Wednesday 26 June 2019

1982: The Floodgates Are Truly Open

To be honest, I was a little nervous about the year 1982 and expected a bit a turbulence during the ride through it. The reason for this was that I spent eight months out of the year overseas with the marines. From the middle of January to the very end of June, I made my second deployment to the Mediterranean and Indian Ocean. Then in the October, I went to Okinawa for the remainder of the year and the first three months of the following one. In fact, October 9, 1982 never existed for me as I was flying across the International Date Line. Because I was overseas so much, the year was fairly barren for me musically and I worried that I might not have enough albums to visit during the year. But, I will persevere and thanks to Youtube, I can listen to albums from that year that I never got the chance to listen to back then.
[caption id="attachment_1085" align="aligncenter" width="127" class=" "]Iron Maiden Iron Maiden[/caption]
With the benefit of hindsight, I can say that in 1982, the new wave of British heavy metal (NWOBHM) had its claws firmly gripped on the industry. I saw this to be true when I was in Toulon, France in the May. Previously, I had heard of Iron Maiden but it wasn't until I heard a song, I can't remember which one, on a juke box in a bar there that I finally got my ears blown away by them. Of course, there were great metal delights served up by the likes of Judas Priest and Motorhead as well as many other rock and metal acts. It seems my journey through what turns out to be an important year that almost passed me by and I am going to put right something I got wrong in the said year. See, I never listened to Van Halen's "Diver Down" album because a couple of marine buddies bought it while we were in France and said that the album sucked. Again, curse me for simply taking their word. I will listen to this album during the course of my trip through 1982 and give you my own thoughts on it.
[caption id="attachment_1143" align="aligncenter" width="128" class=" "]Van Halen Van Halen[/caption]
As I go down the road of metal history, I realise that while I may have missed out on quite a bit of music history on account of military service, the year itself was a phenomenal one for metal. Thanks to NWOBHM and others, the floodgates opened and metal began to flood the world.

Next post: The Police- Ghost in the Machine

To buy Rock And Roll Children, go to www.strategicpublishinggroup.com/title/RockAndRollChildren.html
Also available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Froogle and on sale at Foyles Book Shop in London

Wednesday 19 June 2019

The Runaways: The First True All Female Metal Band

Janis Joplin and Grace Slick for the first queens of rock in the 60's and in the 70's came Ann and Nancy Wilson who were arguably the first modern rock chicks. In the later part of the 70's and early 80's we had such great ladies like Pat Benatar, Chrissie Hynde and Debbie Harry. All of these women were rock queens in the true sense and their contribution to music will always be remembered.
[caption id="attachment_1501" align="aligncenter" width="256" class=" "]Janis Joplin Janis Joplin[/caption][caption id="attachment_1679" align="aligncenter" width="127" class=" "]Grace Slick Grace Slick[/caption][caption id="attachment_1373" align="aligncenter" width="188" class=" "]Debbie Harry Debbie Harry[/caption][caption id="attachment_1396" align="aligncenter" width="195" class=" "]Pat Benatar Pat Benatar[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_874" align="aligncenter" width="168" class=" "]Heart Heart[/caption][caption id="attachment_1759" align="aligncenter" width="243" class=" "]The Pretenders The Pretenders[/caption]
In 1981, two all female bands made their way into the spotlight, The Go-Gos and Girlschool. While the former had a more commercial rock sound, the latter was straight forward heavy metal and stood alongside of many of the NWOBHM acts that were coming out that year. However, these two weren't the all female bands who could blow speakers with great power chords. Before them came The Runaways.
[caption id="attachment_2299" align="aligncenter" width="278" class=" "]The Go Go's The Go Go's[/caption][caption id="attachment_2373" align="aligncenter" width="276" class=" "]Girlschool Girlschool[/caption]
I had heard of The Runaways even before the film that came out a few years ago. Even at the tender (small chuckle here) age of sixteen, I was enamoured with these fine ladies who played such aggressive music. I did listen to their debut album and liked it. Likewise, I wanted to listen to their second one "Queens of Noise" but never got the chance. Must rectify that in the future. While, I never heard any of their songs on that cheap AM radio I had back then, they toured extensively and played many sell out concerts in the US and Japan. Furthermore, the likes of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, Cheap Trick and Van Halen supported them. Unfortunately, accusations of mismanagement, rows over money and direction plus several personnel changes lead to break up of the band.
Albums:
The Runaways- 1976
Queens of Noise- 1977
Waitin' for the Night- 1977
Live in Japan- 1977
And Now, The Runaways- 1978
The Runaways
The Runaways
Cherrie Currie- vocals
Joan Jett- guitar, vocals
Lita Ford- guitar
Jackie Fox- bass
Sandy West- drums
*Vicki Blue and Laurie McAllister also played bass during The Runaways reign

While The Runaways may be no longer, the members are still around and making themselves known. One of them would dethrone Pat Benatar as the queen of rock in 1982 and possibly become the first metal queen. That one is up for debate. Another ex Runaway would also make a huge splash in heavy metal circles nor would some of the other former members remain completely silent. Almost silently, these ladies would go onto to be an influence on heavy metal and I think the all female metal bands that would spring up less than a decade later can look to them for inspiration. Don't take my word for it, watch the film and listen to their music for yourself.

Next post: 1982- The Floodgates Are Open

To buy Rock And Roll Children, go to www.strategicpublishinggroup.com/title/RockAndRollChildren.html

Also available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Froogle and on sale at Foyles Book Shop in London