Lita Ford is ripping open the vault and sharing music no one has
heard
yet. Ford, a Grammy-nominated artist who recently accepted Guitar
Player's Lifetime Achievement Award and is one of the youngest
living
legends in rock 'n' roll, is celebrating four decades of music.
She is releasing Living Like a Runaway: Lita Ford, A Memoir,
documenting her
journey from all-girl band The Runaways to major solo successes.
Ford
is also offering an audio complement in the form of Time .
.
This "throwback" record boasts identifiable voices and brilliant
players jamming without any planning or pressure. Some of the
album's
highlights: Billy Sheehan playing bass and Rodger Carter on
drums;
Dave Navarro playing a mandolin; Jeff Scott Soto singing a duet
with
Ford; Rick Nielsen and Robin Zander of Cheap Trick actually
singing
backing vocals; and KISS' Gene Simmons ripping the bass.
The album is a time of the fertile and whisky-soaked
pre-grunge period that so many rock fans have continued affection
for.
Time is Ford's gift to fans who love the '80s, when
thrilling
vocal performances, raunchy riffs, and loud, growling guitars
were as
essential as oxygen.
In these "lost" s, you hear what happens when insanely
talented musicians get drunk, hang out, end up in a room together
with
a "Screw it, let's play" mentality, minus the click tracks or
label
execs breathing down their necks, looking for the single or the
"hook."
"There was a shitload of these 24-track analog tapes in the
closet in
my house [in the islands]," Ford recalls. "This is some of the
best
work I've ever done and it was sitting there. I grabbed two
suitcases
and took them back to the United States."
Imagine Ford dragging a pair of suitcases full of analog tapes
through
the Caribbean dirt back to Los Angeles, so, as she recalls, "we
could
bake these fuckers," due to their age. "If you just put them on
the
reel, they would flake. I was chewing my fingernails, thinking,
'Please work!' And they did!"
Time was made ally among the most badass and
gifted
musicians from the '80s. There was no back and forth emailing of
parts
this was done in real time, drinks in hand.
As for exactly how the songs came to be, she muses, "We had a
break
between s and it seemed so many us were always in the
same
place, at the same time. George Tutko was one hell of an
engineer,
coming off the platinum-selling Lita album. He asked me, 'Who
will
produce?' I will, because I knew George had my back and I wasn't
alone
on this."
Participation happened spontaneously. She remembers how one
recruitment went down, saying, "Dave Navarro walks by. We grab
him and
tell him, 'Play something on this song. Here, play this
mandolin!' And
boom! He does it."
She furthers, "These s have attitude. All of these rock
stars
were in the local studios. There's also Cheap Trick the
identifiable voices of Rick Nielsen and Robin Zander singing
backing
vocals. Gene Simmons played on and co-wrote 'Rotten to the Core.'
W.A.S.P. Chris Holmes is in the introduction to the album and is
the
first thing you hear, stomping around looking for the keys to his
'Ford.' Billy Sheehan was one of my best friends, and I asked him
what
he was doing. I said, 'Want to play bass?' We didn't know how
long it
would take; we were simply having fun."