Sandy West - The Runaways
Sandy drumming in her Runaways heyday (Tom Gold)
SANDY WEST
Sandy West, drummer, was born on July 10,1959.
She died on October 21, 2006, aged 47.
Drummer for the all -girl band the Runaways whose rebellious teenage image
and punk sounds hit the late 1970s with great success

WOMEN playing guitars in rock bands are scarce enough and female
drummers are even rarer, but Sandy West broke the mould. As the drummer
with the all-female Californian group
the Runaways, she developed a simple
but ferocious style which she unleashed with unalloyed glee on such
calculatedly commercial hits as Cherry 'Bomb and Born to Be Bad.
In the male-dominated world of 1970s rock, the group was widely dismissed as
an exploitative novelty act and the manner in which they were marketed as
teenage jailbait was undoubtedly both cynical and crude. Yet although it is
easy to dismiss them as the Spice Girls of their day, they were all proficient
enough on their instruments and co-wrote much of their own material, while
their brattish image was a significant influence on the spate of female-led punk
acts that followed them, including
Blondie, Siouxsie and the Banshees,
the Slits
and X-Ray Spex. By the end of the decade the Runaways had
broken up. However, West proved her serious intent as a rock musician by
continuing not only to drum but also to sing and play guitar with other bands
until struck by serious illness in 2005.
Born in Los Angeles in 1959, (although for several years the date was given
as 1960), she grew up in comfortable affluence in Huntington Beach, a classic
California girl who might have stepped out of a Beach Boys song and spent
her time surfing and skiing. By the age of 14 she had channelled her energies
into music, after her grandfather had bought her a drum kit. Within a year she
had passed an audition for a band being put together by the West Coast pop
entrepreneur and record producer Kirn Fowley.
The Ramones were already making waves on New York's still underground
punk scene and the enterprising Fowley hit upon the idea of creating a female
equivalent. His first recruits were West, the guitarist Joan Jett and the bassist
Micki Steele. and it was as a trio in late 1975 that they made their debut at the
famous Whisky-A-Go-Go on Sunset Strip, opening for another Fowley band,
the Hollywood Stars. West later recalled that they had not settled on a name
at this point and were billed as
the Heavy Metal School girls.
Steeie soon left (subsequently to form
the Bangles) and was replaced by
bassist Jackie Foxx, along with additional recruits, the lead guitarist Lita Ford
and the singer Cherrie Currie. As none of them was older than 16, Fowley
named the new five-piece
the Runaways and fashioned them an image which
suggested if they had not been in a rock band, they would have been locked
up in a girl's reform school as dangerous teenage Lolitas. Such hype could
hardly fail and within weeks Fowley had signed
the Runaways to a deal with
Mercury Records, after a stunt which had them playing a showcase for record
company executives on the roof of a Los Angeles apartment block.
Their self-titled debut album appeared in late summer 1976 and was produced
by Fowley with material co-written by him, teenage lyricist Kari Krome and Jett.
Owing much to the glam-rock ethic of the likes of Suzi Quatro and the Sweet,
the most striking track was Cherry Bomb with its memorably trashy chorus of
"Hello daddy, hello mom, I'm your ch-ch-cherry bomb!"
After a stopover in New York to make their debut at CBGB, famed as the
birthplace of punk,
the Runaways headed for Britain where they proved to be
a sensation, not least when they were arrested following complaints from their
London hotel that they had stolen hairdryers from their rooms.
A second album in similar style called Queens of Noise followed swiftly in early
1977 and as Fowley realised that time was running out with the girls
approaching the grand old age of 18, by the end of the year a third hastily
written and recorded album, Waitin' for the Night, had also been released.
By then, however, Fox and Currie had both left with new recruit, the guitarist
Vicki Blue, leaving Jett and, on occasion, West to take over the vocal duties.
But the bubble burst inevitably, and having broken with Fowley,
the
Runaways
played their final gig in San Francisco on New Year's Eve, 1978.
West continued to perform as a singer, guitarist and drummer fronting the
Sandy West Band. She also released a solo EP. She was planning to record
a new solo album to be produced by Currie when lung cancer was diagnosed
in 2005. The following year she was found to have a brain tumour.
Sandy died on October 21, 2006, aged 47.

(Cheers to Cyril O'Blivion for donating this from the Times)
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