Chrissie Hynde knows a few things about being a female rocker. When at the tender age of 14 she saw Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels play at a fairground in her hometown of Akron, Ohio, the band got into a fistfight with each other during the performance. She was hooked. âI thought,â she said to The Guardian ‘That’s got to be the life!’”
Not long after college at Kent State, where she was in a band with Devoâs Mark Mothersbaugh, she ended up in London. There she worked at Malcolm McLarenâs notorious store SEX alongside the future members of The Sex Pistols. She even asked Sid Vicious and Johnny Rotten to marry her for the work visa. She tried to start a band with Mick Jones of The Clash, but that didnât take. She was kicked out of the band Masters of the Backside before they changed their name to The Damned and became famous. Then in 1978, she formed the band The Pretenders and quickly became a rock icon with hit tunes like “Donât Get Me Wrong” and “Message of Love.”
In short, Hynde has been rocking for over 40 years now and she has some advice for aspiring lady rockers, which was originally printed as a promo for her 1994 release “Night in my Veins.”
1. Donât moan about being a chick, refer to feminism or complain about sexist discrimination. Weâve all been thrown down the stairs, and fâed about, but no one wants to hear a whining female. Write a loosely disguised song about it instead and clean up. ($ )
2. Never pretend to know more than you do. If you donât know chord names, refer to the dots. Donât go near the desk unless you plan on becoming an engineer.
3. Make the other band members look and sound good. Bring out the best in them; thatâs your job. Oh, and you better sound good too.
4. Do not insist in [sic] working with âfemales.â Thatâs just more b.s. Get the best man for the job. If it happens to a woman, great â youâll have someone to go to department stores with on tour instead of making one of the road crew go with you.
5. Try not to have a sexual relationship with the band. It always ends in tears.
6. Donât think that sticking your boobs out and trying to look fâable will help. Remember youâre in a rock and roll band. Itâs not âfâme,â itâs âfâyouâ!
7. Donât try to compete with the guys; it wonât impress anybody. Remember, one of the reasons they like you is because you donât offer yet more competition to the already existing male egos.
8. If you sing, donât âbeltâ or âscreech.â No one wants to hear that sh–; it sounds âhysterical.â
9. Shave your legs, for chrissakes!
10. Donât take advice from people like me. Do your own thing always.
A lot of this is just sound advice for getting along at the workplace â donât act like you know more than you do, donât complain, make your workmates look good but donât doink them. But probably the key points for Hynde is number one and number seven.
In that interview with the Guardian, she indeed proved to be reluctant to âmoanâ about sexual discrimination in the rockdom. “There’s always been women doing this, just not that many,â she said. âI don’t know what the feminists have to say about it. Over the years, you’d hear, ‘We weren’t encouraged.’ Well, I don’t think Jeff Beck’s mother was saying, ‘Jeffrey! What are you doing up in your room? Are you rehearsing up there?’ No one was ever encouraged to play guitar in a band. But I never found it harder because I’m a woman. If anything I’ve been treated better. Guys will carry my guitars and stuff â who’s going to say no? Guys always tune my guitars, too.”
Check out the video for “Night in my Veins” below:
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Jonathan Crow is a Los Angeles-based writer and filmmaker whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The Hollywood Reporter, and other publications. You can follow him at @jonccrow. And check out his blog Veeptopus, featuring lots of pictures of badgers and even more pictures of vice presidents with octopuses on their heads.  The Veeptopus store is here.
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Chrissie Hyndeâs 10 Pieces of Advice for âChick Rockersâ (1994)
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