Joan Jett Interview
By Mite
During Joan's career, she's worked with the Sex Pistols, the Beach Boys,
Paul Westerberg, L7 and Bikini Kill to name a few. She also produced the
debut album by, the Germs and acted in a few movies, including one based
on the Runaways (with actresses playing the rest of the band) called We're
All Crazy Now! (Which was never released)
A few months ago, I got the opportunity to be in on a roundtable interview
with Joan Jett via telephone. Actually Gail was supposed to do the
interview, but circumstances wouldn't have it. My fellow interviewers were
Wendy, John L. Alan, Joe, and John C. I can't really say who asked what
questions, so I'm putting them all under the Mutant Renegade umbrella,
with a * by the questions I asked. Enjoy.
MRZ - Do you miss the '80s?
Joan - In what respect?
MRZ - The music, the fashion, the kids. I mean nowadays, everything seems to
be a little bit calmer. Rock 'n' roll is not what it used to be of course.
Joan - I don't know if I miss it per say, but I do miss the fact that there
just doesn't seem to be any rock 'n' roll out there anyplace. Everything
does seem kind of tame. It's even hard in Manhattan to go out and find a
good band to go see.
MRZ - Everybody says rock is dying, do you believe so? And do you find it
hard to stay faithful to rock 'n' roll nowadays?
Joan - It's easy for me to stay faithful. It's even easier when there are
less people doing it. I feel like it's my job to carry the torch. I don't
understand personally what happened. Why there aren't people out there
willing to have fun playing rock 'n' roll. I just don't get it. I don't
know if it's because fashions change, styles change and now everyone's into
this rock, rap, metal kinda vibe. I really don't know. I think there's
nothing better than seeing a three-chord straight up rock 'n' roll band
in your face with sweaty music and three minute good songs. There's nothing
better than that?
MRZ - How about aging? Do you feel like sometimes you're softening?
Joan - Who me? (In a "you've got to be joking" tone)
MRZ - Yeah.
Joan - What, are you kidding? (In a "you've really got to be FUNKIN' joking"
tone)
MRZ - Many people just let it go after awhile because they're tired...
Joan - ... I understand that. Some people do let it go because they get tired.
I think what I'm going to do is get more balance in my life to still be able
to go out and play the hard rock 'n' roll and do what I like to do in music.
I'm going to take a month off and go hang out with my friends, to have a
little more balance in my life so I don't get tired. So I won't say, "You
know, fuck all this!" and just leave it. I think it's about getting into
other aspects of your life and opening that up a bit. Not just always about
being in a band.
MRZ - I know you've done acting, but have you ever considered stepping
outside of rock 'n' roll and doing other musical styles, or anything like
that?
Joan - As far as musical styles, no I've never really considered that. It's
not something that resonates with me. Rock 'n' roll music is what gets me
off. I would love to do more acting. I've just never had the opportunity to
get at scripts, to have the opportunity to show people that I can act. So
I'm just waiting for those little openings.
I wouldn't say no to other kinds of musical opportunities. I guess that it
just depends on what it was or what it required me to do, and if I felt that
it compromised my own soul.
MRZ - Have you worked with Lita Ford since the Runaways?
Joan - No, I haven't.
MRZ - Do you want to?
Joan - Yeah, in a Runaways context yeah. We discussed possibly doing something.
MRZ - Like reforming the group.
Joan - I don't know. I'm the one who's really not into that. I don't see the
reason. We took so much shit when we were doing it when the Runaways were
happening. So now 20 years later people want us to get together so they can
take shots at all these old babes trying to get back some youth.
I mean come on; I've been there. I know what the press would do. They say
"Oh come on, reform". We reform and people take shots. I would come out
with nooses and hang everybody who made fun of us. Only because The Runaways
were my baby and there's no reason to get it back together except to totally
have fun. If that's not the goal, then I don't want to do it.
So as soon any other thing enters into it, any discussion of sound, any
kind fights, any kind of press leaks, you know what, I don't need it. I've
already done it. I did it. I don't have to prove anything with the Runaways. It's everybody else who has missed it or wants to see it again that wants us to consider a reunion or something like that.
It's not totally out of the realm of possibility that we would get together
to do a song, but I don't see a tour or anything like that happening.
MRZ - What was it that about the Runaways that you were made fun about?
Joan - Everything, just the fact that we were girls, with girls being the main
thing. You know, I guess it's really hard for people to get it, unless
you're in it. People don't want to see women doing things they don't think
women should do. Women are supposed to take a submissive roll in society.
The fact that the Runaways picked up guitars, and me being one of the louder
ones with leather jacket, heavy makeup, just pushing the envelope.
We were called sluts, whores and dykes all the time, all the time.
We were constantly laughed at by the bands we played with, by the crews,
the press, everybody.
It got really frustrating. I didn't get it. I thought people would love to
see teenage girls playing real rock n roll. I thought you know that's great.
And when I see girls who are the age that we were now, and I think of what
we were doing at their age. It's hard for me to think that a lot of those
teenage girls to handle what we were going though.
We were really grown up for our age and it was an incredible special band.
And anybody who saw that knows that. We had some amazing tours. We did three
months with the Ramones in the United States. It was one of the most
incredible tours. The Ramones and The Runaways, it was unbelievable. It was
1977. It was like heaven.
MRZ - Have you seen the Donnas? It seems like they've pretty much exactly
taken the ball the way the Runaways did, the complete formula. What do you
think of them and have you seen them?
Joan - I saw them in New York last year. I think they are excellent. I think
they are very competent. I really got a kick out of the whole Runaways vibe.
They have t-shirts on with the name underneath. That's what the Runaways
did. We all had our own colored t-shirts. I think it's cute. Imitation is
a form of flattery. I'm honored. Finally seeing girls pick up some guitar
and play guitar.
I get so tired of seeing women in pop music being called rock ' n' roll.
Could you all please stop calling all the pop babes rock 'n' roll. It's
really getting tiring. I don't even want to say. Britney Spears, rock 'n'
roll, rock 'n' roll. I mean come on, give me a break.
MRZ - I think from the underground these days there seems to be a
groundswell of respect for you from some of the bands coming up from the
punk underground, The Donna's, The Muff's... The Muffs have a similar sound
of what you've always done. Do you like them?
Joan - Yes, I like them and know them as well.
MRZ - What about any other bands that you like?
Joan - You know, I have a really tough time finding new bands. The newest
band is Fugazi, which is not new; they've been around for years. Another
band on their label, a band called Lungfish, I think they're great. Their
(Fugazi) whole attitude, playing the music for the music's sake, is
something that is so lost. They're so into their audience. They don't sell
albums above five bucks; all their gigs are five dollars. They're always
all ages. That's important
MRZ - Would you consider doing a club tour anytime in the near future?
Joan - We always play clubs. It's not something that I feel above. Those are
my favorite shows because they're intimate, they're tight, their sweaty,
they're hot. You're close to the people. Those are my favorites. So yeah,
I'd do one for sure.
MRZ - You've opening for Def Leppard. What do you think about that? It's a
strange double bill.
Joan - I don't think so; I think the music works well together. Both bands
write three-minute rock songs with big chorus. Yeah, they might have a
slight different take on the songs. Def Leppard is obviously a different
band that we are, but the music work well tighter. And the audiences seem
work well together too.
We are opening, but we're having a good time. The band is treating us
great. They're great guys, real friendly. It's good to be put in a
different position every so often. And just look at things from a different
perspective. I'm having fun opening up. Sort of struggling to get the
audience into it. It's good. It makes you fight. Not fight like antagonistic. But fight for what you
believe.
*MRZ - I saw you in Dayton last summer Joan and I have to say you are not
softening. You put one hell of a show on and I loved your Lungfish cover.
Gail was actually supposed to do the interview but she couldn't make it.
Growing up, you and Iggy Pop were Gail's heroes. Who were your heroes
growing up, who are your heroes now and why?
Joan - Oh boy. That's a tough question you know that? Heroes? You mean musical
heroes?
*MRZ - Anyone, someone who just inspired you and how you look at life.
Joan - Wow, so long ago. I wouldn't even use that word. I didn't have heroes.
More of being a fan or inspired, but not a hero. That's way too strong of a
word.
The British Glitter scene, British glitter music, Gary Glitter,
Suzi Quartro... Suzi Quartro was a big one because that was the first
time seeing another woman playing rock 'n' roll. She was a big one for
sure, because I figured if she could do it, I could do it. If I could do
it, other girls can do it. That's probably a big inspiration.
Oh, here's one. Liza Minelli in Cabaret. Big one. Big. That turned me onto
show business, deviation and just wanting to sing. I really wanted to
emulate Liza. It was something that I related to with her. I've been lucky
enough now to have met her and be friends with her. So that's really a
wonderful end to that story. I got to meet... yeah she is one of my Heroes.
MRZ - Does it ever feel like a heavy burden to you to be such an icon of women
in rock, riot grrrl all of that?
Joan - No, I guess that although people tell me that it doesn't really sink
in. I feel like a schmuch just like everyone else on the street.
MRZ - But you're not, you're Joan Jett!
Joan - But I'm still just a human being. It's fun to be able to tell everybody
that. Hey, I'm really no different that you, I just had a little fire in
my belly and followed my dreams and was lucky enough to achieve it. So it's
feel good to me to be able to relate that to other people so they don't feel
like they can't do it. We all can do it; it's just knowing that.
MRZ - It just seems like it would be such a responsibility having so many
young girls look up to you, you know.
Joan - Yeah, I guess it's a responsibility that you just want to be able to
direct them if they've got questions. But I don't feel like a burden. It's
liberating. It's exciting to me. Bring them on and let me talk to them.
What do they have to ask me? I get off on talking and sharing, and
sometimes not knowing the answer. Just saying I don't know the answer.
MRZ - I have a question along those same lines. Because you did go through
such a hard time to getting where you're at, you know being the heavy metal
rock girl. Do you feel let down by some of the girls today? Do you feel
that they aren't taking the advantage of you plowing ahead for them and
picking up your torch?
Joan - I don't know if I feel let down. I just don't get it to tell you the
truth. I just don't get it. There seems like there's me, Cortney Love in
the main stream...
MRZ - Do you like L7, I love L7?
Joan - Yeah, I love L7, but they haven't had a hit. So I guess there is this
glass, I don't know if you want to say ceiling, but this partition that
makes it very difficult for women to actually do it, to actually play hard
rock. It's one thing to say, "Oh I'm a woman and I play guitar" well if it's
pop music or if it's acoustic rock, which I have a problem with.
MRZ - What about lillith? What do you think of Lilith? Why weren't you on the
Lillith tour, that's what I want to know? I'm p.o.ed that you weren't on the
Lillith tour.
Joan - Well you know there's a couple ways to go with that you could say. Ad
some hard rock to it and make it all compassing which is an interesting
idea, or I don't know. I think the whole setup was a little too light at
the time and I think that I just wanted to just not be involved and let it
be what it was.
L7 and I have been rehashing, talking over maybe doing some kind of thing
like that, a hard rock version. But do a small version, not even to think
of filling up stadiums or even a big place. Maybe just using clubs. For
example, L7 and us going out and at each city getting a couple of girl
bands or bands with girls in them or just some such thing and going across
the county like that. It's just and Idea.
I don't know why girls aren't doing it. It's just frustrating. I think
that if people take any kind of shit that I took while I was in the
Runaways, I would say that's the reason, because they would start getting
judgments about their character. Getting judgments about their sexuality.
It's completely unfounded. It's just based on the fact that they're playing
electric guitar. Most people don't what to deal with that, so they take the
easy way out, they decide to do something else.
MRZ - What are your plans in the future, movies or music?
Joan - Hopefully a little bit of both. I plan to stay in music. I plan to
keep making records.
MRZ - Are you writing songs?
Joan - Yes I am. I'm actually going to take a couple months after this tour
to try to rejuvenate myself, but by the spring I'll be ready to go again.
MRZ - You've talked about how much the Runaways had to fight for respect and
never got any. I've read recent articles about you and I'm totally struck
on how patronizing it often is that they always say, "Would you believe
that Joan Jett is a smart business woman. And would you believe she's
influenced fashion and all of that sort of thing. So do you feel that you
are getting the respect now?
Joan - You know, you can't judge the respect from what the press says. You
guys take this with a grain of salt. You know the press if fickle. One
week they say Joan Jett's smart or whatever. And as soon as they have
something bad to say, they say it. It's more about what they people think.
I've always felt good about what the people think of my. They let me know
that they're behind me.
You know I don't care if the world thinks I'm smart or not. I happen to
invest and the press picked up on it. It's smart if I make money, it's dumb
if I don't, right.
I don't know if I'm getting the respect. It depends on who you're asking,
The press write about it and the press write about certain things, but I
don't know if that equates respect. You have to ask the press people who
are writing it if they really respect me or if they're writing it because
it's their assignment.
MRZ It seems like there's such a bias against rock period these days unless
it's some a homogenized, hybridized thing. You were talking about the glass
ceiling for L7 or some of the girl bands. It seems to me that it's much just
because they're much raw rock as it is their gender at this point. What do
you think about that?
Joan - Well you know the thing that I did noticed, I'll use the word rock as
appose to rock 'n' roll, because rock 'n' roll implies movement A lot of
that rock stuff I was hearing a couple of years ago was very mid tempo,
very boring. You know like plodding, plodding, too much plodding.
I think you need three minute, up-tempo good songs, good chorus. That's
what you need. When you got that, you can't fight that. And you have a
record company behind it, this is a key too, you need people to fight for
your records, at least a little bit. So if you have a great song, it's
catchy, and you've got a little bit of help, I think that's all you need.
But there hasn't been that in music.
I don't know the name of the song, I could almost hum it but I don't know
if I could, but it was... uhmm a few songs that I've heard in the last four
months, very catchy. I don't know if I would call them rock 'n' roll, but
they're rock, very catchy things on the radio, so I think that there is
opportunity for that. It's all just a matter of having the material out
there.
*MRZ - Joan Jett is so synonymous with rock 'n' roll, that when people talk
about you they talk about rock 'n' roll. I'd like to know other things about
you, what other things are you into.
Joan - That's what I want to figure out. That's why I want to take time off to
deal with it. I've been doing this stuff for so long it's the one aspect of
my life that I've paid attention to and really sort of not paid attention to
the rest of it. So now I need to take a little time and start to find out,
who am I. Besides the person who is on stage, besides this person who plays
guitar.
I love sports. I love animals. I love kids. I want to save the world. So
how do I combine all those things? I don't know. I like to hang out with
my friends. I love music. I like to go to the movies. I like to eat. I
like to cook.
So I'm going to figure out all these other things, the things you just asked
me. What else do I like to do? I need to start working on that instead of
being so regimented, only accessing one aspect of myself. Slow down a little
bit.
MRZ - So I should ask you again in another six months?
Joan - Yeah do that.
Joan first gained notoriety as a member of the female rock 'n' roll band,
the Runaways. After the Runaways broke up Joan went to England and while
there she cut three songs with ex-Sex Pistols Paul Cook and Steve Jones,
two of which came out as a single in Holland only. (The third song was I
Love Rock'n'Roll.)