In the '70s, women in rock music were few and far between, so when The Runaways entered the scene, they set an unprecedented ...
A conventionally enjoyable making-and-breaking-of-the-band saga. The film was exec produced by Joan Jett, with Sigismondi’s script drawn from Cherie Currie’s 1989 autobiography “Neon Angel,” and made ...
In 1976, The Runaways stormed onto the music scene. Just as the disco craze was beginning to take over, producer Kim Fowley's curated all-female teen punk band released the hard-rocking rebellion song ...
In the '70s, there was no other band quite like the Runaways. Formed in Los Angeles in 1975 by impresario Kim Fowley, the band consisted entirely of tough teenage girls who sang and played their own ...
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The Runaways: Tragic Details About The Iconic Band
In the '70s, rock and roll was a boys club dominated by bands like Led Zeppelin, The Who, Black Sabbath, and The Rolling Stones. But before bands like Hole, The Donnas, and The Bangles there was The ...
Once upon a time — before MTV, before hits by the Clash became elevator music, when baby boomers were taking Quaaludes instead of breaking hips — rock ‘n’ roll was something amazingly raw and filthy. ...
When Vicki Blue first edited Edgeplay: A Film About the Runaways, the bassist turned writer/producer had pieced together a mostly sunny look back at the band. But when the licensing rights for the ...
Once upon a time, before The Go-Go’s lips were sealed, before the Bangles walked like an Egyptian, five schoolgirls and a Svengali record producer created an all-girl rock band called The Runaways—the ...
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