4- From Underground to Mainstream Culture: Addressing Problems Related to Drag Music in Today’s Music Industry - Jérémi Gendron, Université Laval
Partie de:
Quand:
11:30 AM, Dimanche 26 Mai 2019
(2 heures)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) -
DS-1520
Comment:
The art of drag
(entertainment through a female impersonation by men (Baker, 1994)) evolved
from underground to mainstream culture. Previously performing their art only to
the LGBTQ+ community, drag queens are now the face of a multimillion-dollar
industry (The Globe and Mail, 2018). Now
considered a cultural phenomenon, the platform in a way responsible for its
diffusion is the reality tv show RuPaul’s
Drag Race (RPDR) (New-York Times,
2018).Since the accession of
RPDR, we have witnessed drag queens benefiting from a visibility in various
markets; as brand ambassadors (American Apparel and Starbucks in 2014,
Coca-Cola in 2017 or Ikea and Lush in 2018) and as musicians.Numerous ex-RPDR contestants have produced themselves in the music
industry with their own creations but are constantly denied by major American
labels (Billboard, 2018). They must
turn to independent labels such as Producer Entertainment Group (PEG), a label
that is working to obtain a distribution deal with a major label. According to
David Charpentier, fonder of PEG, not a single major label takes drag queens
seriously, asking them to repackage as non-drag artists. By drawing a portrait
of the extent of such phenomenon in different markets and by considering the
popularity of a few ex-RPDR contestants in the musical sphere, we are
wondering: To what extent is drag queens’ music discriminated by today’s music
industry? Are their images and personas in the way of their success? What are
the motives behind the refusal of major labels to reach a distribution deal?