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Band News

Unveiling of The Go-Go’s Hollywood Walk of Fame Star

Via the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce website.

ICONIC FEMALE ROCKERS THE GO-GO’S TO BE HONORED WITH STAR ON THE HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME

WHO:       The Go-Go’s: Belinda Carlisle, Charlotte Caffey, Gina Schock, Kathy Valentine & Jane  Wiedlin
Emcee: Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, President/CEO Leron Gubler

WHAT:     2,444th Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the Category of Recording.

WHERE:   6652 Hollywood Boulevard in front of the Bettie Page Shop (formerly *The Masque Nightclub)

WHEN:     Thursday, August 11, 2011 at 11:30 a.m.

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Band News

Charity Buzz

Bid on 2 tickets and a backstage meet & greet with the GoGo’s at the Greek Theater in Los Angeles, CA on August 17 and take home a hand-signed copy of Beauty and the Beat on pink vinyl.

30 years after the release of Beauty and the Beat, their double-platinum debut album that cemented in our hearts and our pop-vernacular such smash hits as Our Lips Are Sealed and We Got the Beat, the Go-Go’s and their fans prepare for a slew of 30th Anniversary activities for the 2011 summer and beyond. This Los Angeles homecoming show at The Greek Theater is very special as it will be held on Belinda’s birthday!

The proceeds for this item benefit L.A. Gay & Lesbian and Lesbian Center. More info HERE.

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Interviews

New interview with Kathy…

New interview with Kathy and the Seattle Examiner.

Next up in our series of interviews with the Go-Go’s is Kathy Valentine, the band’s bass player. Kathy was the last to join the Go-Go’s and had already been in an all female band, having played briefly with UK heavy metal act Girlschool. She talks about her stint with that band and much more. For news about her current projects, check her website. The Go-Go’s arrive in Seattle on August 14, playing Woodland Park Zoo. The band’s first album, Beauty and the Beat, celebrates its 30th anniversary this year, and has been reissued, with bonus tracks.

The Go-Go’s were the first all female band — as opposed to singing group — that’s had a #1 record. But there aren’t any others.

No, there aren’t. And the other thing is of course there were many many women before us that had careers in music and whatnot, but so many of them had male figures behind them. And I think that was what as really remarkable about our success. We were just a bunch of kind of kids, really. Very young girls with not being told how to play or what to write or what to wear. We weren’t packaged or put together in any shape, way or form.

The Go-Go’s weren’t your first all-female band. You also played in the UK band Girlschool. How did that come about?

Well, when I started playing guitar, I was 15 years old. And the women I had seen playing guitar were like Joni Mitchell and Linda Ronstadt, and they were primarily singers or singer-songwriters. My mom’s English, so I’m half English, and I when I went to England with her I saw Suzi Quatro on Top of the Pops. And she was in black leather and she was a rock star, and it blew my mind. It was like “Oh my God!” I loved the Rolling Stones, and of course the Beatles, and I loved rock music, but it just didn’t occur to me that a female could be a rock star. So I decided right then and there, when I came back home I got an electric guitar and an amp. And I thought I was the only 16 year old girl in the United States that was doing that. I really did. And the next thing you know, I hear about the Runaways. And I was like, Oh, I’m not the only one, there’s other girls. And they were same exact age. So they came to Austin and I met them and once I saw that, I just wanted to do what they were getting to do. And when I took another trip to England with my mom, I was about 17 and I took my guitar with me. And I answered an ad in the paper; an all girl band needed a guitar player, and I joined up with the girls. And they didn’t have the name Girlschool yet, but it was Kim [McAuliffe] and Enid [Williams] and Denise [Dufort] and me. And one day I got this terrible stomach ache, and I actually had to go in the hospital. And when I got out, I went to rehearsal and Kelly Johnson was there. And she was playing “Rock ‘n’ Roll” by Led Zeppelin. And I knew as soon as I saw her and heard her I didn’t have a chance. I knew I was out. Which was cool, because I wasn’t going to move to England, you know.

Then I came back to Austin and started a punk rock band, the first one in Austin. And it was all girls except for a guy bass player. And we were called the Violators. And then we decided to move to LA in 1978. And we got out there and pretty much broke up. Then I started the Textones with one of the girls from the Violators. And we played for two years. And then I quit that band and was really not sure what I was going to do in Los Angeles with myself. And that’s when I met the Go-Go’s.

You probably seen them play by then.

I had seen them, yeah. The first time I saw them I didn’t take them seriously at all. I was very into musicianship, from the get go. When I started playing, I wanted to be really good, I wanted to be up there with Eric Clapton and Jimi Hendrix. I really wanted to be the best female guitar player ever. And I’d gotten a little sidetracked with the whole punk rock and new wave movement, where it wasn’t so much about ability, and technique. So when I first saw the Go-Go’s I wasn’t that impressed to be honest. And then I saw them maybe a year later, and Gina [Schock] had joined the band, the drummer, and she had made a big difference. And they had a big crowd, which certainly got my attention when a band can sell out a club it gets people’s attention. You notice that, when everyone’s responding. So I liked them a lot more the second time.

What got you to join the band?

Well, first Charlotte [Caffey] asked if I could play the bass. And I just figured, well sure I can, why wouldn’t I be able to? And she said that their bass player was ill, and that they had three sold out nights coming up in five days, and could I fill in? So I said sure. And she got me a cassette of their songs, from live shows or rehearsals, and I borrowed a bass, and I learned the songs. And as I was learning them I realized that they were really good songs and that I would like this to be more than a temporary replacement if I could do anything about it. And I didn’t have to do much about it; it was just a really good fit, they liked me. For whatever reasons, they had been unhappy with their bass player and it just kind of fit. And when they asked me, about three weeks after that gig if I would consider joining, I said As long as I can be one of the songwriters. And they were really happy to have another songwriter in the band.

“Our Lips Are Sealed” and “We Got The Beat” are the best known songs on Beauty and the Beat. What other songs do you like on the record?

Well, I like the song I contributed a lot, “Can’t Stop the World.” I thought it was a really good addition. I actually like the whole record. We draw more from that record than any other record, live. So I think it’s one of those classic albums, like the Pretenders first record, where their really isn’t a clinker on the track list.

What do you think makes album hold up?

It’s an iconic classic record, so that’s going to hold up. I think that the Go-Go’s as a group — I know you didn’t ask this, but I think we hold up as well because there’s no one like us. There’s never been anyone like us, and there isn’t anyone like us, and it’s unique. I mean, if you try to say “Oh, The Go-Go’s, they’re a lot like…” what would you say? I’ve thought about this. I’m curious. What would you say? Who are we a lot like?

Well, one could say there are other groups doing a similar musical style…

Yeah but who’s like us?

No one comes to mind.

There isn’t anyone. I’ve thought about this, and we’re just a very different breed. And I think that’s one of the reasons,despite our inactivity and lack of tons of current effort. that there’s still something unique and special about the Go-Go’s. And Beauty and the Beat is what put us on the map. so hand in hand I think there could be interest ten years from now, 20 years from now. I just don’t think there’s anyone like this band. I just think that the chemistry and the uniqueness of the Go-Go’s — it was the right record, the right songs, the right people. It was just everything was right. And I think that the same record would probably have an impact today too.

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Band News

Classic Tracks: The Go-Go’s “Our Lips Are Sealed”

Interesting article about the recording process for “Our Lips Are Sealed.” Co-producer and recording engineer Rob Freeman is interviewed  and quotes from Belinda’s memoir are liberally borrowed.

Nothing says 1980s L.A. like The Go-Go’s on the radio. Those sweet, bright, infectious songs were the perfect soundtrack for a sunny day—still are, though 30 years have passed since one of rock ’n’ roll’s first all-female bands released their debut album, Beauty and the Beat.

The Go-Go’s formed in the midst of L.A.’s late-’70s punk scene. None of the founding members—Belinda Carlisle, Jane Wiedlin and Margot Olaverra—were professional musicians. They were friends who bonded over shows by bands like The Germs and The Dickies.

In her recent memoir, Lips Unsealed, lead singer Carlisle recalls being outside a party in Venice, Calif., and the exact moment three fans became bandmates: “…the three of us found ourselves sitting on the curb with beers and cigarettes. We talked about the Sex Pistols’ show in San Francisco, which was still fresh in our minds, and I added stories from my trip to London, and eventually we were talking about starting our own band…It was like making a pact.” …. read the rest of the article HERE.

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Band News

UNICEF’s Month of Giving

The Go-Go’s are honored to be a part of the George Harrison Fund for UNICEF’s Month of Giving, to honor George’s legacy of giving.  This August celebrates the 40th anniversary of the Concert for Bangladesh, the first major music concert for a cause.  George Harrison launched this legendary event because his friend Ravi Shankar asked him to help the people of Bangladesh. Now we can help honor the legacy of George and support UNICEF’s efforts to help save children’s lives in Africa.  Watch the concert, donate and download HERE.

We love and have always honored the genius of The Beatles, but George wasn’t only a Beatle, he was also a well-respected humanitarian. We are happy to join our friends and fellow musicians in this important campaign.

More than 2 million young children are acutely malnourished in drought affected Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia and Djibouti. Requiring immediate life-saving attention to survive, half a million children’s lives hang in the balance.  We know that George would have wanted to help these children and their families. We are pleased to be able to say that our efforts throughout the Month of Giving are going to help raise funds for UNICEF’s emergency response in the Horn of Africa to save children’s lives.  To jump start this fundraising initiative, the George Harrison Fund for UNICEF, which was founded by Olivia Harrison, wife of the late George Harrison, is immediately releasing $1 million to UNICEF for emergency efforts in the Horn of Africa.

Go HERE for more information.
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Band News

Upcoming Star Ceremony

Upcoming Star Ceremonies

Via the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce website.

ICONIC FEMALE ROCKERS THE GO-GO’S TO BE HONORED WITH STAR ON THE HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME

WHO:       The Go-Go’s: Belinda Carlisle, Charlotte Caffey, Gina Schock, Kathy Valentine & Jane  Wiedlin
Emcee: Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, President/CEO Leron Gubler

WHAT:     2,444th Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the Category of Recording.

WHERE:   6652 Hollywood Boulevard in front of the Bettie Page Shop (formerly *The Masque Nightclub)

WHEN:     Thursday, August 11, 2011 at 11:30 a.m.

In celebration of the 30th anniversary of the Go-Go’s 1981 landmark debut album “Beauty and the Beat” and their current “Ladies Gone Wild”summer tour (including a headlining concert at the Greek Theater on August 17), the Go-Go’s will be honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in front of the former nightclub, *The Masque, where they played their first show.

From their halcyon days as America’s sweethearts to their current status as superstars who pioneered a genre, The Go-Go’s preside over an amazing three-decade reign as high pop priestesses. The internationally-loved pop hit makers helped cement the foundation of the early ‘80s pop-rock sound without the aid of outside composers, session players or, most importantly, creative compromise. From their very first show, the Go-Go’s sang and played their own songs, offering five feisty role models for a generation of ready-to-rock girls and good, hooky fun for pop-loving guys.

Their story truly is a punk version of the American Dream. They came, they saw and they conquered the charts, the airwaves and, with their kicky kitsch appeal, pop culture in general. For a while, the band was

virtually inescapable: TV guest shots, magazine covers, high-profile concert tours and movie offers turned  Belinda Carlisle, Charlotte Caffey, Gina Schock, Kathy Valentine and Jane Wiedlininto certified rock stars. Their sparking California pop appealed to an astonishingly wide cross section of music fans internationally.

Because of — or maybe in spite of — all this attention, they soared to become a pop phenomenon while having a lot of fun and blazing a brand-new trail — for the DIY ethic in general, and women in music in particular. Their self-contained battle cry was a string of irresistibly catchy, self-penned pop singles featuring Carlisle’s infectious vocals, with Caffey and Wiedlin’s loud, punk rock guitars and sweet backing vocals, all slammed home with Valentine’s throbbing bass and Schock’s big ‘60s beat.

Sure, before the Go-Go’s debuted in May of ’78, there were other all-female bands, but to a man (ahem, or in this case, woman) there was usually a seedy, cigar-chompin’ guy lurking just behind the curtain, pulling strings, writing songs and shaping the image as his gals danced on his string. But the Go-Go’s didn’t need a doctor in their house. It was their baby right from the start and they nursed the bouncing infant on a diet of non-stop nocturnal nourishment in dank clubs all across the city.

They danced to their own joyous beat from the very beginning. The Go-Go’s banded together in the truest of punk ethics: there was no master plan to get signed or in any way conquer the world. In fact, when Belinda Carlisle and Jane Wiedlin met, they weren’t even musicians. But since nearly everyone else in their vicious circle of friends was forming bands, they said why not? and jumped right in that darn fountain, fully clothed. The band was conceived in the very same gritty glitter of the rough Los Angeles scene that also birthed X, The Germs, and The Weirdos.

By all accounts, their first show was short, sweet — and very, very raw. They didn’t care, they were just having fun. But, just as lust can turn to love, their newfound hobby turned to dedication. Two months later, real musician Charlotte Caffey joined and their sound quickly improved. The unique mix of snotty punk discord blended with sweet pop melodies was presented with a freewheeling let’s have a party thrift-store chic attitude. The ensemble quickly cultivated a dedicated clique of fans and collected glowing notices in the notoriously fickle LA press.

By ’79, with the addition of Gina Schock on drums, the Go-Go’s were beating their path to stardom on their own terms. They played every cool club and party in L.A. and, naturally, record companies were starting to sniff around. Still, the band remained true to their punk leanings, releasing an early version of “We Got The Beat” through the quirky Stiff Records in the UK.

As ’80 turned into ’81, Kathy Valentine joined and by April, the band was signed to upstart new wave haven I.R.S. Records. As summer arrived, so did Beauty and the Beat, hot on the heels of their debut U.S. single “Our Lips Are Sealed.” Summer turned to fall, and the world fell in love with the cute, bubbly and effervescent (and yes, they hate that description) Go-Go’s.

The double platinum-certified Beauty and the Beat reached number one and begat Vacation in ‘82 and Talk Show in ‘84 during the ladies’ charming reign of chart and radio smashes. And, like any truly classic rock band, their enduring hits including “Vacation,” “Head Over Heels” and “Turn To You” live on in countless compilations, movie soundtracks, remakes and, yes, even a string of very successful television commercials.

In 2000, their raucous and rocky off-stage history, often re-told and colorfully embellished, was unflinchingly presented in a very popular episode of VH1s “Behind The Music” series with an accompanying greatest hits collection. Behind The Music: The Go-Go’s Collection continues to be a strong-selling catalog item.

On the strength of the VH1 special, God Bless The Go-Go’s, an all-new collection of songs was released in 2001. A stack of glowing reviews soon followed backed by a triumphant tour, later immortalized in the exciting DVD, Live In Central Park.

The Go-Go’s recently released an expanded 30th Anniversary edition of their double platinum debut album, Beauty and the Beat, and are on the road this summer for their “Ladies Gone Wild” tour, including a stop at Los Angeles’ Greek Theatre on Wednesday, August 17.

The whole world may have lost its head, but in a world gone crazy, the Go-Go’s still have the beat. And now, three decades after the release of their first album, go-go music still makes us dance!