She Creates Noise

PODCAST · music

She Creates Noise

She Creates Noise, the podcast that shines a light on the groundbreaking work that women in the music industry do. Hosted by platinum-selling songwriter/producer and artist development strategist, Sarah Nagourney. 

  1. 22

    Mental Health in the Music Industry — When “Not Okay” Becomes Normal | Cathy Olson & Erica Ramon

    Send us Fan MailMay is Mental Health Awareness Month, and for this special episode of She Creates Noise, we bring together two powerful advocates for a conversation the music industry can’t afford to sideline. The same business that creates magic can also grind people down until “not okay” starts to feel normal. Here, we explore that tension through two distinct perspectives: Cathy Applefeld Olson, founder of Hollywood & Mind and longtime entertainment journalist, and Erica Ramon, a veteran executive and manager who has worked closely with artists under intense pressure. Erica has represented Fergie, The Pretty Reckless and Passion pit among others. Together, they discuss what happens when creativity and vulnerability coexist—and why mental health can no longer be treated as a side conversation, but as central to the future of the industry.   We dig into the patterns that show up on the road and behind the scenes: insomnia, imposter syndrome, addiction recovery, burnout, and the loneliness of touring. We challenge the myth that great art requires suffering, and we explore how artists can stay authentic without romanticizing instability as the price of genius. We also get specific about what structural change looks like in the music business, from smarter tour routing and building in recovery time to new resources like on-tour mental health support and industry-specific crisis help.   Then we widen the lens to music and wellness: how functional music and sound can help regulate the nervous system, support focus, and ground people through daily life. We talk data, research, and why listening behavior already proves that many of us use music as a mental health tool, whether we call it that or not. We also address women in music, including the ongoing gaps in support around pregnancy, motherhood, and career continuity. For more about Cathy Olson's work go to  https://www.hollywood-mind.com For more info on Erica Ramonwww.cacmg.comwww.chillpalm.com www.ericaramon.comSupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  2. 21

    "10 Global #1 Hits — Including Katy Perry's Biggest — songwriter Bonnie McKee".

    Send us Fan MailYou’ve sung these songs in your car, at weddings, and at the top of your lungs—now you can hear from the songwriter who wrote them.In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Grammy-nominated songwriter and pop artist Bonnie McKee, the songwriter behind many of Katy Perry’s biggest hits, as well as Taio Cruz, for a candid conversation about what pop success really looks like behind the scenes.Bonnie takes us from a teenage major-label deal and an early crash course in the business to being dropped, rebuilding through demo work, and eventually writing era-defining songs that reached number one around the world. She shares what it actually feels like when a song explodes, why she still writes lyrics by hand in notebooks, and the craft lessons she learned the hard way about simplicity, collaboration, and not getting too precious about what a pop song “should” be.We also go deeper than chart stories. Bonnie speaks openly about safety in studio spaces, the shift after Me Too, and why women still have to guard their boundaries in intimate writing rooms. She makes a powerful case for creator economics too: production credit, master points, and why every songwriter should learn engineering and production tools like Pro Tools, Logic, or Ableton to become more self-sufficient.The conversation closes with her expansion into filmmaking, the victory of re-recording shelved music to independently release Hot City, and a mindset shift earned through experience: don’t make success your higher power.If you want to know more about: writing 10 #1 major pop hits  working with Katy Perry  how hit songs are really made  songwriting craft and collaboration  women’s safety in studio rooms  producer credit and songwriter income the value of learning Pro Tools, Logic, and Ableton  reinventing your career independently A smart, funny, and revealing conversation with one of pop music’s most important modern hitmakers.https://www.instagram.com/bonniemckee/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  3. 20

    From Touring with Rob Thomas to Creative Reinvention — Toby Lightman

    Send us Fan MailWhat happens when success comes fast—and you have to figure out who you are in real time?In this episode of She Creates Noise, singer-songwriter Toby Lightman reflects on the early breakthrough that launched her career—from a record deal just one year out of college to touring with Rob Thomas—and the long, deliberate path to creative reinvention.One year out of college, Toby Lightman had a record deal, a breakout moment, and an impressive touring schedule with multiple TV appearance. That kind of fast success sounds glamorous, but it can also be disorienting, especially when you’re still learning who you are as a songwriter, vocalist, and performer. We talk through what it felt like to be launched so young and how Toby learned to turn that pressure into skill, confidence, and a sustainable creative life. From major-label releases and intimidating studio rooms to the slow, determined work of teaching herself music production, Toby shares the real mechanics of reinvention. We get into building a home studio, why she sticks with Pro Tools, and what changes when an artist can shape their own sound without waiting on anyone else. She also reflects on advice she once got from Prince that stayed with her for years: you can do more than you think, and you don’t have to outsource your power.  The conversation goes deeper into songwriting as a survival tool. Toby opens up about fertility struggles, miscarriage, and the loneliness that can come with those experiences, then connects that honesty to making empowering music about resilience and motherhood. We also dig into advocacy and leadership, including her work with the Recording Academy, SONA, and She Is The Music, plus practical realities like sync licensing, composing for kids programming, and diversifying income in today’s music business.  If you care about women in music, independent artists, music production, and building a sustainable creative career, this one is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review on your favorite so more listeners can find the show. Instagram Toby Lightman on spotifySupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  4. 19

    Writing “Genie in a Bottle” for Christina Aguilera — Pam Sheyne

    Send us Fan MailHow do you write a song the whole world ends up singing?  We’re joined by Pam Sheyne, the multi-platinum songwriter behind Christina Aguilera’s breakout hit “Genie in a Bottle,” to talk about what actually happens in the room when a career-defining track comes together, why you can feel you wrote “a good song” and still never predict a smash, and how preparation separates pros from wishful thinking.  We also zoom out to the modern music industry: writing as a chameleon for different artists, doing the homework on vocal range and style, and navigating the subtle politics of helping an artist feel true ownership. Pam shares what she’s seeing through her songwriting camps, including sync licensing sessions built around real briefs and the practical business details that matter, like one-stop clearance and keeping song ownership intact.  Then we get into songwriter rights and advocacy. Pam reflects on her work with SONA and the fight that led to the Music Modernization Act, what streaming royalties exposed, and why conversations about master rights, fair pay, and even healthcare aren’t optional if we want sustainable songwriting careers. We close with a return to artistry through her duo Eva and the healing power of singing, plus grounded advice for anyone trying to build a life in music.  Subscribe, share this with a songwriter friend, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations. https://www.instagram.com/pamsheyne/https://www.songwritercamps.com/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  5. 18

    Interviewing Madonna, Taylor Swift & Everyone In Between — Inside Music Media with Andrea Dresdale

    Send us Fan MailOn this episode I sit down with Andrea Dresdale—a two-time Gracie Award winner and longtime ABC radio host who has interviewed everyone from Elton John to Madonna, Taylor Swift to Adele and Teddy Swims among many others. A voting member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame  —Andrea and I chat about the real levers of access, trust, and influence in today’s music media. Andrea traces her path from a teenage radio obsessive to syndicated programming, where small stations gain national access. From there, we explore how the interview landscape shifted as podcasts, YouTube, and social platforms splintered attention. With more outlets chasing the same 20 minutes and listeners, she shows why relationship capital with publicists and managers beats clout chasing—and tells the story of how a smart early bet led to three Madonna interviews. We also revisit the VMAs and hear how a kept promise turned into a rare, respectful conversation with Taylor Swift right after the Kanye call. The red carpet gets its own spotlight: tactics for breaking through the noise and the value of a long boom mic, and how split-second prep differs from a studio sit-down. Then we zoom into newsroom reality at ABC: independent verification, high standards around celebrity news, and why being second but right still matters in a social-first cycle. Andrea opens up about navigating rock spaces as a woman, the quiet ways women's expertise gets questioned, and tangible signs of progress as voting bodies broaden and gatekeeping weakens. When the conversation turns to legacy, Andrea votes with influence over pure sales—naming artists whose impact echoes through other artists, like Amy Winehouse. We challenge old industry myths with a look at Bad Bunny’s rise: a Spanish-first catalog, minimal traditional media, massive global demand, and deals that flip the script on power. The takeaway is clear: authenticity travels fast, research earns trust, and relationships endure longer than trends. We close on a love letter to radio as a living discovery engine that still surprises, one local station at a time. If this conversation shifted how you see music journalism and artist access, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review so more curious listeners can find us. Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  6. 17

    It’s Never Too Late —Find your voice in the Music Industry - AC Scott & Kate Hyman

    Send us Fan MailWhat happens when you write your first song in your sixties — and someone hears it instantly?In this episode of She Creates Noise, artist AC Scott and legendary A&R executive Kate Hyman explore an extraordinary second act in the music industry — from late-blooming creativity to the power of instinct, mentorship, and emotional truth in songwriting.A voice that waited decades to be heard meets an A&R ear that knows in seconds. AC Scott began writing songs in her sixties, turning a life-altering diagnosis into creative fuel. What followed was a partnership grounded in trust, instinct, and a shared belief that emotion—not perfection—drives great music.From the intimate ache of “Sometimes” to the sweep of “Highlands” and the clarity of “Never Too Late,” AC’s songwriting blends hard-won honesty with melodies that land on first listen.Kate Hyman takes us inside her decision-making process: why authenticity must cut through, how an unvarnished take can outshine perfection, and what it means to say yes—or no—when 40 to 50 strong songs land at once.AC shares the transatlantic journey—crossing by ship to collaborate in person—and the moments of creative breakthrough that followed. The conversation opens up to the realities of today’s music industry: ageism, niche audiences, and how story and substance are finding their place again.We also talk about women mentoring women, the courage to share imperfect work, and the trust required to let something real take shape.If you’ve ever wondered whether it’s too late to start, this conversation offers a clear answer: keep living, keep writing, and let belief meet craft at the right time. If this story moved you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs a nudge, and leave a review so more listeners can find these conversations.Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  7. 16

    Changing Who Gets Heard — Ebonie Smith on Music, Tech, and Power in the Music Industry

    Send us Fan MailWho gets heard in the music industry—and who gets left out?In this episode of She Creates Noise, producer, engineer, and Gender Amplified founder Ebonie Smith shares how she’s building a more open, collaborative, and equitable future for music—from the studio to the systems behind it.Ebonie Smith discusses her production work and origin story. From Memphis, where hymns and call-and-response shaped her music, to New York and LA, where Grammy-nominated projects and Broadway musical recording filled her credits, Ebonie shows how leadership, faith, and enlightened approach to  engineering can create an open environment in the studio and elevate the artist’s voice. We spotlight her journey  and follow the choices that built her reputation: invite artists to the console, demystify the gear, and treat technology as a shared canvas and support system instead of an obstacle.  The story doesn’t stop at credits. While building records for Hamilton, Janelle Monáe, and Cardi B, Ebonie launched Gender Amplified, first as a college thesis, then as a movement. She uncovered a vibrant, often unseen network of women producers and DJs, then built platforms where their work could be found, hired, and celebrated. We dig into why charts show where power sits—not where value lives—and how storytelling, community, and access can shift who gets heard and who gets paid. The conversation widens into the AI surge and why fear isn’t a strategy: audio jobs will change, and those who learn new tools, refine taste, and lead collaboration will thrive.  From her Recording Academy leadership to her AES keynote, Ebonie pushes a provocative idea: artists should build the tech that moves their art. Distribution solved a problem and created a gap between creators and their money. Her playbook points to ownership—of masters, publishing, audience, and the rails themselves. We talk indie wins, sustainable revenue, and the courage to design your own ecosystem. Then we look ahead: more records, daily piano, new content, and Gender Amplified camps in New York and LA that bring gender-expansive producers into rooms built for their success.  Subscribe, share, and leave a review to help more creators find these stories—and tell us: what would you build to put artists back in control? https://www.instagram.com/eboniesmithmusicSupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  8. 15

    Caron Veazey on Managing Pharrell and Women’s Leadership in the Music Industry

    Send us Fan MailWhat does it take to help guide one of the most influential artists in the world—and turn that experience into lasting leadership in the music industry?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Caron Veazey to discuss her years managing Pharrell Williams, and how that chapter helped shape her perspective on women’s leadership, artist development, and real change across the music business.From an early break as a page at Saturday Night Live to senior roles at MCA, RCA, Island Def Jam, and Sony’s global marketing team, Caron built a rare career path rooted in instinct, strategy, and people-first thinking.She shares how refusing narrow categories opened doors for artists like Christina Aguilera, Rihanna, and Duffy—and why creating your own opportunities can still be the most powerful move.We also discuss the Pharrell years: building I Am Other as a multi-platform vision where music, fashion, film, and philanthropy fueled one another, and navigating the global success of “Get Lucky,” “Blurred Lines,” and “Happy.”If you want to know more about: managing major artists  Pharrell’s creative world  women’s leadership in the music industry  artist branding and career growth  building influence behind the scenes  marketing artists globally  creating opportunity in the music business  long-term career strategy A sharp and inspiring conversation with one of the industry’s most respected executives and advocates for progress. If the conversation resonates, tap follow, share it with a friend who needs a nudge, and leave a quick review—your support helps more listeners find stories that open doors. Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  9. 14

    Writing “Complicated” for Avril Lavigne — Lauren Christy on Hits, Reinvention, and the Music Industry

    Send us Fan MailHow do you rebuild a career after major setbacks—and come back helping shape the sound of a generation?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Lauren Christy, songwriter, producer, and co-creator of The Matrix, for a candid conversation about resilience, reinvention, and writing some of the defining pop hits of the 2000s.From early artist struggles and label disappointments to building The Matrix with Graham Edwards and Scott Spock, Lauren shares how instinct, craft, and persistence led to songs like “Complicated” and “Sk8er Boi” for Avril Lavigne—and a new era of pop-rock success.We also talk faith, family, women in production, and what it really takes to create a lasting life in music.If you want to know more about: writing hits like “Complicated” and “Sk8er Boi”  how producer teams really work  starting over after setbacks  women in music production  songwriting craft and melody building  balancing career success with family life  artist development in the 2000s music industry  how to build longevity in music Lauren’s story is a masterclass in trusting your instincts, adapting when the business shifts, and creating success on your own terms. If stories of resilience, real-world tactics, and transparent mentorship fuel you, press play and join us. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s building their music career, and leave a review so more creators can find these conversations.https://www.instagram.com/thelaurenchristy/[email protected] the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  10. 13

    Season 2 Preview — How Music Gets Made—and the Women Who Make It Happen

    Send us Fan MailWhat does it really take to make music—and who’s behind the moments we hear?After a debut season that landed in the top 80% of new podcasts and the top 98% of most shared shows, She Creates Noise returns with a bigger, bolder Season Two—continuing to explore how music gets made, and who makes it happen.If you care about songwriting craft, studio engineering, music production, artist development, and the real mechanics of the music industry, this season is built for you. We’ll keep the warmth and honesty you’ve come to expect while delivering more diverse voices, and conversations that move from inspiration to application.Thanks for listening, sharing, and being part of this growing community. Hit follow, send this teaser to a friend who loves music, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find these stories. Your support helps us keep amplifying the women who move the industry forward. Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  11. 12

    The Origins of Creativity — Valerie June (A Favorite of Bob Dylan)

    Send us Fan MailWhere does creativity come from—and how do you stay open enough to receive it?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Grammy-nominated artist, songwriter, and poet Valerie June shares how everyday life becomes a creative channel, and how she protects the space where songs first arrive. Valerie traces her roots to Tennessee and a childhood surrounded by music. We talk about her father’s involvement as a promoter of performers like Prince, Jojo and Jodeci. That early vantage point meets a deep well of influence—Appalachian folk, gospel, blues, dream soul, and how her music draws from artist’s as diverse as Curtis Mayfield, Tracy Chapman and Leonard Cohen. She shares how her ideas and melodies show up unannounced, how she protects the solitude of writing before inviting collaborators to add their contribution in the studio, and how her three-breath meditative reset keeps her centered. We listen to and talk about a song from her newest album, Owls, Omens and Oracles. The song “Endless Tree,” is a radiant experience that asks whether we can be free and still disagree, and we also unpack the quiet power of opening doors as a Black woman in Americana without having to explain it at every turn.  Style becomes another instrument in this conversation: Bowie-inspired silhouettes, thrift-store treasures, and street-stall finds that build a living mood board around her music. Valerie describes the slow climb from fly-on-the-wall sessions with Dan Auerbach to co-producing with conviction, and she opens up about poetry arriving after loss, spoken lines in her poetry that later find their way into her songs. Beyond the stage, she is a mentor and brings mindfulness into classrooms, helping students turn attention into art and courage into performance.  Listen to hear about her songwriting secrets, stay for the practices you can use today—portable meditation, patient craft, and the reminder that creativity thrives when we listen and engage. If this conversation moves you, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find these stories. https://www.instagram.com/thevaleriejune/?hl=enSupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  12. 11

    Nashville’s Insider — Anastasia Brown on Sync, Artist Development, and Leadership

    Send us Fan MailWhat makes Nashville such a powerful engine for artist development—and how has it evolved alongside film, television, and the changing music industry?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Nashville-based music supervisor, consultant, and author Anastasia Brown shares how she helped shape the city’s growing role in film and television, while building a career grounded in instinct, strategy, and resilience. From her early days as a manager, the Bluebird Cafe revelation that led to signing Keith Urban to his first record deal; Anastasia shows how conviction, curiosity, and grit can lift you to new career heights.  We unpack the real Nashville: a ten-year town for artist development  because of the density of talent and the apprenticeship needed for  songwriting. Anastasia explains how sync licensing became her pivot as mechanical royalties for record sales fell, why authentic archival recordings can save a budget without shortchanging writers, and what it takes to spot an artist before the market does. We talk frankly about songwriter pay, the realities of streaming royalties, and the practical ways supervisors and producers can protect value for the people who create the songs. If you’re searching for artist development, music supervision strategy, sync licensing, Nashville music scene, or songwriter rights, this conversation delivers an insider’s view.  The episode also moves into leadership and resilience. Anastasia shares how women in Nashville pushed through outdated norms, the mentors who opened doors, and her goal to build a self-sustaining scoring industry in Music City—highlighted by recording The Shack with a 74-piece orchestra at Ocean Way. Finally, she opens up about her own loss and purpose, launching “There Are No Words, But We Have A Few” to give grieving parents a community and a voice.  If this resonated, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves music and stories that matter, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find the show. Your support keeps these conversations—and the songwriters behind them—thriving.https://www.instagram.com/anastasiabrownnashville/?hl=enSupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  13. 10

    From Hotel Café to Independent Artist — Rachael Yamagata on Music Then and Now

    Send us Fan MailWhat happened to the singer-songwriter era—and what does it take to survive as an artist now?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Rachael Yamagata reflects on her early days in the Hotel Café scene and the long road to building an independent creative life today.  That’s the invitation at the heart of our conversation with Rachael Yamagata, whose new record, Starlit Alchemy, unfolds as a continuous journey—interludes, transitions, and songs that flow like a single film score. We trace the winding path to release: tours planned for 2019, recording plans derailed in 2020, the pivot to a home studio in the Catskills, and the choice to embrace an album-first vision when the industry rewards singles and snippets.  Rachael shares the stories behind the music, including “Birds,” a meditation on signs, loss, and the ways we make meaning during uncertain times. She opens up about the tradeoffs of full independence: self-management, learning marketing from scratch, funding a record out of touring, and crafting DIY visuals on her phone to reach new listeners. The numbers are real—tens of thousands to make an album, streaming payouts that don’t cover the costs, and the long grind of booking, rehearsals, and promotion. Yet the creative intent shines: immersive shows in listening rooms and resonant spaces with strings, soundscapes, and a set designed for deep focus.  We also revisit Rachael’s early 2000s roots—Hotel Cafe, global tours, and collaborations—and explore why placements in TV and film still give songs a second life. Then we get candid about the present: social media as both lifeline and time sink, gatekeeping that privileges surface over substance, and the uncertain role of AI in shaping the next wave of artistry. Rachel’s answer is to go deeper, not faster: make work that rewards attention, build community, and let the album format carry the weight of complex emotion.  Hit play to hear a veteran artist map the real economics of creating today, the philosophy behind an album that demands presence, and the optimism that keeps the music moving forward. If the conversation resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more listeners can find these stories. https://rachaelyamagata.com/https://www.instagram.com/rachaelyamagata/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  14. 9

    From Discovering INXS to Finding Global Hits — Kim Frankiewicz

    Send us Fan Mail How are global hits discovered—and who spots greatness before everyone else does?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Kim Frankiewicz, winner of the Seymour Stein Global A&R Award and EVP of Worldwide A&R at Concord Music Publishing, to discuss how talent is discovered, developed, and sustained in today’s borderless music industry.From early roots in Australia and formative years connected to INXS to signing writers across multiple continents, Kim shares why songs, character, and long-term vision matter more than hype.We talk global trends, K-pop, Afrobeats, AI, leadership, and what separates one-hit moments from lasting careers.If you want to know more about: how global hits are found  music publishing and songwriter careers  K-pop, Afrobeats, and worldwide trends  what A&R really looks for  building careers instead of one-hit moments  AI and the future of music  women leading in the industry  how introverts can lead successfully A rare insider conversation with one of the most respected global talent executives in music.If you care about artist development, music publishing, and the future of A&R in a global, AI-tinged landscape, this conversation will reset your compass. https://www.instagram.com/kimfrankiewicz/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  15. 8

    Playing Bass for Beyoncé — Divinity Roxx on Finding Her Voice and Building a Creative Life

    Send us Fan MailIn this engaging conversation, Divinity Roxx takes us through her remarkable journey from classical clarinet player to hip-hop artist, to Beyoncé's bassist and musical director, and ultimately, a creator of genre-defying music for all ages.  Divinity talks about her experience as musical director in Beyoncé's groundbreaking all-female band—a role that transformed perceptions of women in music across generations. "I meet people all the time who talk about how impactful it was," she shares, recounting stories of young women who became professional musicians after seeing women commanding stadium stages for the first time. This representation wasn't just vital for girls but also for boys who grew up with limited notions of what women could accomplish musically.  Her artistic evolution is a masterclass in following curiosity wherever it leads. Growing up in Atlanta's rich musical ecosystem, Divinity absorbed influences from local funk bands to Parliament Funkadelic, from Bad Brains to Bob Marley. This diverse musical diet created the foundation for her uniquely genre-fluid approach to composition. When the pandemic hit, an unexpected opportunity to create music for Scholastic led to her first Grammy nomination and a whole new creative chapter.  Beyond her own creative work, Divinity speaks passionately about advocating for women in music, especially instrumentalists who often face the harshest industry conditions. "You're the first to get cut, the least paid, nobody worries about you," she explains, highlighting why mentorship and visibility matter so profoundly. Yet her message ultimately transcends the music industry: "You can start over as many times as you want to. You can have as many lives and different lives as you want to."  Join us for this intimate conversation about breaking barriers, finding joy in unexpected places, and the power of staying endlessly curious about what might come next. Whether you're a musician, a parent, or simply someone navigating your own career pivots, Divinity's journey offers inspiration and practical wisdom for charting your own path.https://www.instagram.com/diviroxx/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  16. 7

    From David Bowie to Madonna — Publishing Pioneer Annette Barrett

    Send us Fan Mail What if some of the biggest moments in music history were shaped by someone most listeners have never heard of?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Annette Barrett, whose 40-year career in music publishing reveals the invisible architecture behind some of the industry’s most important creative successes. From an early opportunity at Carlin Music to global leadership roles, Annette’s story is rooted in instinct, intelligence, and a lifelong belief that everything begins with a great song.From working with legends like David Bowie, Madonna, Prince, and Elton John, to becoming the first woman appointed to the board of Warner Chappell Music, Annette shares the philosophy that guided her through decades of change: it all starts with a song.She also reflects on her lifelong friendship with David Bowie, which began during art studies at the Sorbonne University in Paris, where Bowie was also a student. That connection offers rare insight into one of music’s greatest innovators and the creative fearlessness that changes culture.Annette explains how her grounding in copyright law, combined with an artist’s sensibility, became the “magical combo” that shaped her success—helping writers protect their work while building meaningful careers.Long before globalization became standard practice, she was connecting songwriters across borders and cultures. She shares the story of introducing Danish producer Cutfather to Nashville writers—an unlikely pairing that later led to a number one hit with P!nk and Keith Urban.As co-founder and president of the Independent Music Publishers Forum, Annette continues championing independent voices, songwriter rights, and the next generation of creators.A rich conversation about songs, strategy, originality, and the unseen people who help shape music history.What You’ll Learn in This Episode:How music publishing quietly shapes major artists, hit songs, and long-term careersWhat Annette Barrett learned from working with icons like David Bowie, Madonna, Prince, and Elton JohnWhy combining creative instinct with business and copyright knowledge can become a career superpowerHow global songwriting collaborations can lead to unexpected hit recordsWhy mentorship, advocacy, and protecting songwriter rights still matter todayhttps://www.instagram.com/annettebarrett4022/https://www.reservoir-media.com/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  17. 6

    How Syreeta Thompson Became New York’s Trumpet Lady

    Send us Fan MailWhat does it take to be heard—and lead boldly—in a world that hasn’t always made space for women instrumentalists?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Grammy Award-winning trumpeter Syreeta Thompson, known as “New York’s Trumpet Lady,” to talk about the determination, discipline, and confidence that built her remarkable career.From her Chicago roots to stages across New York and beyond, Syreeta shares how a childhood surrounded by jazz, soul, and church music shaped her path. Though she began on clarinet, she quickly found her true voice through the trumpet. “It was the loudest instrument in the band,” she says with a laugh. “I wanted to be heard.” Syreeta’s story begins with her name itself – named after Syreeta Wright, Stevie Wonder's wife – setting the stage for a life immersed in music. This conversation brilliantly illuminates the dedication behind musical mastery. Under the mentorship of Bill Fielder (who also taught Wynton Marsalis), Syreeta spent two years focusing solely on proper breathing techniques before playing a single note on her trumpet. This foundation-building approach, combined with her experiences playing in Pentecostal churches, created her signature sound – a distinctive fusion of jazz sophistication, classical technique, and gospel soul that has topped both jazz and gospel charts simultaneously.  Beyond her musical achievements, Syreeta’s advocacy for women in music stands tall. Her custom trumpet, encrusted with over 10,000 Swarovski crystals, isn't just an instrument but a statement piece reflecting her bold artistic vision. Her upcoming documentary "Blow Yo Horn: Making Music in a Man's World" aims to amplify female instrumentalists who haven't received proper recognition. As an educator partnered with Berklee and Juilliard, she instills her "winner mindset" in the next generation: "If you don't see yourself as a winner, who else will?"  Discover Syreeta’s projects, including her new single "With You I'm Born Again" featuring Tony Lindsey from Santana, plus performances at Lincoln Center and in Los Angeles. Subscribe now to hear more stories of women reshaping the music industry landscape through creativity, persistence, and unapologetic authenticity. https://www.instagram.com/trumpetladyt/?hl=enhttps://ladytrumpet.org/support-our-partners-with-a-donationhttps://open.spotify.com/album/04S6nb2XhHJUyCg8O9XH2R?si=ADVQO8KWTxO3VRcs4y4_GQSupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  18. 5

    From George Michael to Artist Advocacy — Sharon Tapper on the Music Industry

    Send us Fan MailSharon Tapper's journey provides a masterclass in resilience, advocacy, and community-building that every music professional should hear.  When Sharon told her parents she was postponing medical school to explore the music business, they never imagined this "gap year" would transform into a decades-long career spanning artist management, publishing, and advocacy. From working at London's legendary SARM Studios with Trevor Horn and George Michael to managing icons like The Cranberries and Meatloaf after a chance green card lottery win brought her to America, Sharon's path reveals how passion and persistence create opportunities in unexpected places.  "You have to do the work," Sharon emphasizes throughout our conversation, dispelling myths about overnight success. Having witnessed firsthand what separates artists who achieve longevity from those who fade away, she offers no-nonsense advice for creators at every career stage. Her most urgent counsel? Build direct relationships with fans through email lists rather than surrendering your audience to social media platforms: "We spent the last 20 years driving our artists to social media, turning those companies into billion-dollar entities at the expense of the artists."  As a leader at the Music Managers Forum US, Sharon champions creators' rights through initiatives like the American Music Fairness Act and the RAP Act while building vital community connections through regional chapters nationwide. These efforts continue the community-building work she pioneered with NYC3, which grew from six professionals around a table to nearly 500 members creating meaningful industry connections.  Perhaps most powerful is Sharon's personal testament to resilience. After surviving a brain hemorrhage in 2007 that forced her to relearn basic skills, she re imagined her approach to work and life: "Health is fragile and you can't take it for granted." This perspective infuses her closing thoughts on embracing failure in an industry often obsessed with perfection: "That's how we learn."  Join us for an inspiring conversation about building careers that last, advocating for change, and creating communities that nurture the next generation of music industry leaders. Subscribe now to hear more stories from the women shaping today's music landscape.  https://www.mmfus.com/https://www.instagram.com/sharonatapper/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  19. 4

    Discovering Lady Gaga — How Artists Break Through and so much more | BMI’s Samantha Cox

    Send us Fan MailSarah sits down with Samantha Cox, Vice President of Creative at BMI New York, to explore the vital role BMI plays in supporting songwriters and artists as well as her take on how women are reshaping the music industry.Sam's journey from small-town Texas to becoming an influential figure  in the industry serves as both inspiration and masterclass. With remarkable candor, she shares the moment she discovered a teenage Stephanie Germanotta—soon to become Lady Gaga—and instantly recognized the creative force that would soon captivate the world. "I fell in love instantly," Sam recalls, describing how she watched Gaga transform from an unknown performer on BMI's Lollapalooza stage to returning years later as a global superstar.  Beyond the star-spotting stories, Sam delivers invaluable wisdom for songwriters navigating their careers. Her insights on collaboration, protecting creative work, and leveraging performance rights organizations reveal pathways through the industry that many creators never discover until it's too late. "If someone says you don't need a lawyer, don't work with that person," she warns, providing the kind of straightforward advice that can save careers.  What makes this conversation truly special is the window it provides into BMI's multifaceted support system for artists. From creating networking opportunities through their innovative "Speed Dating for Songwriters" program to serving as advisors, connectors, and advocates, Sam illuminates how performance rights organizations function as much more than just royalty collectors.  Whether you're a songwriter looking to understand your rights, an industry professional seeking deeper insights, or simply curious about how the music business really works, this episode delivers rare, honest perspective from someone who's helped shape countless careers. Listen now and discover why Sam Cox is the music industry powerhouse everyone wants in their corner.https://www.instagram.com/scoxadoodledoo/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  20. 3

    Discovering Jeff Buckley and The Cranberries- Inside the Career of A&R Executive — Kate Hyman

    Send us Fan MailWhat does it take to discover Jeff Buckley when your boss says "he has no charisma"? How do you stand up to Tommy Mottola when he tries to intimidate you with an East River "walk and talk"? And what happens when Madonna becomes your roommate and starts throwing out all your "unhealthy" food? Kate Hyman knows. As one of the first female A&R executives at major labels, Kate has shaped music history through her work with the Flaming Lips, Moby, the Cranberries, Aimee Mann, and countless others. In this riveting conversation, she pulls back the curtain on the music industry's male power structure and how she navigated it with unflinching honesty.<Kate's journey from archaeology student to A&R powerhouse wasn't planned. Growing up partly in England with a father who ran a major film studio, she found emotional salvation in music—especially darker, lyrical artists like Leonard Cohen and Neil Young. After being fired as a receptionist who couldn't type, she was surprisingly rehired for A&R when executives noticed she was always listening to exciting new music no one else had discovered.Her talent-spotting approach is refreshingly pure in today's data-driven world: "I would put something on, and either the hair on my arms would stand up and I'd get this incredible feeling in my stomach and heart—and that was that." This instinct-first methodology led her to champion artists others dismissed, including turning down major label opportunities when executives couldn't see an artist's potential.Through her Big Ears Music Consultancy, Kate now helps artists navigate the industry independently, providing the kind of hands-on development that's vanished from major labels. "There's no A&R left at labels—just researchers," she observes. "These young artists really want help with their songs, with making them better, with finding the right producer."Listen in for candid stories about living with Madonna ("the worst roommate"), knocking on Marianne Faithfull's door to land a job, and why the music industry's gender dynamics remain challenging despite progress. Kate's unforgettable insights will change how you hear music and understand the creative forces that bring it to life.https://www.bigearsmusicconsultancy.comhttps://www.instagram.com/kate.hyman1 Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  21. 2

    Changing What the Music Industry Looks Like — Artist & Advocate Lachi

    Send us Fan MailWhat does it mean to truly change what the music industry looks like—and who gets to be seen and heard within it?In this episode of She Creates Noise, artist, author, and disability advocate Lachi shares how she’s reshaping the conversation around visibility, access, and inclusion in the music industry—on her own terms.Lachi a chart-topping Grammy nominated recording artist and fierce advocate who's revolutionizing how the music industry approaches disability inclusion.Born legally blind, she spent years concealing her disability until a pivotal missed opportunity with an A&R executive changed everything. Embracing her blind identity – bejeweled cane and all – she discovered authenticity wasn't just liberating; it was magnetic.This revelation led her to found RAMPD (Recording Artists and Music Professionals with Disability), an organization transforming how the industry approaches disability. Her advocacy reaches the highest levels – from creating a Disability and Inclusion Task Force at the Recording Academy to launching Glam Canes, and becoming such a regular guest at the Biden White House that she “knew how to roam the halls.”Lachi reframes disability not as limitation but as strength: "Disability is humanity." Whether you're a music industry professional or someone seeking inspiration, her story proves that when you refuse to compromise who you are, you create spaces where everyone can thrive.www.lachimusic.comwww.rampd.oegwww.glamcanes.comwww.instagram com/lachimusichttps://open.spotify.com/artist/07D2qGlJUOVf83OM5ujJZD?si=aw9dVhQMTKqr5laeyJuE2ASupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  22. 1

    What Happened to Artist Development? — Lee Dannay, Recording Academy NY Chapter President

    Send us Fan MailWhat happened to artist development—and can careers still be built the right way in today’s music industry?In this episode of She Creates Noise, veteran A&R executive Lee Dannay—Recording Academy New York Chapter President—shares lessons from more than three decades helping artists grow from potential to lasting careers.With over 30 years at Sony Music, Warner Chappell, and now 30 Tigers, Lee has helped guide the careers of artists including John Mayer, Brandi Carlile, and Train.She explains why great A&R begins with trust, why so many artists feel abandoned when champions leave labels, and why long-term career building still matters more than quick moments.We also discuss the changing business model—from traditional labels to artist ownership—and what 30 Tigers is doing differently.If you want to know more about: artist development in today’s music industry  how A&R really works  songwriting camps and collaboration culture  music publishing and ownership  women in music leadership  mentoring the next generation of artists  what the Recording Academy actually does This conversation offers a rare insider perspective from someone who has helped shape careers for decades. https://www.instagram.com/sunshine_daydreamer18https://www.instagram.com/thirtytigers/Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  23. 0

    How New York Shapes Music and Culture — The Women Driving It | Shira Gans

    Send us Fan MailHow does a city help shape music, culture, and opportunity behind the scenes?In this episode of She Creates Noise, Sarah sits down with Shira Gans, Senior Executive Director for Policy and Programs at the NYC Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment, to discuss how innovative public policy can create real change across music, nightlife, film, and entertainment.She shares the story behind NY Music Month, NYC’s $12 million music industry social impact strategy, and a $10 million grant initiative supporting women-led entertainment projects.If you want to know more about: how cities support music scenes  NY Music Month  women-led entertainment funding  nightlife policy  music industry jobs and equity  government supporting culture  building opportunities in NYC  social impact through entertainmentReady to experience New York Music Month? Visit nyc.gov/musicmonth for the full lineup of June events happening across the city. https://www.nyc.gov/site/mome/industries/ny-music-month.page   Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  24. -1

    How Hits Get Chosen — Michelle Fantus on Spotify, Publishing, and the Music Industry

    Send us Fan MailHow do songs actually get chosen—and who’s making those decisions in today’s music industry?In this episode of She Creates Noise, A&R executive Michelle Fantus shares insights from over 20 years across publishing, distribution, and streaming, offering a rare look at how music is discovered, developed, and brought to audiences today.From her beginnings as a receptionist at Sony ATV Music Publishing to her current role as co-head of A&R at Killphonic Rights, Michelle's journey reveals the power of relationship-building and strategic innovation. When she found herself at Spotify during a pivotal moment, she seized the opportunity to create the groundbreaking Equal program and Created by Women playlist, initiatives designed Throughout our conversation, Michelle illuminates the confounding world of music publishing—a system she describes as increasingly complex despite her decades of expertise. She shares how early in her career, she created monthly showcases at legendary New York venues, booking then-unknown artists like Lana Del Rey, Ex-Ambassadors, American Authors, and Dan & Shay, fostering relationships that continue to benefit her professional journey today.For aspiring industry professionals, Michelle offers practical wisdom: network relentlessly, collaborate widely, and don't wait for permission to create opportunities. Her perspective on AI's inevitable transformation of the music landscape challenges the industry to adapt rather than resist, drawing parallels to the streaming revolution that fundamentally altered the business modelJoin us for this enlightening conversation that pulls back the curtain on the music industry's female changemakers and offers a roadmap for anyone looking to navigate its complex terrain. Whether you're a creator seeking to understand publishing or an industry professional working to advance gender equity, Michelle's insights provide valuable guidance for making noise that matters.Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/michellefantus/?hl=enhttps://www.instagram.com/killphonicrights/?hl=enSupport the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

  25. -2

    The Women Powering the Music Industry — She Creates Noise Trailer

    Send us Fan MailWho really powers the music industry?She Creates Noise spotlights the women shaping music on stage and behind the scenes—artists, producers, executives, managers, and changemakers whose stories deserve center stage.Hosted by a platinum-selling songwriter, producer, manager, and mentor, the show goes beyond surface success to reveal how careers are built, songs are made, and culture moves. The mission of the show is to celebrate the visionary women who connect the dots others can’t see—producers, label execs, artists, and managers alike. These conversations are raw, real, and reveal the “secret sauce” behind some of the most influential careers in music.Whether you’re a young creative looking for inspiration or a seasoned pro curious about the stories that often go untold, this podcast offers valuable insights into the power of women in music.Support the show If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, rate and share. Many thanks to Anne Tello for her vocals on the theme song and to our sponsor 'Heard City'. Check out https://www.shecreatesnoisepodcast.com for more episodes featuring women who power the music industry.https://www.shecreatesnoise.com/https://www.sarahnagourney.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/shecreatesnoise/https://www.instagram.com/glassbeatmusic/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SheCreatesNoiseEmail: [email protected] 

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

She Creates Noise, the podcast that shines a light on the groundbreaking work that women in the music industry do. Hosted by platinum-selling songwriter/producer and artist development strategist, Sarah Nagourney.

HOSTED BY

Sarah Nagourney

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