Tag: Pat Benatar

  • Pat Benatar- Precious Time 45th Anniversary

    Pat Benatar- Precious Time 45th Anniversary

    One of the blessings that comes with maturity is the confidence to tell the unvarnished truth, and in my classic rock interview to mark  her #1-selling third album Precious Time, Pat Benatar makes a series of eyebrow-raising revelations here In the Studio.

    “It went platinum (1,000,000 sales) in thirteen days,” Pat Benatar states matter-of-factly about her explosive third album Precious Time, while she and hubby/musical director Neil Giraldo reminisce In the Studio. It headed rapidly to the top-selling perch in America by August 1981. There are some powerful perennials on her best-charting collection, including the timeless tortured love rockers “Promises in the Dark” and “Fire and Ice”. No doubt delivered with complete conviction, Pat was just attempting to rebound from a bad first marriage as she was falling in love with her new guitar player. But the real story wasn’t between the sheets.

    “You gotta understand, I was twenty-seven years old. I came off a few years of a very bad relationship, was around a lot of girlfriends who went through hell with (abusive) men. You have to understand that I grew up with the Women’s Movement. I was ready to stretch and flex. I was happenin’ ! (chuckles) So I would inflict serious injury if a guy gave me a lot of crap.” When husband Neil Giraldo recoils in mock horror, Pat quickly adds,”But I’ve mellowed, you see. But I’ve learned to put the glove on the fist. Except I always think that I’m big!” she blurted out in laughter,”I always think that I’m big, I do! When you’re a little person, when you got pushed around on the playground, that makes you into something else that big people don’t have to deal with. And it wasn’t limited to men, it was people in general.”

    It is important at this point to remind you of just how much the business of pop music has changed over the Precious Time of forty-five summers since Pat, identified by the Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock’n’Roll  as “the most popular female rocker in the Eighties”, earned that accolade. “That was when we were doing twelve, even fourteen months (touring). During In the Heat of the Night  we did fourteen months in a row. It was nuts. But that was old way. That’s what you did. There was no MTV. You had to expose what you were doing to everybody and that’s how you did it. I look back on it nowadays and I think, ‘Oh man, that purple zebra leotard. What was I thinking ?!” According to Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo, those who were supposedly on her management and record company team chose sexploitation as a business plan. “Redbeard, you gotta understand, in ’81 the record company was airbrushing ( her photos) ,” Neil says exasperatedly,”They were airbrushing…”

    “My clothes off !” Benatar blurts out.

    “You’re talking about management and the record company,” Giraldo continued,”that she really couldn’t do anything! We were trying to make records, and they were telling us what we can and can’t do, and would play both ends against the middle.”

    “What happened was that I had a record company and a management group who refused to be open-minded,” Pat pointed out.”It was a constant battle with them. I was already gone (figuratively) by the time this record came out. By the time this came out, I was already moving to another place. Except that they weren’t letting me. And at that time they still had control, they had contractual control. I didn’t have a choice at that time. And that was when I said, ‘You can do anything you want, but you can’t make me make records. And if you don’t let me make the kinds of records that I want to make, I WON”T make them anymore.” –Redbeard

  • Pat Benatar- Crimes of Passion- Pat & Neil Giraldo

    Pat Benatar- Crimes of Passion- Pat & Neil Giraldo

    In the court of public opinion, Pat Benatar’s August 1980 second album Crimes of Passion was found guilty  of greatness on all counts. The diminutive diva threw big haymaker hooks with “Treat Me Right”, combination punches “Hit Me with Your Best Shot”, and a post-punk cover of the Rascals’ “You Better Run”, and then countered with the anti-child abuse expose’ “Hell is for Children”. And that was just side one.

    The first time I interviewed Pat Benatar about her August 1979 debut In the Heat of the Night, plus the breakthrough second album Crimes of Passion,  she was very wary of being interviewed by a stranger and visibly uncomfortable. It didn’t take long to understand why: Rolling Stone’s Encyclopedia of Rock’n’Roll states unequivocally in its opening line, “Pat Benatar was the most successful female rocker of the 1980s.” What should be added is that she was probably the most exploited, as well. After the diminutive singer appeared on the covers of both her 1980 second album, Crimes of Passion  and Rolling Stone  that year dressed in a leotard, Pat Benatar did for Danskin sales what Guns’n’Roses would later do for the tattoo industry.

    Pat Benatar and her second album, Crimes of Passion,  were big “hits” in 1980, but her success, and the ensuing scrutiny, became so much more than mere popular music. The diminutive yet fiery singer is joined here In the Studio  with guitarist/co-writer Neil Giraldo for the real stories behind “Treat Me Right”, “Hell is for Children”, the rockin’ Rascals cover “You Better Run”, and the career haymaker “Hit Me with Your Best Shot”.
    Having grown up in the performance world of opera, live theater, and cabaret before embracing rock, the leotard and leg warmers were no less a common practical uniform than was the waitress whites and apron she donned while struggling in New York City to make ends meet after a failed marriage. But while Benatar’s management, record label, and new media sensation MTV all co-dependently promoted her as a ballsy chick sexpot, the burgeoning women’s lib movement was pointing to Pat as a sexist stereotype that objectified women! All the while Benatar was breaking the band taboo of falling in love with her musical director/co-writer, guitarist Neil Giraldo. Hear how Pat Benatar risked it all for artistic integrity and true love in my classic rock interview  detailing In the Heat of the Night plus Crimes of Passion-Redbeard

  • 20 More Rock Hall Snubs

    20 More Rock Hall Snubs

    More of your favorite classic rock interviews from stars  who have been omitted, prevented, blocked, denied, ignored, blacklisted, jilted, overlooked, underloved, and still not invited to the party at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Time will tell if recent changes at the very top of the Rock Hall’s entrenched leadership will mitigate any of the induction controversies. Meanwhile, here are “20 More Rock Hall Snubs ”  from In the Studio. Redbeard

    ( Doobie Brothers happy not to be on this list anymore )