Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Pam Windsor lives in Nashville, Tennessee and writes about music. Suzi Quatro was just 14 years old when she and her sisters began ...
It was 1973. At one end of the spectrum, Carly Simon was releasing her “You’re So Vain” reflections on Warren Beatty, Marvin Gaye was topping the charts with his sexual healing of “Let’s Get It On,” ...
The bass-playing singer and songwriter, Suzi Quatro, is an icon. Maybe not so much in the U.S. where she is best known for her Happy Days role as Leather Tuscadero, backed up by The Suedes and playing ...
This rock doc features a parade of musicians testifying about how radical her arrival as a pioneering female rocker felt in the mid-’70s, though she insists, "I don't do gender." Ultimately, though, ...
Her second album, “Quatro”—issued here by Bell Records 50 years ago this month—charted slightly better, at No. 126. Impressed by her drive, Alice Cooper invited her to open for his band’s 1975 tour.
The world had never seen the likes of Suzi Quatro, rocking her bass in an under-zipped black-leather jumpsuit inspired in part by Elvis Presley in the '68 Comeback Special and in part by Barbarella.
Her second album, “Quatro”—issued here by Bell Records 50 years ago this month—charted slightly better, at No. 126. Impressed by her drive, Alice Cooper invited her to open for his band’s 1975 tour.