“I love words,” Kate Bush once said. “I think they’re fascinating and incredibly wonderful things and part of the joy of my work is that I not only get to work with music but also with words.” The best female songwriters seem to share this enthrallment: the cadence of words, the significance that bubbles just under their surface, the way they can be whispered or screamed. Words matter.
But songs are not stories (or, at least, not only stories). These words breathe to music’s heartbeat, whether that’s to a pithy, economical pop song or a lengthy mediation. Many of the best female songwriters work in collaboration with others; Valerie Simpson, for example, created music while husband Nickolas Ashford wrote lyrics. “You had to find something that would match that thought,” she said in 2020. When Ashford died, in 2011, Simpson was forced to rethink her process. “With the passing of Nick, it was a challenge to see if I had a singular identity that would stand,” she said, “if I could write a whole song, not half a song.” She found out that she could. She said, “It tickles me that I didn’t endeavour to do it before.”
Writing approaches vary considerably. “My only rule for writing is, it has to be fast,” Charli XCX has said. “I don’t like to spend a lot of time on anything. I think the faster a song is written, the better it will be. All the best songs are written in half an hour. You can’t dwell on things.” Other songwriters can find ideas laying dormant for decades. Thirty-five years passed between the release of Vashti Bunyan’s first and second albums. “There was a lot to come up with,” she said in 2010, of her inspirations later in life. “There were all of those years, and the children, and the life, the life that I had had in between.”
k.d. lang memorably described the relationship between writer and song as an “umbilical cord”. Whether the best female songwriters write for themselves or others, in all cases their lifeblood is in these tracks, reflecting on every aspect of our labyrinthine lives.
Best Female Songwriters: 20 Great Artists You Need To Know
20: Lesley Duncan (1943-2010)
Although she flew under the commercial radar, Lesley Duncan created five albums during the 70s, each one of such songwriting excellence that she inspired countless others, more than earning her place among the best female songwriters of all time. Her most celebrated composition, Love Song, was made famous by Elton John (and was also demoed by David Bowie). She collaborated with Kate Bush and Phil Lynott in 1979, on a re-recording of a Duncan song from 1971, Sing Children Sing. A reserved, unshowy person who didn’t enjoy public attention, Duncan sadly passed away in 2010; but she has never been forgotten by fans or her songwriting peers.
Must hear: Earth Mother (1972)