The Bangles
Originally "Colours," "the Supersonic
Bangs" and "the Bangs", the all singing/all performing
four-woman the Bangles formed in 1981 and sprung from the L.A. paisley
underground scene. Later they traded their garage band roots for a slick,
heavily-produced pop sound that turned them into one of the most successful
chart groups of either gender during the '80s.
In the beginning, the group played original, '60s-based guitar rock, and
were fond of covering Big Star, the Merry Go Round and Love. Sisters Debbi
and Vicki Peterson on drums and bass respectively, and singer/guitarist
Susanna Hoffs started the group when the sisters responded to a want-ad
placed by Hoffs; later they added Annette Zilinskas on bass.
The scruffy girl group self-released the single "Getting Out of Hand,"
which sounded like a lost song by the Mamas and the Papas and followed
it with a loose, four-song pop EP on IRS before getting signed to Columbia.
All Over the Place was produced by David Kahne and released in 1984, once
the band had been given an all-over clean-up. By that time, Zilinskas
had left the fold to join Blood on the Saddle and former Runaway Michael
Steele was added to the lineup.
For the second album, 1985's Different Light, the band were aided by Prince
(or "Christopher," as he was known during that phase) with his
song "Manic Monday," which charted at number two and paved the
way for the follow-up smash, "Walk Like an Egyptian," which
went to number one and sent the album to the top of the charts. There
was a sexist assumption among some critics that the successful female
group couldn't really play and needed studio and live assistance, but
as with any slick chart band, sessionmen were in fact credited, beginning
on the second album. Future Black Crowes' producer George Drakoulias was
enlisted to play the guitar lead for their next single, a cover of Simon
& Garfunkel's "Hazy Shade of Winter," from the Less Than
Zero soundtrack which reached number one in 1987. At the same time, Hoffs
appeared in a b-movie, The Allnighter, and it garnered the band some undesirable
attention, but the follow-up album, Everything, spawned another number
one, "Eternal Flame," in 1988.
The band packed it in due to the usual artistic differences in 1989 --
the Peterson's sibling harmonies were what gave the group their unique
sound, but singer Susanna Hoffs was often considered the focal point and
it contributed to the tension. Vicki Peterson sang with the Continental
Drifters and filled in for Charlotte Caffey during 1994's Go-Go's reunion
tour; Hoffs recorded two solo albums since the band's breakup, When You're
a Boy in 1991 and a self-titled record in 1996, while Debbie Peterson
and Steele continued to work with various alternative pop groups. The
Bangles officially re-formed in the summer of 2000, announcing tour dates
and plans for a new studio album. ~ Denise Sullivan, All Music Guide
Contact
a Bangles Agent now to book
The Bangles to appear at your next corporate, private
or special event!
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