Rock Goddess

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Rock Goddess
Origin London, England
Genres Heavy metal
Years active 1977–1987, 1994–1995, 2009, 2013.
Labels A&M, JID, Thunderbolts
Associated acts The Jody Turner Band.
Website Rock Goddess website
Members Jody Turner, Julie Turner, Tracey Lamb.
Past members Donnica Colman, Kat Burbella, Dee O’Malley, Julia Longman, Beckie Axten, Jackie Apperley, Mika, Isabella Fronzoni, Aki Shibahara, Nicky Shaw.

Rock Goddess are an all-female heavy metal band from the New Wave of British Heavy Metal era who enjoyed cult status in the 1980s in Great Britain and who have recently reformed.

History

The band was formed in Wandsworth, South London in 1977, by sisters Jody Turner (guitar and vocals) and Julie Turner (drums) when they were thirteen and nine years old respectively.[1] They recruited school friend Tracey Lamb on bass guitar and that completed their first line-up. Later Donnica Colman joined, adding a second guitar, and after her departure, Jackie Apperley replaced her, also on a second guitar. After Jackie left the girls rehearsed intensively as a trio, and placed a track on a sampler album, which circulated in the London music underground.[1] Meanwhile, manager John Turner, Jody and Julie's father, who had a music shop and rehearsal rooms, used his musical connections to get the band their first gigs. Finally, after an appearance at the Reading Festival in 1982, the band obtained a recording contract with A&M.[1]

They released their eponymous debut album with producer Vic Maile in 1983, and at that time there were temporary legal problems - Julie Turner was still a minor attending school and she was restricted in the number of live shows she could play.[1] Also in this period, Kat Burbella briefly joined the band as a second guitarist, and Tracey Lamb became disgruntled and quit Rock Goddess, initially forming the band She with Burbella, but then joining Girlschool in 1987. She was replaced by Dee O'Malley, who played bass and keyboards on the band's second album, Hell Hath No Fury, produced by Chris Tsangarides that was released in 1984. The band co-headlined with Y&T, supported Iron Maiden and Def Leppard on UK and European tours and embarked on their own headlining tours. O'Malley announced her pregnancy just before Rock Goddess' first US tour and left the band, and Rock Goddess left A & M records with their third album unfinished and unreleased.%.[2] She was replaced by Julia Longman on bass and Becky Axten on keyboards.[1]

A fourth album was released only in France, with the title Young and Free, however, due to insurmountable problems Rock Goddess disbanded shortly thereafter. In 1988, the Turner sisters reappeared as The Jody Turner Band with two male musicians, but they did not go beyond the local club circuit.[2] Jody Turner fronted a new line-up of Rock Goddess in 1994, but after a name change to Braindance,[1] the group disbanded again in 1995, after playing their last gig at the Thomas O'Becket public house.

The band reformed in 2009 to play the Hard Rock Hell music festival in Prestatyn, Wales, but were forced to split before they had a chance to perform.[3]

In March 2013 it was announced that the original line up of Jody Turner, Julie Turner and Tracey Lamb had reformed and would start recording a new album [4]

Jody, Julie and Tracey are now on recording their forthcoming album "Unfinished Business".

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "My Angel" (1983) - UK No. 64[5]
  • "I Didn't Know I Loved You (Till I Saw You Rock 'n' Roll)" (1984) - UK No. 57
  • "Satisfied Then Crucified"

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 van Poorten, Toine (7 April 2008). "Back To The Past (15): Rock Goddess". Metalmaidens.com. Retrieved 2 January 2011. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Watts, Chris (11 June 1988). "Band of Jo(d)y". Kerrang! 191. London, UK: Spotlight Publications Ltd. p. 10. 
  3. Barton, Geoff (4 September 2009). "News in brief". Classic Rock Magazine. Retrieved 15 January 2011. "Rock Goddess split" 
  4. >http://metaltalk.net/news2012-2/2012752.php
  5. 5.0 5.1 Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 456. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

External links

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