Joan Jett & The Blackhearts
There
are many female musicians, but few genuine female rockers. Joan Jett
bucked this trend and pursued straight-ahead rock & roll at a time
when it was fashionable for women to pursue gentler sounds like
soft-rock and disco. In the process she recorded several major hits and became an icon
to future femme-rockers like L-7 and Bikini Kill. For many, Joan Jett
will always be the original "grrl-rocker".
Jett got her start at the tender age of 15 as the guitarist for the
seminal female-rock group The Runaways. This quartet recorded the classic
Cherry Bomb, among others. Jett played with the group until they
disbanded in 1980.
She then independently recorded her first solo
album, Bad Reputation, with the help of Paul Cook and Steve
Jones of The Sex Pistols. It was a solid slab of punkish hard-rockers
like the title track and Joan's cover of the Gary Glitter classic
Do You Wanna Touch Me?, the latter becoming an early MTV
favourite.
The next year, Joan Jett formed a backing group called The Blackhearts
and landed a record contract. She hit big in 1982 with I Love Rock
and Roll, a snarling hard-rock update of an obscure glam rock
song. It became an instant rock anthem and stayed at the Number 1 spot on
the pop charts for 7 weeks. Joan Jett also became a pin-up attraction
in teen magazines around this time, and her love of black-leather
clothing influenced both male and female rockers. Jett also scored
hits in 1982 with a guitar-heavy remake of Crimson and Clover
and a reissue of Do You Wanna Touch Me? (aided by its heavy
rotation on MTV).
In 1983, Joan Jett released Album and had back-to-back Top-40
hits with the self-penned Fake Friends and a cover of Sly
Stone's Everyday People. She later collaborated with The Beach
Boys, who lent their airy harmonies to Good Music in 1986. The
next year, she made her acting debut in Light Of Day, a serious
drama in which she played sister and rock band mate to Michael J. Fox.
Jett also performed the film's theme song, which was written by none
other than Bruce Springsteen.
Joan Jett stormed the US Top-10 in 1988 with I Hate Myself For
Loving You, a stomping shout-along rocker from the Up Your
Alley album. She also hit the Top-20 with Little Liar. In
1990, she released an all-covers album called The Hit List,
which featured her versions of classics by AC/DC, The Kinks and The
Sex Pistols.
By the 90's, Joan Jett had become a cult idol to a group of young,
all-female rockers known as the "grrl-rock" movement. She performed
with L-7, recorded a live album with Seattle femme-punkers The Gits,
and collaborated with Kathleen Hanna of Bikini Kill on songs for her
next album. The result was Pure and Simple, Jett's most
critically-praised album in years. She also contributed songs to the
soundtracks of Tank Girl and Mr. Wrong.
Most recently, Joan Jett reunited with The Blackhearts for
Fetish. Twenty years after beginning her solo career, Joan Jett
rocks on |
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