Gay female singer

They're talented musicians, gifted singers, and proudly gay. These are the most notable lesbian singers, as ranked by harmony fans like you. The best womxn loving womxn singers have made their mark in different ways. Some talented openly lgbtq+ female singers are solo artists, while other famous female homosexual singers front widespread bands. Many of the best queer woman singers have won Grammy Awards for their work.

Who will you vote to the top of this list of the best lesbian singers? Maybe you'll maneuver Melissa Etheridge to number one. She came out publicly in 1993, the same year that she released her smash hit album, Yes I Am. “Come to My Window,” “I'm the Only One” and “If I Wanted To” are just a few of the hits off the release. k.d. Lang is another iconic lesbian singer featured on this list. Annie Clark, a.k.a. St. Vincent, hasn't come out publicly, but has dated women. Other dynamic artists from rock and alternative to folk and pop who appear on this list add Dusty Springfield, Beth Ditto, and Tracy Chapman. You will also find nation stars Brandy Clark and Chely Wright on this list. 

Vote up the top and your favorite lesbian singers and musicians. 

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30 Lesbian Love Songs: Women Singing About Women (Updated 2019)

Hayley Kiyoko wasn’t kidding when she sang “girls like girls like boys do.” Love, curiosity and attraction between women is nothing new — and it’s certainly not a novelty, like some media might suggest.

While there are countless passion songs and songs about relationships featuring heteronormative pronouns, we’ve compiled a playlist of genre-spanning tracks from queer, lesbian, pansexual and bisexual women who have written and sung about their feelings towards other women. From Janelle Monáe to King Princess, rejoice queer artists and girl-on-girl treasure with these 30 songs, below.

Baum, “Hot Water”

Baum’s “Hot Water” is an electric ode to the joint excitement and nervousness that comes with discovering one’s sexuality. “You look so nice / Can I kiss you / Smell like Secret, Teen Spirit,” the queer pop upstart opens the track, her voice cradled by a cushion of plush synths. Later, she admits her inexperience on the chorus: “But I’ve never done much at all… / I’m in steaming water.”

Gia, &ldq

A Brief History of Queer And Transsexual Women In American Music


Queer and trans person people have played a substantial role in every facet of modern song, yet it’s not often lesbian, bi, queer, or transgender women are noted for their contributions. Sexism, homophobia, racism: The folks included in this little history have uniformly faced one or more of these obstacles along the way. Their melody, however, lives on as a testament to their perseverance.

Pioneering Black women

Sister Rosetta Tharpehad a self-taught technique she’d practiced since the age of four, playing live with her family before recording for the first time in her 20s in 1939, bringing her spiritual-based rhythm and rock to the radio. Biographers say Sister Tharpe was famous to have a relationship with at least one other woman while she toured, with the road making it easier for many women to reside more openly without fear of homophobic retribution. Artists prefer Harlem Renaissance celebrity Gladys Bentley, attracted to both genders “Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith, moaning Ma Rainey, and “dirty blues” singer Lucille Bogan were more overt in their queerness on stage – in the latter’s song, “B.D. Blues,” the B.D. stands f

When starting this blog, I originally focused on the 60s and 70s, but I’ve since expanded to talking about the 80s and 90s as that’s now considered classic rock. Generally speaking, when 30 years have passed since a decade, that decade is now considered classic rock. Time has flown and it means that I can’t avoid talking about the 90s anymore.

My LGBT musicians of the 50s, 60s, 70s, and 80s post is still to this day the most popular post in my blog’s history and it’s only right that I make a sequel for the 90s. Without further ado, LGBT musicians of the 90s!

If you want to check out other LGBT related posts check out my posts on LGBT themed songs of the 60s, 70s, and 80s and my post on classic rock musicians in drag.

Ani DiFranco – bisexual – Folk/alternative singer-songwriter who started her career in the preliminary 90s. Throughout her harmony career, she has done activism for the anti-war, pro-choice, feminist, environmentalist, tune education, and pro-LGBT causes. She’s always been an independent musician, starting her own record label called Righteous Babe Records because she’s a progressive who takes an anti-corporate sta