the Recommended Songs list.

And this on a week when we had four stellar releases by women, she wrote, citing new albums and singles by Trisha Yearwood, Tanya Tucker, the Highwomen, Kelsea Ballerini, and Sheryl Crow.

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Comparing Spotify to Apple Musics A-List Country playlist, she noted that Apple Music had 13 women out of 65 total, or 20 percent. Its kind of an apples to oranges comparison in this case, since Spotifys recommendation engine is separate from its curated playlists. In fairness, Spotifys Hot Country playlist currently has 13 songs by women or woman-fronted acts out of 61 total, a slightly higher percentage than Apple Music but still nowhere near half.

Martina McBride

Comparisons aside, McBrides anger seems centered over not being able to get any recommendations for songs by women, nor being able to find a good explanation as to why that might be.

Is it lazy? Is it discriminatory? she wrote. Im not doing this for me obviously. Im sure I wont show up on any recommendations anytime soon after today. Im frustrated for my sisters. For all the great female artists who are making fabulous music. For all the female writers. And most of all, for every little girl out there who doesnt hear this music and doesnt know that she can grow up and do it.

Martina McBride