Why is Coachella headliner Doja Cat L.A.’s only female rap megastar?

Why is Coachella headliner Doja Cat L.A.’s only female rap megastar?
Illustration of Doja Cat by Rachelle Baker
(Illustration by Rachelle Baker For The Times)

Why is Coachella headliner Doja Cat L.A.’s only female rap megastar?

Liz Sanchez April 11, 2024

In the late hours of Sunday evening, Doja Cat will close out

the first weekend of the

23rd

annual

Coachella Valley Music and Arts F estival in front of 100,000 rapturous fans

,

and millions more streaming at home. On the sprawling grounds of

the a

former desert polo field, the multi

platinum Grammy Award winner will achieve another career landmark: shell become the first female rapper to headline the event, a distinction that puts a capstone on her rise to become the most prominent woman rapper ever raised in Los Angeles.

But this moment

raises brings up

a pressing question:

W

hy did the first female Coachella headliner from L.A. need to skirt around

the

traditional hip-hop

routeboxes

to become a superstar? After all, while Doja Cats idiosyncratic art-pop fusion of rap and R&B defies easy categorization, her roots can be traced back to L.A.s storied underground hip-hop scene in Leimert Park

like Kaos Networks Bananas where she freestyled and performed her early music. As a teen, she breakdanced and pop-locked in cyphers under the moniker Lady Get Down for the West Coast Pop Lockers. She also collaborated with local rappers Busdriver, Ill Camille and VerBS, who helped sharpen her musical talents. As a child, she was exposed to psychedelic jazz while living at Alice Coltrane’s Coltraines Agoura Hills Sai Anantam Ashram in Agoura Hills .Itsa question that Her path to success

underscores a deeper

mysteryparadox

at the heart of the citys hip-hop culture:

W

hy has Los Angeles failed to produce a major rap-first female superstar along the lines of Nicki Minaj and Cardi B from New York City, Saweetie from the Bay Area, Latto from Atlanta, GloRilla from Memphis or St. Louis Sexxy Red

. ?

There’s no one single answer, but many theories are partially correct. The lack of women rappers crossing over into the mainstream involves a combination of

systemicsystematic

issues endemic to L.A.s hip-hop climate: the legacy of gangsta rap and its extreme violence and misogyny that created a landscape inhospitable to women; the absence of super-producers who have championed female rappers and helped sustain their success; the inherent expectations and difficulties of being a female rapper in a male-dominated industry;

,

and the failure of the artists themselves to capitalize on their initial momentum.

There was a lot of times where a lot of people was wondering, where are the female artists on the

W

est

C

oast? asked South-Central rapper and Eazy-E protege Sylk-E. Fyne on the “I Only Touch Greatness” podcast last year.

To understand how it happened requires taking it back to the beginning. In the 80s, before gangsta rap dominated the West Coast, there was electro-funk a subgenre inspired by electronic and funk hybridists like Kraftwerk, Prince

,

and Afrika Bambaataa. At the time, Uncle Jamms Army and its breakout star,

t

he Egyptian Lover, supplied sex and freak-obsessed anthems to a generation of popping and locking teenagers. This was the hedonistic party-centric environment that incubated

the

L.A.s first major female rappers, J.J. Fad.

Around 1986, in the suburban Inland Empire, a teenage

d

Juana Sperling hosted auditions at her mothers house to find the members of her future girl group. She remembered feeling inspired by East Coast hip-hop and the carnal anthems spun at Uncle Jamms Army parties.

About an hour west in Compton, Eazy-E simultaneously formed N.W.A

.

with Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, DJ Yella, Arabian Prince, and later, MC Ren. The blistering menace of their production, their shockingly aggressive and raunchy subject matter, and their cinematic narratives of L.A. street life ultimately created the blueprint for mainstream West Coast hip-hop.

But before they became recognized as the pioneers of gangsta rap, the members of N.W.A

.

trafficked in the electro-rap tradition too. For all of the brandished sawed-off rifles and attacks on the police, the last track on 1988s Straight Outta Compton was called Something 2 Dance 2. In this same year, Eazy-Es Ruthless Records released the debut album from J.J. Fad, seeing the perfect way to fund N.W.A

.

through Fads pop-friendly and commercially viable package.

After the trio of MC J.B. (Juana Sperling ne Burns), Baby D (Dana Dirks) and Sassy C (Michelle Franklin) aligned themselves to the nascent gangsta rap juggernaut, the labels in-house producers Dr. Dre, DJ Yella

,

and DJ Arabian Prince remixed their already hugely popular single Supersonic, adding heavy bass and electro-pop flourishes. But when they signed to Ruthless, Sperling says it was perhaps too fast for naive teens, We didn’t have our own lawyers. We had Ruthless’ lawyers to go over the contracts and stuff with us. Baby D was a minor, and she didn’t have a parental signature. The group didnt feel bamboozled or anything like that, but in retrospect, whether the contract was fair or not, I can’t really say, cause we didn’t have any idea, says Sperling.

Supersonic went gold in 1988. Only three months after its release, J.J Fad

members

were among the first class of hip-hop artists to be nominated for a Grammy. But in the wake of Supersonic and Straight Outta Comptons triumphs, West Coast hip-hop split in two. When it came time for J.J. Fads sophomore album, Dr. Dre claimed that he was too busy with other projects to handle production. By then, their feel-good up-tempo electronic rap was out of vogue. The misogynistic themes of L.A. gangsta rap could be aptly summarized by the title of a song on The Chronic, Dr. Dres triple-platinum solo debut: Bitches Aint S

hit

.

Commentary: For Black women, the world of hip-hop has always been a minefield of misogyny

It caused a lot of problems in our community, hip-hop archivist and educator Martha MD Daz says, when asked about the long-term effects of the anti-women messages embedded in West Coast gangsta rap. Its great music, but the artists didn’t care how it programmed our young people, [or] how it affected how we see Black and

b

rown women, [or] how we treat each other. It really dehumanized us.

As the members of N.W.A

.

and Dr. Dres protg, Snoop Dogg, became household names, their music increasingly came under attack. Feminist scholars and music critics frequently criticized their lyrical disdain for women. In real life, Dr. Dre

camehad come

under fire

in January of 1991

for physically assaulting Dee Barnes, the host of the popular video show

,

Pump

I

t Up. Dre

pleadedpled

no contest and was placed on two years probation, as well as

havingbeing forced

to do community service and pay a small fine. He later apologized for his actions.

Twenty-five years ago I was a young man drinking too much and in over my head with no real structure in my life. However, none of this is an excuse for what I did, Dre said in a 2015

statement released to the New York Times.

The mogul ended his comments statement with an apology

to the women hes hurt,

without naming anyone specifically. I deeply regret what I did and know that it has forever impacted all of our lives, he said. But at the time of the assaults,

Dre’s actions set a precedent for the type of conduct that would be tolerated in such a regressive environment. This was clearly a boy

s

s

club, where the only women allowed

werewhere

those willing to explicitly or implicitly condone behavior hostile toward

s

their own gender.

You can Google the history of Dres abuse towards women. You can read the accusations from [Dres former collaborator and childs mother] Michelle, says DJ Carisma, the sole female DJ on L.A.s urban radio staple, Power 106 (105.9-FM). That era was brutal.

According to Michelle, Dr. Dre inflicted a broken nose, cracked rib

,

and five black eyes

,

during the course of their lengthy relationship,

which began in the late 80s, when she was 16 and he was 22. In a 2015 interview on the Breakfast Club radio program, the singer also accused Dre of once shooting at her with a gun. He missed her by inches, she said.

[Dre’s] definitely responsible, Carisma says, when asked about the glaring absence of women produced and co-signed by Dre during his four-decade run at the top of West Coast hip-hop. When you also look at what’s going on with Diddy [Sean Combs], you see a pattern. These big dogs have no respect for women.

Whether male or female, one of the most common routes to rap stardom involves developing a close working relationship and co-sign from a super-producer or an already entrenched MC. But for women rappers, it has been a particularly essential part of their path to success. Think of Timbaland introducing Missy Elliott to the world or Lil Wayne ushering Nicki Minaj into popular consciousness. The Notorious B.I.G. brought Lil Kim into the industry through his crew, Junior M.A.F.I.A.

, w

hile Da Brat worked closely with Jermaine Dupri. Even one of the first breakout female rappers, Roxanne Shant, came up under the aegis of Marley Marl and the Juice Crew.

Even though technology was widely available, women usually weren’t producing their own music until much later on, Daz says. That’s really important because the men were the ones that controlled who got put on. And in Los Angeles that was even more significant because until the early years of the last decade, Dr. Dre acted as an almost omnipotent gatekeeper controlling the levers of L.A. commercial hip-hop.

Nor can you deny the impact of the street politics that define L.A. rap music either.

We’re not a collaborative coast, says

the

Compton songwriter, producer and singer

,

Brittany Bee-B Barber, who won a Grammy last year for her writing contributions on Robert Glaspers Black Radio III.” It’s very territorial. But its only for women though. I’ve noticed that men eventually collaborate. Or they join rap groups or create teams. I think women get left out of that.

To Dres credit, he did work with a few female rappers at Death Row and Aftermath. The most commercially viable was

the

Virginia transplant

, t

he Lady of Rage, who was molded in the gangsta rap archetype. She rocked rough and tough with her afro puffs (the title of her ubiquitous first single

in 1994

) and once famously punched a horse in the face defending Death Row in a fight.

Women rappers from L.A. have historically been formulated in the image of the men you know, the whole

Dickey Dickie

, plaid shirts, gangsta rap era, says Charis Henry, a longtime music industry executive

,

who worked closely with Eazy-E at Ruthless Records.

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Despite a hit single and iconic appearances on The Chronic and Doggystyle, the Lady of Rage was never prioritized at Death Row. After waiting years in label purgatory

,

her debut, Necessary Roughness, didnt receive a release until 1997. By then, 2Pac was dead, Dre and Snoop Dogg had left the label, and Death Row boss Suge Knight was incarcerated. It failed to produce any hits and the album peaked at #32 on the Billboard charts.

The Lady of Rage wasnt the only great L.A. female rap hope during the 90s. At the turn of the decade, 18-year-old, spaghetti-braided

,

Yolanda Yo-Yo Whitaker made a showstopping debut on Its a Mans World, a standout track from Ice Cubes classic, AmeriKKKas Most Wanted.

With mentorship from the N.W.A

.

star, Yo-Yo delivered a trio of albums that received critical acclaim

,

but failed to make a dent on the Billboard 200. Despite her fearless and empowering feminist raps or perhaps because of them the Compton native

never garneredfailed to earn

as much local radio play as her male peers. But in 1993, Yo-Yo seemed to be on the cusp of shattering the glass ceiling. Her women can do it as well as the men duet with Ice Cube,

The

Bonnie & Clyde Theme, became a fixture on Power 106 and The Beat (92.3-FM). It topped the Billboard Hot Rap Singles chart and she even nabbed a recurring role on the smash Fox show

, “

Martin.

But after it took three years for her label to release her follow-up, 1996s Total Control,

.

Yo-Yo

decided to

walk

ed

away from pursuing a full-time rap career. She too had issues with the overtly masculine culture that predominated West Coast rap,

They couldn’t accept me for just being a woman. When I got pregnant, I just was like, ‘Oh, I can’t tell anybody’ I was letting them down, that they let a girl in, Yo-Yo said in a 2022 interview with PBS. Now the money they’ve put into me, they got to put it on hold, because it just seemed like a woman wasn’t supposed to be here.

In her

inference commentary

, Yo-Yo alludes to another reason why female rappers supposedly dont receive as many record deals: the costs inherent in breaking a female artist.

They’re a lot more costly. I have heard that directly from labels, says

Power 106’s

Carisma. All major female artists are expected to look a certain way, think Beyonc with her high-glam and Megan Thee Stallion with her dance crew, hair, makeup, the whole nine yards.

These issues didnt only impact female rappers with major-label deals, they affected underground female artists who never received the same level of interest as their male counterparts.

The 90s was a very heterosexual and very masculine climate, says Medusa the Gangsta Goddess, a longtime creative force in the Leimert Park underground hip-hop world.

L.A. male rappers might think other female rappers are dope, but they would rather put on someone that is going to rap about where they’re coming from, something that they can tolerate and get behind.

Medusa cut her teeth performing at the local hip-hop

hubsmeccas, t

he Good Life and Project Blowed, where artists were rewarded for thought-provoking lyricism, discouraged from using profanity, and eschewed violent themes despite coming from the same socio

economic conditions as gangsta rappers. This countercultural movement ran concurrently but apart from the more commercially viable sex, drugs

,

and violence-dominated rap world. It was an environment more conducive to and reflective of a traditionally feminine energy, but one that major-label king and queen makers usually avoided.

[Dre] has bowed down and touched my feet, so has DJ Quik, Medusa adds. I’m like, you all know I’m here I think the ego of a man gets in the way of allowing the woman to be exactly who she is.

When weighing L.A. hip-hops history, its difficult to overlook how few female rappers have received a chance from the major producers

whothat

have dominated the citys culture. In the nearly 30 years since Dre left Death Row to found his powerhouse Aftermath Entertainment imprint, hes been heavily responsible for turning Eminem, 50 Cent,

t

he Game, Anderson .Paak

,

and Kendrick Lamar into household names. Yet the only prominent female rapper to work with Dre was Philadelphias Eve, who briefly signed to Aftermath in the late 90s and only appeared on a single song

,

on the 1998 Bulworth soundtrack (under the name Eve of Destruction). Shortly after leaving Dres company, Eve signed with Ruff Ryders and became one of the most commercially successful female rappers of all time.

In the late 00s, it seemed like a glory era of L.A. female rappers was about to emerge. With social media and the internet allowing artists to avoid the oligarchs that controlled local hip-hop, the jerkin movement took root among the regions teenagers. Baggy khakis became skinny jeans, marine blue and blood red were swapped for fluorescent color schemes, and women numbered among the biggest stars of this dance-rap phenomenon. Soon to follow, was the subversive-minded Odd Future skateboarding goblins, formed by leader Tyler, The Creator, another L.A. rapper who will also headline Coachella alongside Doja Cat for the first time this year. Their lyrics were still explicit, but quite often

,

the girls rapped the most obscene bars, inverting the previously entrenched power dynamics.

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Groups like Pink Dollaz, Vixen Ent.

,

and the Bangz ranked among the most technically vicious and virally popular artists of the jerkin craze, but only the latter received a record deal with a major label. Soon after, one of the two rappers in

t

he Bangz,

Korttney Elliott a.k.a. MC Ella Ann,

was seriously wounded in a drive-by shooting

,

and was unable to continue performing.

But jerkin incubated much of the next generation of L.A. hip-hop. Most notably, Y.G. and his producer DJ Mustard emerged as jerkin slowly morphed into ratchet, an up-tempo minimalist party rap subgenre. But the violence and misogyny in the songs remained the same,

sometimes quite literally. One of Mustard and Y.G.s first major breakthrough hits was a remake of the Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg original, Bitches Aint S

hit

. And for all of his success over the last decade, Mustard has neglected to release any full-length records from a Los Angeles female rapper.

At the same time that Doja Cat cut her teeth in the Leimert Park underground that had birthed Medusa a generation before, other female rappers started garnering attention in the middle years of the last decade. By now, Nicki Minaj was one of the most famous musicians on

E

arth, and most of the major rap capitals seemed to be producing their own female rap stars.

In the left-field and more heady spheres of the L.A.

underground rap scenesubterranean

, Ill Camille and Vel the Wonder established themselves as formidable and incisive lyricists.

While

Watts AshBashtharapper and Comptons Azjah proved that there were plenty of viable heirs to the throne of Yo-Yo and the Lady of Rage. Most recently, Inglewoods CUZZOS have emerged as one of the best groups in the city regardless of gender even shouting out the influence of Vixen

s

and Pink Dollaz in a song from their latest EP.

Yet the fact remains that only Doja Cat has been able to break through to the level where she can top the bill at Coachella. And to do it, she had to go the pop route and from there, circle back to her Leimert Park freestyle roots on her last album, 2023s Scarlet. But if youre searching for two rappers who define the possibility and talent just waiting to be cultivated from L.A.s deep female rap talent pool, the first names that come to mind are Cam & China, a pair of twins from Inglewood who were initially in Pink Dollaz before going solo in the early years of the last decade.

Despite receiving critical adulation and building a huge fanbase on social media, Cam & China are overly familiar with the hardships and exploitation that have historically plagued L.A. female rappers.

In 2016, Pitchfork gave Cam & Chinas debut self-titled EP an 8.0 and called it viscerally exciting rap music. Around the same time, the duos manager started fielding collaboration requests from artists like Cardi B, and requests to perform on larger stages. But Cam says that their team never relayed these opportunities.

[We were] just dealing with the wrong people, wrong management, wrong representation, Cam says over a

Zoom

video call.

Just like in their Pink Dollaz days, they were unable to capitalize on their momentum. But unlike in the past, modern rappers are no longer beholden to major-label release schedules, the fickle tastes of radio

,

and the ever-changing whims of producers. After resolving their contractual situation, Cam & China have proved that hard work and rare talent can transcend the obstacles facing female rappers. Their freestyles are constantly going viral on Instagram and TikTok, and Issa Rae

tabbed tapped

them for the soundtracks of her shows “Insecure”

and Rap Sh!t.

This show of solidarity and recognition from their fellow L.A. native helped usher Cam & China through a rough patch.

,

[We were] living at the studio for like three months but we [were] going hard with the freestyles, says Cam. There were no windows. You never got to really see sunlight. You didnt know when it was dark. So I started praying for a place where there were windows. And with the help of Issa Rae and everything that came after that, I was able to get a condo with several windows.

The one-time teen prodigies from the jerkin era have now become certified legends with more than a decade of experience under their belt. And their continued career growth reflects the changing perceptions of female rappers from L.A. Only last month, Cam & China performed before their biggest audience yet at the rap music festival Rolling Loud, just a few blocks from where they grew up in Inglewood.

There’s a lot of female rappers rapping now, and this whole industry has changed for women in a really important way, Cam says, remembering her historic place in the genre. I love hip-hop. I love everybody who came before us. I appreciate everybody who came before us. And [now] I’m a part of the change, and it feels good.

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