T
The Go-Go’s made history in March 1982 when their brilliant debut album, Beauty and the Beat, climbed to the top of the Billboard 200 chart. They duly became the first all-female group who wrote their own songs and played their own instruments to score a number one album in the US. Nearly 40 years later, no other instrument-playing all-female band has managed to match their achievement, sadly, though The Bangles came close in 1986 when their Different Light album peaked at number two.
More like this:
– Pop music’s greatest philosopher
– Dusty Springfield’s remarkable comeback
Though the term ‘girl power’ hadn’t been invented when The Go-Go’s were scaling the charts – it was coined by riot grrrl band Bikini Kill in 1991, then adopted by The Spice Girls half a decade later – The Go-Go’s displayed exactly the kind of fearless, ‘take us or leave us’ quality that we now associate with the phrase. They created their own space in a male-dominated corner of the music world – in their case, the rough-and-ready LA punk scene, where they formed in 1978 – and transcended it with a mix of sisterhood, spirit and irrepressible pop songs.