The Pandoras

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Pandoras were an all-female rock and roll band from Los Angeles, California in the 1980s, who began in the garage rock style and later adapted a hard rock style bordering on hair metal.

The Pandoras were formed in 1984 by singer-guitarist Paula Pierce and keyboards Gwynne Kahn (the granddaughter of 1920s/1930s Tin Pan Alley songwriter Gus Kahn). They were associated with the Paisley Underground era in Hollywood's alternative rock scene, along with bands such as Redd Kross, The Three O' Clock, The Dream Syndicate and The Rain Parade. These bands shared an aesthetic heavily influenced by 1960s garage rock and psychedelia, and most (but not all) of the members tended to come from the west side and beach cities areas of Los Angeles County. Pierce, a resident of Chino in San Bernardino County, was a notable exception.

The Pandoras went through many personnel changes, beginning with the bitter departure of Gwynne Kahn in 1985. While Kahn formed a rival Pandoras, which included Lisa Rae Black and Jennifer Finch. The band did have a song released on an Enigma compilation, however the "Gwynndoras" were short-lived.

Pierce's Pandoras included Julie Patchouli on bass guitar, Melanie Vammen on keyboards and Karen Blankfeld on drums, they went to enjoy modest success with the release of Hot Generation on Voxx Records. They toured the east coast to promote the single. In 1986, The Mr. T Experience recorded a song, "I'm In Love With Paula Pierce", for their album, Everybody's Entitled to their Own Opinion.

In 1987, the Bill Inglot-produced Stop Pretending was released on Rhino Records. The song was originally recorded by Pierce with her pre-Pandora's band, Action Now [1]. Julie Patchouli played bass for the beginning of the session. Kim Shattuck played on the latter part of the session and then went on to play guitar and sing for The Muffs, which Vammen joined also.

After being signed by Elektra Records, the Pandoras changed to a much more hard rock type sound with the 1960s influences de-emphasized, targeting the Sunset Strip hair metal crowd. They were dropped almost immediately afterwards, and would continue to play for the rest of the decade. Remarkably, they never managed to alienate their original audience, and continued to be a top live draw outside of Los Angeles. The Pandoras put out an EP on Restless Records which expanded their audience to include "hair metal" fans. During this time the band toured as a five-piece that at times included Rita D'Albert, Susan Hyatt, and Lisa Belltri, all performing on the second guitar. Restless Records released Live Nymphomania, a sound board recording from a 1989 Dallas, TX tour stop. This helped decelerate interest in the band among critics and fans alike. Although the Pandoras still drew large crowds outside of Los Angeles, Pierce couldn't reverse the losing interest in her band. She had fired Melanie Vammen earlier, who joined up with Kim to form The Muffs, Kim having quit in the summer of 1990. When Drummer Sheri Kaplan quit, the Pandoras stopped for about nine months while Pierce regrouped. Pierce had recorded a number of new songs and recruited new members when she died of a brain aneurysm after exercising in her apartment at age 31 in 1991.

[edit] External links