THE BANGLES
Susanna Hoffs -
vocals / guitar
Debbi Peterson - vocals / drums / guitar
Vicki Peterson - vocals / lead guitar
Michael Steele - vocals / bass
A thorough listening
to the Bangles' new album lets you know exactly where they stand.
This ain't your momma's reunion album. Frisky, provocative, riff-ready
and on point, the effusive band is itching to top their storied
past and let the music do the talking. As vocalist/guitarist Vicki
Peterson puts it, "Even during our peak, critics always seemed
to take the easy way out: 'quirky girl garage band mentored by
Prince becomes polished pop act'. Somehow we were misinterpreted
to be this manufactured machine." In fact, it wasn't until
the Bangles recently engaged in a flurry of sold out shows that
fans and music scribes rediscovered what made pop's preeminent
girl group a jarring, melodic, breath of fresh air in the first
place.
Gender appellations
disappeared from the rave descriptions of the reunited foursome's
playing. Every review - from the most hardened indie rock mag
to the New York Times pointed to the Bangles indefinable chemistry
and scrappy command of the '60's rock canon, as what set them
apart from '80's lite-rock the first time around. It's that same
crackling craftsmanship that differentiates them from music's
thump-alike bands now. "Despite some of the more sensational
things that you read in the press about us, there was always a
certain magic when the four of us were in a room, just picking
up our instruments and playing," says vocalist/guitarist
Susanna Hoffs. "I think with the passage and perspective
of time, that's what comes through now." It was precisely
that which led to the Bangles first album of new material in more
than a decade, the bristling, buoyant Doll Revolution.
Rather than just re-hash
the past, the band flexes a more muscular edge to go along with
those famous harmonies. Produced by the Bangles and Brad Wood
(Liz Phair, Pete Yorn), it's a bolder, brasher, yes, even wiser
musical offering, serving up hearty chunks of the Bangles' brilliance,
and glimpses of the tremendous possibilities to come. "We
holed up in a big house in Los Angeles and just had fun,"
says drummer/vocalist Debbi Peterson. "Brad was great. The
second we met him we all just clicked, which is saying a lot.
He ended up being like the fifth Bangle." Susanna says creating
the right atmosphere around the new album was also key. "Renting
the house gave us a freedom to be ourselves and be together again.
It was a dream come true to have this great space where our kids
could come over, where we would have a dinner party or two, a
real hang-out space where someone could always be working."
Another important factor was that the Bangles funded the album
with the money they garnered from playing live again. The girls
even brought back their original label imprint, Down Kiddie! Records
that will appear on the forthcoming release. A working band works,
and the "one for all and all for one" spirit, as bassist/vocalist
Michael Steele puts it, added to their rekindled sense of camaraderie.
"It also gave us real control over the making of the record,"
she adds "I think that was crucial to getting the band back
together. We all grew up which is a good thing."
Vicki says each of
their independent journeys is reflected in the new music. "We
played a lot of the new material on stage, and the reaction was
just as strong as some of our standards." The Bangles found
themselves with an abundance of songs to record, whittling 40
down to a neat and trim fifteen. "There are a couple on there
that I call 'bridge songs,'" says Vicki. "Songs that
existed in the previous Bangle lifetime, or songs designated for
various solo projects. Debbi's 'Ask Me No Questions' was one of
those as well as Michael's 'Between the Two.' We used to play
that live in the '80's but never got it down in the studio. Susanna's
'Grateful' was a song she had written with Dan Schwartz and Bill
Bottrell (Tuesday Night Music Club). I had two songs that I had
recorded with my band, the Continental Drifters, 'The Rain Song,'
and 'Mixed Messages.' We'd test them all and see if we could 'Bangelicize'
them."
The band also wrote
a batch of new songs together. Some of the newer gems began with
a process of recording song ideas and fragments and sending cassettes
back and forth to each other. Others were born in the Bangles'
boileroom, reminiscent of past writing sessions: members furiously
trading riffs, lyrics scrawled on napkin scraps in hopes of hitting
on what Susanna refers to as "that X-factor" that brings
a song to life. "The song, 'Stealing Rosemary,' was like
that," she says. "Debbi and I had an idea for an early
'60's Simon and Garfunkel thing, and Vicki brought this idea for
a great lyric." Says Vicki, "I got the idea cooking
dinner with my 12-year-old niece. We were talking about going
out to the neighbor's garden and stealing some rosemary. But then
it became about the little crimes that you commit for love. I
love the way it came out."
The Bangles
do a little "pinching" of their own on the new album,
laying down a ballzy cover of Elvis Costello's recent song "Tear
Off Your Own Head (it's a doll revolution)." "Elvis
was working on a TV pilot about, what else - a girl group,"
laughs Debbi. "He called to see if we'd be interested in
giving it a try. Susanna and Michael did a rough demo version
of it and really loved the song." Vicki picks up the story,
"We were actually in the van on the way to a show and they
put the cassette in and we all just flipped over the song. We
said we had to do it. It ended up being one of the last songs
we recorded. At the time we had no idea Elvis was going to record
it - but that's OK," she deadpans. "He really is a fan."
And so continues the mystique of surely what has been one of rock's
most missed groups.

THE BANGLES
A Little History
And what about that
storied history? The internet is loaded with the Bangles sites,
offering obscure Bangle-bits to satisfy their legion of fans (did
you know Michael was an original lead-singer of Joan Jett's Runaways).
Of course, there are also play-by-play accounts of the band's
much talked about VH-1 Behind The Music bio, which tells you more
than you'd probably want to know about the group's notorious breakup.
"Ahh, the dra-ma. The fatal meeting," teases Vicki.
As the band diplomat, she remembers sitting there saying "OK,
OK, we'll work this out" even as the members were walking
out the door.
While it's the early
days the band likes to talk about now, it's the memories of those
early club years that get their blood going. From their gritty
first offering, Getting Out Of Hand, (billing themselves as The
Bangs on Downkiddie Records in 1981) to what many consider one
of the decade's few classic albums, the multi-platinum A Different
Light, in 1986, (featuring hit singles "Manic Monday,"
"Walk Like An Egyptian," and "Walking Down Your
Street") to their final studio album, 1988's Everything,
(going out on top with the #1 hit "Eternal Flame").
The Bangles have always retained some semblance of their jagged
roots - more girl gang than girl band. Now they've come full circle
in a new decade that just might be looking for some spit with
their melodies. As the aforementioned NY Times review gloated:
'They're skilled enough to revamp garage rock, Byrds-style psychedelia,
and hippie folk…making room for a lot of magnificence."
As all the members
indicated, picking up their lives after the breakup has also contributed
to their growth as a band. Susanna released a myriad of solo projects,
enjoying writing collaborations with the Go-Go's Charlotte Caffey,
Mark Linkous, and Jim Keltner among others. She married film director
Jay Roach in 1993, and the couple has two children.
Debbi has a five-year-old
son with her husband Steve Botting. She's worked on several music
projects, including collaborating with Gina Schock from the Go-Go's.
Debbi later partnered with Siobhan Maher of the group River City
People. Together they formed the band Kindred Spirit, and released
a self-titled album.
Vicki's musical pride
and joy the past few years has been the acclaimed Continental
Drifters, a New Orleans based band that received rave reviews
for their 2001 album, Vermillion. The group enjoyed several sold
out tours both in the U.S. and in Europe. Vicki's other collaborations
have included working with such artists as John Doe, Belinda Carlisle,
Jules Shear, Kevin Salem and others.
Michael Steele, by
her own admission, wanted to "get as far away from the music
business as I could," after the Bangles split in the early
'90's. She relocated to the rugged coast of Northern California
- and as far as we know, has yet to work with any members of the
Go-Go's.
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