Guitar World

THE BANGLES

All Over the Place

- By Bill DeMain

VICKI PETERSON EXPLAINS HOW FOUR BEATLES-CRAZED CALIFORNIA GIRLS WOOED 1984 WITH THEIR POWER-POP DEBUT

GROWING UP IN the Sixties and early Seventies, all the future Bangles were mad for the Beatles. Susanna Hoffs used to pose in front of the mirror, pretending she was on stage with the Fabs. Michael Steele wore a mop-top wig and did skits in school. Debbi and Vicki Peterson dreamed of forming a band that would be the next Beatles.

“As I grew up, instead of wanting to marry Paul McCartney, I wanted to be him,” guitarist/vocalist Vicki Peterson says. “And it was kind of magical that the four of us found each other, because we all shared the same obsession with the British Invasion, and the Beatles especially. They were our musical school. Their songwritin­g structures, harmonizin­g, and even the fact that there were four strong personalit­ies with three lead singers — we wanted to emulate that.”

By the early Eighties they were doing just that, as the Bangs (a lawsuit from another band with the same name forced them to add “les”). On the back of an indie-released EP, they carved out a tuneful niche in LA’s Paisley Undergroun­d scene, gigging at clubs like The Music Machine and Cathay de Grande. When they signed with Police manager Miles Copeland, one of his first moves was to put them on the road, ultimately building chops that would feed into their 1984 debut album All Over the Place.

“That was a magic moment,” Peterson says of the shift to touring life. “He said: ‘How would you like to go on tour with the English Beat?’ It was the opportunit­y we’d been waiting for. Debbi and I were still sharing a one-bedroom apartment in Hollywood, and I was sleeping in the living room. I was still driving a beat-up Volkswagen. So we all quit our day jobs and went on tour. And we toured non-stop.”

But it wasn’t always easy being an opener. “It was either no sound-check, or the promoter didn’t bother telling anyone you were on the bill,” Peterson says. “Then we’d face an audience of pseudo-punkers wanting to hear ska, and they’re looking at this group of girls, thinking ‘What the fuck is this?’ But it built character.”

Back in LA in late 1983, the quartet signed with Columbia, who put them in the studio with David Kahne. Working in Hollywood, at Crystal Sound and Soundcastl­e, Kahne was mostly hands-off, letting them experiment

with arrangemen­ts. “We were not experience­d studio musicians by any stretch,” Peterson says. “We were kind of finding our way as we went. Even though we were building a foundation of what we wanted to sound like instrument­ally, we knew we wanted to do a lot of harmony vocals. That was important to us.”

Although Peterson says the album’s title reflected the band’s feeling that it was stylistica­lly all over the place, today, 40 years on, she says she can hear “more through lines and continuity.” Indeed, with standout tracks “James,” “Hero Takes a Fall” and “Dover Beach,” it’s one of the Eighties’ most tightly constructe­d debuts — a distinct calling card.

At the same time, it’s easy to forget just how out of step the Bangles’ retro-pop sound was with prevailing trends. In May 1984, when the album was released, radio was spinning glossy hits such as Duran Duran’s “The Reflex,” Thompson Twins’ “Hold Me Now” and Madonna’s “Borderline.” “The early Eighties hadn’t fully achieved that critical sonic landscape we associate with the Eighties yet,” Peterson says, “but I didn’t love what was on the radio at all. So we were kind of fighting against that sound. Listening to All Over the Place now, I love how we approached it in a naturalist way. No synthesize­rs or drum machines. At the same time, we sweated over every single moment. We were all so exhausted by the end of it. I remember saying to my boyfriend at the time, ‘I don’t know how anyone ever makes a second record!’”

Of course, the Bangles did make several records, including their 1986 commercial peak Different Light, its singles “Manic Monday,” “Walk Like an Egyptian” and “If She Knew What She Wants” propelling them to stardom via MTV and Top 40 radio.

 ?? ?? The Bangles’ Vicki Peterson on stage in Minnesota, December 9, 1984
The Bangles’ Vicki Peterson on stage in Minnesota, December 9, 1984
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