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Kenny Laguna is Joan Jett's longtime manager, collaborator,
producer and friend. Kenny first met Joan in 1979 at the Riot
House on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California. Initially
he was asked to meet and produce what turned out to be the last
Runaways album, Joan's former band. The Runaways were a group of
five teeneage girls from Southern California formed by Jett and
Runaways drummer Sandy West. Commercial success eluded the band
in America, but they found massive success in Japan, where the
group recorded their legendary live album Live in Japan in 1977.
The Runaways gave their last performance New Year's Eve 1978 in
San Francisco. In the spring of 1979, Joan was in England trying
to get a solo project going. While there, she cut three songs
with ex-Sex Pistols Paul Cook and Steve Jones, two of which came
out as a single in Holland only. (The third song, "I Love
Rock'n'Roll" was included on the 1993 "odds and sods" release
Flashback.) Back in Los Angeles, Joan produced the debut album
by local punk rockers, the Germs and acted in a movie based on
the Runaways (with actresses playing the rest of the band)
called We're All Crazy Now! (the title was taken from the Slade
song). The movie was never released, but one good thing came out
of the project, Joan met Kenny Laguna. "Her old manager called
me and wanted to know if I would be willing to write some songs
in a hurry with Joan Jett," recalled Kenny. "My wife, Meryl,
told me that I should go and meet Joan because she really liked
what she had been reading about her in the press. So I went to
Los Angeles and checked into the Riot House and in walked Joan
Jett. That's how I met her. We wrote some songs that weekend,
one of which was "You Don't Know What You Got.""
"Even before meeting Joan, I used to know the Runaways' old
manager, who was a publicist I met through The Who organization.
They wanted me to produce one of their albums. I remember that I
was actually going to the airport to fly to Amsterdam and meet
them when I ran into Matthew King Kaufman of Beserkly's Records
in the lobby of the hotel I was staying in. He offered to drive
me to the airport and on the way he said, 'Look, you could go to
Amsterdam and meet a band you're not even confirmed with or you
could come to San Francisco, California and produce Greg Kihn
with me.' At the time I thought that was a better idea, so I
went to San Francisco instead. I did hear from the Runaways once
during the recording of their album because they weren't happy
with what was going on and they wanted me to jump in, but I
didn't. I wound up forgetting the whole thing until their old
manager called and wanted me to write with Joan. He was very
concerned about a $5000.00 investment he had in her and he
wanted to make sure he got that back. He said a few things about
Joan like she was wild and other nasty things that eventually
got back to her. She was a little unhappy with him. Then she ran
into Steve Leber from Leber/Krebs. Steve thought she was a star
and wanted to manage her, so she flew to New York and stayed at
my house. Steve's partner decided that punk rockers were Nazis
and he didn't want one in the office. So here I was with this
girl who had fired her manager and didn't have anyone to do
business for her."
Initially, Kenny was interested only in co-writing with Joan and
producing an album for her. "I never wanted to be called a
manager," stated Kenny. "I date back to a time when the manager
was your buddy from high school who carried your bags. I wanted
to be known as a producer. I figured we'd do a little shit
together and forget about it like I normally did as an
independent producer. Joan and I went to a few managers, one of
them was a really big guy who stole a song idea of ours, another
guy did this, one did that, and by the time we were done we had
finished the album, but we still hadn't found a manager. I
became her manager because I was doing a lot of the work
unofficially for a while and getting more and more involved."
Joan's solo debut with Laguna and Ritchie Cordell producing,
using the Jones-Cook British tracks plus guest musicians Sean
Tyla and Blondie's Clem Burke and Frank Infante was released in
Europe only simply entitled, Joan Jett. The album was rejected
by no less than 23 major and minor labels, before Joan and Kenny
decided to release it independently on their own Blackheart
label. "I really dug Joan and I thought she was really talented.
It really got me that no-one would sign her to the point that it
pissed me off. I thought she really deserved it. It was very
discouraging because every label turned her down. We couldn't
think of anything else to do, but print up records ourselves,
and that's how Blackheart Records started. It was more or less
Joan's idea to do it ourselves."
Joan and Kenny used their personal savings to press records and
set up their own system of independent distributors. Kenny was
unable to keep up with demand for Joan's album, yet no American
record company was even remotely interested in signing Joan.
Eventually the album was picked up by Neil Bogart who signed
Joan to his new label, Boardwalk Records. He re-released the
album in January of 1981 under the new title Bad Reputation. The
album was given adequate distribution and was a moderate
success, bearing witness to Joan's spirited sense of commitment.
With Kenny's assistance, Joan formed The Blackhearts with three
obscure New York area musicians: Gary Ryan on bass, Eric Abel
(replaced shortly thereafter by Rick Byrd) on guitar and Lee
Crystal on drums. After almost a year of touring, Joan's first
album with the Blackhearts, entitled I Love Rock'N'Roll came out
in December of 1981. The album included a version of "Little
Drummer Boy" on the pre-Christmas editions. The album's impact
on the music scene was immediate with the LP reaching the Top
Five, while the single "I Love Rock'n'Roll" hit the very top of
the Billboard's Charts on March 20, 1982 and stayed #1 for 7
weeks. Joan Jett had come back from nowhere.
Through it all, one thing has remained consistent in Joan Jett's
career and personal life - Kenny Laguna. He was there at the
beginning and has weathered the good times and the bad. "We're
very good, close friends. In the world that I live in, loyalty
is one of the most important things. There's never been a
thought of walking away from Joan, although I've heard it before
and been advised many times to walk away. It's like this is my
friend and regardless of what the business is, I'm going to stay
with my friend. We have a mutual respect for one another and
we've never been in competition. We both feel that the other is
really the better. There's never a rivalry about who wrote what
or who wrote more. Our friendship and respect is what holds it
all together," says Kenny.
"We have a business that is a partnership. I do more of the
management than Joan does, but there's a lot about the
management that is defined by Joan. A lot of the artistry that I
get involved in, or the production Joan gets involved in even
might not be credited. We do everything along with Meryl
(Laguna) as a team. For people to understand, everybody’s roles
are defined on the record jackets and for business. It's my job
as the manager to take the heavy shit, but a lot of the business
decisions come directly from Joan and Meryl."
And now, 15 years since Joan first met Kenny the two still share
a love for what brought them together in the first place: music.
"We have a unique relationship that sometimes has incredible
advantages. We've been together so long that we have a real
understanding about what kind of music we should do together;
which is a little bit of my pop sensibility and a little bit of
her punk sensibility split right down the middle. It's been
termed POWER PUNK but whatever it is, it is our unique hybrid of
"Yummy Yummy" meets The Germs."
During Joan's career, she's worked with the Sex Pistols, the
Beach Boys, Paul Westerberg, L7 and Bikini Kill to name a few,
had a number one hit with "I Love Rock'n'Roll" plus a string on
Top 40 hits, looking back on Joan's career as a whole, Kenny
remembered several events that stand out. "Obviously 'I Love
Rock'n'Roll' exploding and becoming a big record was an
incredible moment. We played a stadium when 'I Love Rock'n'Roll'
was hot in England, and I turned to my right and there was David
Bowie and Freddie Mercury standing there. I thought that was an
incredible moment. Going to East Germany was special too because
Joan was the first act, musician, poet or anything to go there.
She refused to have any publicity on it, she just wanted to go
there and play for the fans. Joan getting the movie role over
any actress and singer in Hollywood for 'Light of Day' was a
wonderful and satisfying moment. Headlining for 60,000 people in
Thailand was really good. The most incredible moment on
promoting a record was 'I Hate myself for Loving You' which was
left for dead. It was the longest developing record in 1988 and
was a very record hard to break. Those are the best ones if you
can get them. That was a very special moment."
Now, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts have a brand new album, Pure
and Simple . The band seem to never stop touring, "We're
breaking a record right now," noted Kenny. "Radio is a little
bit resistant, but we'll overcome that. Television and the press
love Joan. We're having a very good year and a very bad year all
at once. We're going to break this record. I'm hoping that Joan
will take some time out and do one of the many movies offered to
her. She's been sort of resistant because she doesn't want to
give up so much of her rock and roll life, but evidently I hope
we find a movie that fits into the schedule nicely. We received
a few offers for parts in movies by famous directors, but for
different reasons we were held back. Light of Day was not what
we were looking for in a movie role because it was a rock thing.
It wasn't Joan she was playing, but we want to find something
where she can use her immense acting talent and be somebody
other than Joan Jett and that's a key factor. Also, Joan doesn't
want to be compromised. For instance, we had a Robert DeNiro
film that was offered to Joan a few years ago, but there was a
nude scene that Joan didn't feel was appropriate. They wanted to
use a body double and she thought that was just as weird.
There's nothing wrong with Joan's body, it's really special, but
she didn't want to be compromised that way. Unfortunately, to do
movies, most of the time they want the woman to get undressed at
some point in the movie. We did do an episode of 'The
Highlander' which was sort of a co-incidence because we were in
Vancouver, Canada writing with Jim Vallance and we kept getting
calls through our New York office. We talked to those guys for
about two days when we asked where it was going to be filmed and
they said Vancouver. We were already in Vancouver and that iced
it for us. It was no big deal."
Joan Jett and the Blackhearts have a new record deal with Warner
Brothers, but Joan and Kenny plan to continue to independently
release albums by other artists through Blackheart Records. "We
have a Characters record that just came out, maybe a Noise Boys
and hopefully another Metal Church record. Sometimes we release
records through Blackheart because we like the people, other
times because we like the music. Either way, we want to keep the
Blackheart label going as an outlet for bands who otherwise
wouldn't have a chance." Over the years, Joan Jett has remained
honest to her vision of true rock and roll. She is unique and
continues a career that has never been influenced by style or
passing fashions. "I would like people to know that Joan is
still very young. People tend to think that she's old because
she's been around for so long, but she started in this business
as a teenager. It's important to know she did start so young,"
noted Kenny. "People should know that Joan doesn't do any
commercials whatsoever. She doesn't do any product placement
because she thinks it's sneaky. I would say that she has turned
down at least 10 million dollars in endorsements because the
product people like her and know the fans trust her. Joan's
integrity is untouchable. There's no way that money could ever
make a difference to her. Joan is a very good person, very
sincere and what you see is always what you get without
manipulation or pretence. She also has a lot of concerns for
charities. She does a lot of children's charities and works with
widows and orphans. She does a lot of things all the time that
aren't well known without any publicity, but that's the way Joan
wants it."
Of course, there will be another record, another world tour, a
possible movie role, but regardless of where Joan's career may
lead, you can be sure that her long time friend, Kenny Laguna
will always be there for her.
A special mention must be made of the contributions of Meryl
Laguna.
Probably the first woman to be an artist manager of a major
modern rock act was Meryl Laguna. Meryl had worked with Kenny
Laguna and other singer/songwriters since the mid-sixties, when
she met Kenny in junior high school.
In 1979, Meryl read about Joan Jett in the rock press and
thought she was significant. After the Runaways broke up, it was
Meryl who convinced Kenny to meet Joan and get involved in her
career.
Meryl was clearly a pioneer in the 80s' video explosion,
overseeing the creation of all Joan's videos, many of which were
ground breaking during the birth of the MTV age. She has also
directed all the LP covers and art in the packages.
Meryl worked with Joan and helped refine her hard core
leatherwear and bridge the gap between punk and high fashion.
She embellished the studs and leather look for Joan with the
legendary Norma Kamali.
Meryl has also managed Metal Church, Darlene Love and other
acts.
-- David Snowden |