“I know women who had to rebel as hard as they could to get anything happening at all”: Heart’s Ann Wilson recalls the sexism of rock and roll in the ’70s

“I know women who had to rebel as hard as they could to get anything happening at all”: Heart’s Ann Wilson recalls the sexism of rock and roll in the ’70s

Back in the ‘70s, the rock scene was a bit of a sausage fest. When Heart broke onto the scene, sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson were in the midst of their 20s – and it could sometimes be a struggle to be taken seriously. In her new solo documentary, In My Voice, Ann has reflected on her career thus far, including how men used to belittle her and her sister.
Speaking to Rolling Stone, Wilson admits that the predominantly male rock scene wasn’t very encouraging at first. “You would build yourself up and do something really great, and you’d feel really good about it – then you could get put down and squashed down very easily by the rest of the men,” she admits.

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Despite her and her sister being branded as a ‘Little Led Zeppelin’ due to their buckets of guitar talent, men never seemed to judge them on their merit. Everything seemed to be pointedly attacking them just because they were young girls. “They could make you feel like you were really silly for even trying,” she adds. “We were lucky enough to have great people around us, but I know other women who were starting up close to our time that had to rebel as hard as they could to get anything happening at all.”
Prior to Heart’s formation, the sisters already had a sense of rock ‘n’ roll’s inherent sexism after walking out of a 1969 Led Zeppelin gig. In an interview with Premier Guitar’s 100 Guitarists podcast, Nancy recalled how appalled her and sister had felt while watching Robert Plant perform “scandalously” suggestive tracks at the Green Lake Aqua Theater in Seattle.
“The singer, he’s so suggestive,” Nancy recalled. “He’s got his shirt wide open, he’s got his bare chest, and his jeans were really low riders. He was moving in this way that was super-suggestive and we were kind of shocked. We’re like, ‘Oh, my God.’”

Aged 15 and 19 at the time, the pair weren’t very comfortable with the sexuality on display. “We were in a little folk band at the time,” she adds. “We were from the suburbs. So we were kind of square, square little hippie chicks to be unenlightened, let’s just say. And so, they were like, ‘Oh, they’re so loud. They’re just being so suggestive and loud.’”
“Then, he sang [the Lemon Song], saying ‘Squeeze My Lemon,’ and we’re like, ‘we must leave…’ because we were just shocked! We actually walked out… We were scandalised!”
Alongside the new documentary, Ann is releasing a new track, Nothing But Love. It’s a track she wrote back in the ‘90s, and will feature on the In My Voice soundtrack. “That track never saw the light of day until now,” she explains.
“I’ve always really liked it, but it didn’t fit with what was going on in the 1990s at all. It’s just so unlike what was going on at that moment, but it seems natural now. It’s got some soul to it. It’s something that I love hearing, and I love singing. I hope people really get lifted by it.”

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