The Columbus Dispatch

Joan Jett still struggling to spread her music

- By Glenn Gamboa Newsday

Joan Jett and Kenny Laguna — her longtime producer and songwritin­g partner, as well as the keyboardis­t in her band, the Blackheart­s — know they are still making good music. They just wish more people would get to hear it.

“We’re trying to figure out a way to work on the single ‘Fresh Start,’ which I think is the best thing we’ve done in years and years,” Laguna said of the theme song from the Jett documentar­y “Bad Reputation,” released last year.

“It’s very hard for people of our era to get on mainstream radio. … I don’t resent it at all, like some of our friends. People who are so iconic, like the Stones or Bruce Springstee­n — they’re not getting on the radio. When I was a kid and buying Joan Jett

rock and roll records, my parents were freaked out that their idols were off the radio. No more Doris Day, sorry. That’s what happens.”

“We keep trying,” adds Jett, 60, who has called Long Beach, New York, home for decades. “What else are you going to do? You just have to try. Keep fighting.”

After all, that’s what the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer has been doing for pretty much her entire career. So why stop now?

“We keep waiting for our George Foreman moment,” said Laguna, referring to Foreman knocking out Michael Moorer in 1994 to regain the title of heavyweigh­t champion of the world at the age of 45.

For Jett, though, getting another hit isn’t the point.

“You realize that the idea of ‘a hit’ is a whole business thing going on that has nothing to do with what is the best, the most fun songs that people want to hear,” she says. “It just doesn’t work that way.”

“Joan never had a hit,” Laguna began.

“Without a struggle,” finished Jett.

Her commercial success such as “I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll” and “Do You Wanna Touch Me?” only came after fans demanded that radio play them.

“The song had to be unstoppabl­e,” Laguna said. “Like when radio played ‘Do You Wanna Touch Me?’ the phones lit up. … ‘Crimson and Clover’ probably wouldn’t have existed if ‘I Love Rock ‘n’ Roll’ didn’t come first. They only had to play it once and they would get the requests.”

Neverthele­ss, Jett has always connected most with her fans through her tours. And this summer will be no different, as Joan Jett & the Blackheart­s hit the road with Heart. They will visit Ohio on Aug. 4 when the tour comes to Blossom Music Center near Akron.

“It’s a good bill,” Jett said. “It wasn’t in the forefront of my mind that it was all women. That wasn’t my initial response. I was just into it. It should be a blast.”

Laguna added: “Before Joan was an iconic star or even had a hit, when we’d run into them on different shows, they were always especially nice. Not every act was, so they stood out. They got what Joan was doing.”

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[ANDY KROPA/INVISION]

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