Post
by michael hann » Sun Nov 18, 2007 5:47 pm
Evening. I edit Guardian Film&Music, and the 1000 Albums supplements. I won't pretend to be a dubstep expert, but I do know about the Guardian.
You're right: we don't do enough about dubstep or other underground non-guitar music. The main reason for that is the shortage of writers who can actually write for the Guardian. I'm not saying they're not good enough, but many underground writers find it difficult to adapt to the stylistic demands of a general audience broadsheet paper, just as I'd find it difficult to write for Plan B, or a specialist title. They are different disciplines. Second, I admit I know very little about it, so I find commissioning on dubstep quite hard - tell me who it is worth my while listening to: should I try that Box of Dub comp as an intro?
The more serious point, for me, are the criticisms of the gender bias of our writing team. The supplements exaggerate the divide - most of those people are not regular writers. In F&M, of the pop regulars (you'd expect to see them every other issue, at least), we have Laura Barton, Maddy Costa, Leonie Cooper, Jude Rogers, Caroline Sullivan, Betty Clarke, Alexis Petridis, Dorian Lynskey, John Harris, Dave Simpson, Chris Salmon, Alex Macpherson - it's an even split. Sophie Heawood used to write for us but went to the Times. We don't have any black regular writers, though, which is a problem we're aware of - and we have tried to address, but without ever finding a satisfactory solution.
Anyway, I just wanted to let you know why some of the things you might be unhappy about happen.
Thanks for the constructive thread - interesting reading.