Sam happens to be gorgeous, and Virgin actually DID try to market here as a pop-tart; she even took a role as a sexy terrorist in Die Hard 3. None of it helped sell what remain some of my favorite albums in my collection. But I didn't buy them becuase she was "hot" so I'm not sure why anyone else would... Stewart Mason wrote: ----- Original Message ----- From: > This just proves that, still, women are not always taken seriously > as > musicians. Looks are still such an important factor, and it's really > unfortunate. I wonder how many people heard "A Girl Called Eddy"'s > album > last year. Or Sam Philips'. These women don't market their looks. > THey > don't need to, they're both incredibly talented. The catch 22- > perhaps > because they chose not to market themselves as "hot babes" they're > not as > commercially succesful as they should be. As the person who inadvertantly started this thread with a passing aside of a joke -- along with liking her music, I happen to think Kay Hanley is cute, and that she's getting cuter as she becomes less of a standard-issue alt-rock-chick...so? -- I apologize for how it turned into this kind of "lookist" debate. However, as much as I like both A GIRL CALLED EDDY and A BOOT AND A SHOE, I don't think their lack of mainstream commercial success has as much to do with the fact that they "don't market their looks" so much as the simple fact that they're terrific albums in musical styles that don't fit in with the prevailing commercial climate. Regardless of their msuical quality -- which I agree is very high -- they're just never going to trouble the upper reaches of the charts, even if Erin and Sam both posed in chemises and g-strings on the cover of next month's issue of Maxim. And that sucks, but it's not the fault of how they chose to market themselves. S ======================================================================= Detailed Audities-List information: To manage your Audities List settings or unsubscribe: --------------------------------- It's here! Your new message! Get new email alerts with the free Yahoo! Toolbar.