Josie Cotton knows what I want.
For most 80's survivors, Miz C., is primarily known for her novelty cult single, "Johnny, Are You Queer?," as well as a memorable performance in the high school concert sequence of Valley Girl. To cognoscenti of smart-and-sexy retro pop femme vocalists, though, she's also much loved for her debut elpee, Convertible Music. A bouncy pop-rock confection which also featured the choice track, "He Could Be the One," plus a swell remake of "Jimmy Loves Mary Ann," it clearly established Cotton as more than just a One Joke Wonder, even if only the hard-core pop-rock addicts paid attention at the time.
Today, our heroine arrives on the CD racks with Invasion of the B-Girls (Scruffy Records), a ten-track set of theme songs from such 60's & 70's era drive-in features as Russ Meyer's Faster, Pussycat, Kill! Kill! and The Green Slime. While new wave peers like Belinda Carlisle (whose Go-Go's first performed "Johnny" in concert) scramble for dubious pop respectability by attempting to reestablish themselves as serious chanteuses, our Josie keeps focused on stuff that matters. Like girls in go-go boots.
A few of these cuts (e.g., "Maneaters," the theme to Herschel Gordon Lewis's She Devils on Wheels, and "Run Pussy Cat") will most likely be familiar to anyone who's ever attended a Cramps concert – or listened to the bootleg CDs of tunes that these psychobilly greats have taught us. Some are more obscure, though, even to devotees of psychotronic cinema. I've never had the pleasure of viewing Ted V. Mikels' Black Klansman, though judging from its organ-ized heavily relevant theme (performed with early solo Cher-like brio by Cotton), it sounds like a flick I definitely need to see. Ditto Who Killed Teddy Bear?, which sounds like something John Barry or Lalo Schifrin would've tossed off back in the day (check out those swoony real-world strings – straight out of some wannabe James Bond rip-off.)







Article comments
1 - Connie Phillips
Congrats! This article has been forwarded to the Advance.net websites and Boston.com.