100 Women Revolutionizing Pop
Music

100 Women Revolutionizing Pop

We were just as horrified as you when the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative released their annual stats about inclusion in the music industry at the start of the year.

The USC think tank's findings were unfortunate; in 2017, the research showed that men were dominating pop music, with women representing only 16.8% of popular artists on the top charts. It was a six-year low, showcasing how "women are pushed to the margins or excluded from the creative process" in music-making.

To combat this bleak statistic, we found we actually didn't have to look far at all for strong examples of women in the pop sphere — encompassing stylistic diversity that includes genres like R&B, hip-hop, and electronic — who were pushing boundaries and shaking things up with their virtuosic art.

Below, 100 women across all spectrums who are revolutionizing pop, and the face of music as we know it for the better, this year and beyond. Click through and listen to a special playlist curated by PAPER editors, featuring all 100 pop stars.

Rina Sawayama

When I listen to British-Japanese singer Rina Sawayama's release RINA, I am always immediately reminded of the Princess Diaries soundtrack. Her album came out last year, a decade and a half after the film, but it has the same slinky production and wide-eyed optimism of the pop songs that soundtrack an early 2000s teen drama. Songs like "Ordinary Superstar," in which Sawayama balances lofty daydreams of fame with reality checks about her ordinariness, would perfectly bolster a montage of post-makeover Mia Thermopolis getting her life together. — Vrinda Jagota (Photography: Andrew T. White for PAPER)

Story by Michael Love Michael, Vrinda Jagota, Justin Moran, Jael Goldfine, Katie Skinner, Talia Smith