Making Our Own Kind of Music: The History and Legacy of the Women’s Music MovementMain MenuAn Immersive Tour of the Women's Music MovementBrought to you by the June L. Mazer Lesbian ArchivesWomen's Music History TimelineAboutMultimedia GalleryThe June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives supported by a grant from the City of West Hollywood’s Arts Division as part of the City's One City One Pride LGBTQ Arts Festival (May 22 - June 30). More info at www.weho.org/pride or @wehoarts.
Sandy Stone
12021-06-16T15:04:33-07:00Julia M Tanenbaumf184d58ff97337c79794f4b4a236d9dc8034c647392831Sandy Stone was the sound engineer for Olivia Records from 1974 to 1978. A group of lesbians in 1976 protested Olivia's inclusion of Sandy, a transgender woman, but Olivia defended her. After numerous attacks on her participation in the label, Sandy Stone eventually left in 1979plain2021-06-16T15:04:34-07:00Andymiah, CC BY 3.0 , via Wikimedia CommonsMay 2011Julia M Tanenbaumf184d58ff97337c79794f4b4a236d9dc8034c647
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12021-06-16T16:24:04-07:00Julia M Tanenbaumf184d58ff97337c79794f4b4a236d9dc8034c647DivisionAngela M Brinskele/Laura Dintzis29plain2021-08-01T13:53:57-07:00Angela M Brinskele/Laura Dintzisef6dc7f76d6383521c985b036594e440c4099a58