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Women guitarists are increasing in popularity on social media and changing the face of music

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In the evolving world of music, one shift is challenging the once male-dominated field of guitarists. Social media has spotlighted a wave of female guitarists, showcasing their talent and passion for the instrument. 

Grace Bowers, a 17-year-old mostly self-taught guitarist, found an audience on Reddit during the pandemic. She stumbled upon a Guns N’ Roses music video, and her admiration for Slash’s iconic style sparked her musical journey.

“He’s iconic: The Les Paul (guitar) and the top hat. I’d never seen anything before like that. I’d never seen live music before, so seeing that really opened up a whole new world for me,” said Bowers.

Despite her initial struggles with learning the guitar, her perseverance turned her small online following into widespread recognition, earning Bowers spots on grand stages like the Newport Folk Festival and a national New Year’s Eve broadcast on CBS. 

But Bowers said she still faces discrimination she says is due to her gender.

“I was sitting at my guitar and the sound guy comes up to me and tells me how to plug it in,” Bowers said. “I just don’t think it would have happened if I was a dude.  I know a lot of people in Nashville who have the same story as me, and it’s because people underestimate them for being a girl.”

The legacy of pioneering female guitarists like Joan Jett, Bonnie Raitt and Sister Rosetta Tharpe has paved the way for this new generation. Yet, as Daniel Levitin, a neuroscientist and musician who studies guitar trends, points out, “It was a sexist industry.”

“Musicians had to pass through the portholes of club owners who were both racist and sexist. The record companies treated women as a novelty,” said Levitin.

But that landscape is changing, as evidenced by a 2018 Fender study showing women account for 50% of beginner and aspirational guitar players. This shift isn’t about women wanting to emulate male guitar legends like Eric Clapton, but about establishing their identity in the music world, inspiring future generations to admire female musicians for their unique styles.

The narrative is further moved by young talents like Mollie Montgomery, a 16-year-old still mastering her craft after starting lessons two years ago. Her experience reflects a growing trend of young women and girls seeing themselves in the new generation of guitarists, such as Grammy winner Brittany Howard and H.E.R., who performed at the Super Bowl.

Claudia Terry, Montgomery’s instructor, mostly teaches female students now, which she says is a stark contrast to her own early experiences.

“Having that bond with my female students that I have, I wish that I had had that because there is a bit of a stigma against female guitar players and not believing that they want to be guitar players to really just be guitar players,” said Terry. 

Meanwhile, Bowers envisions a collaborative future in the music industry. 

“The type of band I want to put together is more like Sly and the Family Stone,” she said. “There are a lot of artists out there where it’s focused on one person. I want a band.”



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“CBS Weekend News” headlines for Sunday, Sept. 29, 2024

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“CBS Weekend News” headlines for Sunday, Sept. 29, 2024 – CBS News


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Here’s a look at the top stories making headlines on the “CBS Weekend News” with Nancy Chen.

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Mezcal producers preserve traditional methods as demand for liquor grows | 60 Minutes

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Mezcal producers preserve traditional methods as demand for liquor grows | 60 Minutes – CBS News


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Demand for mezcal was low for years, but interest and sales have soared. The vast majority of the spirit is made in Oaxaca, Mexico, where family-owned distilleries dot the landscape.

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Vladimir Kara-Murza says he got warning during Russian prisoner swap | 60 Minutes

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Vladimir Kara-Murza, a fierce critic of Vladimir Putin who was sentenced to 25 years in a Russian prison, was on his way to freedom after he was released during a prisoner swap when an FSB agent shared ominous parting advice. 

“‘Be careful about what you eat. You know how these things happen,'” Kara-Murza said he was told. 

Kara-Murza had already survived two poisonings — first in 2015 and then again in 2017. He was then arrested in 2022 and tried for treason last year after denouncing Putin’s war on Ukraine

Kara-Murza knew the risks that come with speaking out against Putin, but he did it anyway.

“There are causes larger than ourselves. And to me, the cause of a free, peaceful, civilized and democratic Russia is certainly much larger than I could ever be,” he said. 

Surviving poisonings

Kara-Murza had been high on Putin’s list since 2012, when he worked with the late Sen. John McCain on the so-called Magnitsky Act, a U.S. law named for a man murdered by prison guards. The Magnitsky Act allows for the seizure of the overseas assets of foreign officials who abuse human rights, and more than 60 people have been sanctioned. 

Vladimir Kara-Murza
Vladimir Kara-Murza

60 Minutes


Kara-Murza says Kremlin assassins poisoned him in 2015 because of his work on the Magnitsky Act.

He was in a coma for about a month and suffered from multiple organ failure. Doctors in Moscow told his wife he had about a 5% chance of survival. As Kara-Murza was recovering, he had to learn how to walk and eat again. 

“It’s amazing how fast the human body just loses everything, just loses all the strength and you just have to start anew,” he said. 

Two years later, in 2017, he was poisoned again. This time, he went to the U.S., where his wife and three children live, to recover. Kara-Murza is a U.S. permanent resident. 

But once he recovered, he returned to Russia.

“How could I not go back to Russia? I am a Russian politician. A politician has to be in their own country,” Kara-Murza said. “How could I call on my fellow citizens and my fellow Russians to stand up and oppose this dictatorship if I myself was too scared to do it? How is that possible?”

Kara-Murza continues speaking out as Putin cracks down 

Kara-Murza says all of Putin’s opponents are either in exile, in prison, or dead.

Shortly after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, lawmakers passed a law imposing a 15-year prison sentence for those who criticize the war.

“We tried to warn the world. We tried to shout,” Kara-Murza said. “We tried to get the message out that this regime is dangerous, that this man is dangerous.”

After his treason conviction last year, Kara-Murza was hit with the longest sentence ever for a political prisoner. The judge in the case had been among the first Russian officials sanctioned under the Magnitsky Act. 

Kara-Murza thought it was a “job well done” when he heard his sentence. 

“I think that 25-year sentence was, frankly, a recognition that what we did over all those years mattered, that the Magnitsky Act mattered, that public opposition to the war in Ukraine mattered,” he said. “Yes, it means it was a job well done.”

Life behind bars and being freed

Kara-Murza spent two-and-a-half years imprisoned. He was sent to Siberia, and put in solitary confinement. He says he was only able to call his wife once and only allowed to speak with his children twice. 

“And it was a 15-minute call, so five minutes per child,” he said. “And as my wife later told me, she was standing there with a stopwatch to make sure that each of our kids doesn’t get more than five minutes so that everybody could have an opportunity to speak with dad.”

He thought he would never get out, so he views what happened on Aug. 1 as a miracle. 

“A large group of officers burst into my cell. I have no idea what’s happening. It’s the middle of the night. It’s dark,” Kara-Murza said. “And they tell me I have 10 minutes to get up and get ready. And at this moment, I’m absolutely certain that I’m gonna be led out and be executed.”

Instead, he was one of eight Russian dissidents released, along with several Germans and three Americans, in exchange for eight Russian criminals and spies. It was the largest prisoner exchange since the Cold War. President Biden’s administration, along with officials in several other countries, had spent months negotiating the prisoner swap. 

After he stepped off a plane in Turkey, a diplomat from the American embassy came over and handed Kara-Murza a phone. President Biden was on the line, along with Kara-Murza’s family. They were calling from the Oval Office. 

“It felt surreal, it felt more emotional than I had ever felt at any point in my life,” Kara-Murza said.

Continuing to speak out against Putin 

60 Minutes correspondent Scott Pelley asked Kara-Murza if he thinks Putin will try to kill him.

“We know what it entails to be in opposition to Vladimir Putin,” Kara-Murza said. “He’s not just a dictator. He’s not just an authoritarian leader. He’s not just a strongman. He is a murderer. That man is a murderer.”

Kara-Murza, who remains in the U.S. with his family, shared his hopes that ordinary Russians standing up to Putin are remembered.

“I hope that when people in the West, that when people in the United States, when people in the free world at large think about Russia, they will remember not only the aggressors and the war criminals who are sitting in the Kremlin, but also those who are standing up to them,” he said. “Because we are Russians too.”



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