[Warning â some items contain explicit lyric or video content that may offend.] The Listverse archives are full of music-related lists, covering many genres and performers. There are even entire lists devoted to specific iconic acts. My favorites are the rock & roll themed lists, but one thing Iâve noticed is that women are woefully underrepresented; in fact, when it comes to the rock lists, they are all but forgotten. Well Iâm here to rectify that. This list celebrates women who rock. I mean really rock. You wonât see these women performing at Lilith Fair.
My criterion for inclusion on this list is simple: I want women that bring it. And by âitâ, Iâm talking about good olâ balls-to-the-wall hard rockinâ attitude. What? Did I just say âballsâ? On a list about women? Hell yeah I did and every woman on this list has a pair, and if you donât like it, go listen to Britney Spears. For those of you still on the page with me, I hope youâll agree with my choices. Of course I expect there will be some omissions that youâd have liked to see included, so give your shout-outs in the comments. Iâve even refrained from showing my honorable mentions, just so you can have the pleasure of telling me what an idiot I am for âforgettingâ to list your favorite. So turn it up, let it rip, and enjoy!
Kelly Johnson was the original lead guitarist for the British all-girl metal band Girlschool. They enjoyed moderate success in the UK during the fledgling âNew Wave of British Heavy Metalâ era of the late 70s and early 80s. Often tourmates and collaborators with fellow bangers Motörhead, Kelly even dated Lemmy Kilmister for a while (hell man, that alone is enough to put her on this list). They racked up several popular albums, their second effort reaching #5 on the British charts. Unfortunately, Girlschool wasnât quite as popular Stateside, which is too bad because Kelly just lights it up and she deserves way more recognition as one of metalâs more talented guitarists. Seldom seen performing without her customary gold top Les Paul, she wielded the axe with the best of them. Sad to say, after a six-year battle with spinal cancer, Kelly passed away on July 15, 2007 at the age of 49. Hereâs a nice little tribute video to her (the interview portion only lasts for the first 20 seconds or so, the rest is her performing, including a brief glimpse of a nice solo).
[Warning â explicit lyrics] Donita Sparks headed up the Los Angeles-based all girl punk band known as L7. Sheâs one badass chick, and her band just smokes. Their song Fast and Frightening should be the girl-power anthem for women everywhere. I would cite a lyric for you, but youâre gonna have to look it up yourself because Iâm too emasculated to repeat it here. Donita is infamously remembered for dropping trou on the set of the UK television show The Word during a live taping of their song Pretend Weâre Dead. During an outdoor performance by L7 at the 1992 Reading Festival in England, she retaliated in anger at some fans that were throwing mud at her by removing her used tampon on stage and throwing it into the crowd! Enough said? Well for those of you that canât think of a word to describe my list, hereâs a song for you, the studio version of which was featured on the soundtrack of the Oliver Stone film Natural Born Killers.
Heavily influenced by her idol Suzi Quatro, (who some may say is also deserving of a spot on this list), Joan Jett co-fronted the often maligned and little respected mid 70s girl group The Runaways. But Joan proved to be more than a member of some lame novelty act when she achieved stardom after leaving them in 1979 to start her own band The Blackhearts (sorry, fellow Runaways alum Lita Ford doesnât make the cut here). Jett and The Blackhearts scored a number one single in 1982 with their cover of a B-side Arrows tune I Love Rock ân Roll, a song that Jett had earlier tried convincing the Runaways to record. That chart success led to a string of albums and several more Top 40 hit singles. Jett is also involved behind the scenes, producing records for other bands on her own label Blackheart Records. In recent years, the Runaways have gained in stature, as they are recognized as being the first true all-girl rock and roll band and were an inspiration to many future female rockers. Joan is currently executive producer of a Runaways bio-pic that is scheduled for release this year.
[Warning â video images may be objectionable] WOW! Is it a coincidence that those are her initials? Well, that is her real name and it is the only way to describe Wendy Orlean Williams, aka The Queen of Shock. This is not a girl youâd want to bring home to meet your mother. Wendy is one outrageous chick, and was fearless onstage, which often led to controversy. During their heyday of the late 70s and early 80s, she and her band The Plasmatics raised the bar of outrageousness with their brand of high velocity punk fused with heavy metal power. Their wild stage shows included such antics as Wendy blowing up cars, sledge hammering TVs, and chain sawing guitars, often attired in little more than a g-string and strategically placed electrical tape. Oh, and a mohawk. She was arrested twice on obscenity charges, one time being severely beaten by Milwaukee cops. At one point, the group was banned from performing at Londonâs famed Hammersmith Odeon. It might be argued that her bawdy act masked a lack of actual singing talent, but for what itâs worth, she was nominated for a Grammy in 1985 for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance (losing out to number 3 on this list). Unfortunately Wendyâs personal demons got the best of her, and on April 6, 1998 she took her own life at the age of 48.
Ok, before you trip over yourselves rushing to point out an error in my intro, I acknowledge that the Pretenders once did play at Lilith Fair, in 1997. But I donât care, Chrissie still rocks. Her voice kills, sheâs legit on the Teleâ, plus, she blows a mean harp. What more could you want? A big fan of 60s British pop and later inspired by punk and protopunk legends such as, the Pistols, the Clash, VU, and the Stooges, Chrissie moved to London from her native Ohio in the early 70s and put together a great lineup of British musicians, forming a band that went on to release several noteworthy albums during the 80s. The Pretenders were more than a punk band, as she and the boys blended her sultry vocal style with straight-ahead rocking. Unfortunately the band experienced some key personnel losses due to drug problems and overdoses (her 1982 hit Back on the Chain Gang is a tribute to fallen guitarist James Honeyman-Scott) and other lineup changes, but through it all Chrissie has kept the Pretenders going strong. In 2005, the Pretenders were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Jesus died for somebodyâs sins, but not Pattiâs. She definitely marches to the beat of her own drum, with her eclectic personality expressed via performance art, spoken word, poetry readings and improvisational music. Patti was a regular performer at the famed CBGBâs during the burgeoning punk rock scene in mid 70âs New York City, and in fact is often referred to as the âGodmother of Punkâ. Her voice has a haunting quality to it as it crescendos and falls while delivering her often convoluted and seemingly free-form lyrics. She suffered a near-fatal accident in 1977 during a concert, falling off the stage and breaking her neck, but came back in 1978 with her most commercially successful album, Easter. That record also contained her well-intended but controversial song Rock and Roll Nigger, which attempted to redefine the racial epithet in a positive light, but instead subjected her to unappreciative criticism. Overall, Patti holds an important place in rock history, and she was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2007.
[Warning â explicit lyrics] The Gits were an influential early-grunge era punk band on the Seattle scene, fronted by the talented and energy-charged Mia Zapata. Mia held back nothing, and she is often cited as a major influence by many of todayâs harder-edged female performers, as well as being one of the inspirations behind the whole âriot grrrlâ movement. As they were in the process of recording their second album, the Gits seemed to be on the verge of a major commercial breakthrough, but on July 7, 1993, Mia was brutally raped and murdered by an unknown assailant. The crime went unsolved for eight years, until finally cold-case detectives, using newly available technology, were able to match DNA evidence to the killer and put him behind bars. Miaâs legacy and career, brief though it was, lives on in the hearts and minds of hardcore punk musicians and fans alike.
Known as the Queen of Rock & Roll, Tinaâs commercial breakthrough as a major superstar came in 1984 with the release of her solo effort Private Dancer and a number one single in Whatâs Love Got To Do With It. But in my opinion her best work preceded that. Born Anna Mae Bullock, as a teenager in 1957 she met local St. Louis R&B artist Ike Turner and joined his band The Kings of Rhythm as a backup singer. So impressive was she that soon Ike changed her stage name to Tina and renamed his band the Ike & Tina Turner Revue. A modest string of hits followed throughout the 60âs, culminating with a 1972 Grammy award for their single, a cover of CCRâs Proud Mary. They supported the Rolling Stones during their 1969 U.S. tour and are seen performing Iâve been Loving You Too Long in the Stonesâ 1970 film Gimme Shelter. As a duo, they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991. However, unbeknownst to fans, Tina suffered years of physical abuse at the hands of a cocaine addled Ike, and finally in 1976 she left him. As a solo performer, she has since won many awards and accolades. Tina also has several film acting roles to her credit, most memorably playing the character of The Acid Queen (and performing the song of the same name) in the film version of the Whoâs rock opera Tommy, and also a straight acting role as Aunty Entity in Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome. And if none of that is enough to justify a place on this list, then just look at those legs.
If ever there was a goose bump-inducing vocalist for me, it is Janis Joplin. Every performance that Janis gives was pure raw emotion. Her hard drinking and partying lifestyle actually disguised a shy and vulnerable side to her personality, as she was somewhat of an outcast and socially awkward as a child growing up in the small Texas town of Port Arthur. She immersed herself in blues and folk music as a teen and left for San Francisco in 1963. There, she eventually joined the struggling local acid rock band Big Brother and the Holding Company in 1966, and as her addition brought them more attention, it was their landmark performance at the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967 that brought them fame. Her tenure with the band was a short-lived, but is highlighted by their second album Cheap Thrills, which charted to number one in 1968 and is regarded as a classic recording from the psychedelic era of the 1960s. Janis went solo shortly thereafter and recorded another two commercially successful albums but died of a heroin overdose on Oct 4, 1970, just before the release of Pearl. Posthumously, the single Me and Bobby McGee went to number one. This clip is Janisâ amazing performance of Ball and Chain at Monterey. Yes thatâs a mesmerized Cass Elliot in the crowd being blown away by what she just witnessed.
You think the great Aretha Franklin is out of place on this list? Think again. Lady Soul should be tops on any respectable list of female rockers, and mine is no exception. Her powerful voice knows no bounds and she could effortlessly belt out soul, blues, rock, gospel, and R&B numbers with equal aplomb. Who can forget her scene-stealing cameo performance of Think in the classic 1980 movie The Blues Brothers? To date she has won 18 Grammy awards, including a record eleven for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance (and the first eight ever awarded in that category). Sheâs charted numerous Top 10 singles, including two that reached #1. In 1987, she was the first woman to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Recipient of many other prestigious awards and accolades, Aretha is nothing short of a legend.




















sweet list….
This list fails hard.
Here is why:
Sleater-Kinney
Kim Gordon
Kim Deal
Kathleen Hanna
Courtney Love
Submitter should be ashamed of him/hirself.
Ahem…where is Kathleen Hanna of Bikini Kill and Le Tigre!??!?! She definitely needs to be on here!!!!!!
Pat Benetar and Grace Slick must be added!!
@Randall [92]: A few comments for Randall here.
1) I can see your points with Stevie Nicks, but simply because a band is popular and middle of the road doesn’t mean it’s members should be instantly discounted. Like perhaps Grace Slick (see my second point) I think she deserves an honorable mention.
2) I somewhat see your point with Grace Slick. Yes, she did sell out, and sell out cheaply with tripe from “Starship” and to a lesser degree “Jefferson Starship”. But I do think the earlier part of her career should still be considered. One can still play a copy of “Surrealistic Pillow” by Jefferson Airplane and hear when she did rock regardless of the musak (spelling intentional) she put out with Starship in the 80′s. Perhaps her work in the 80′s would disqualify her, but it might still allow her an honorable mention or inclusion in a second list.
3) I do see why Aretha Franklin & Tina Turner are on this list. BUT, I can see why some others might not, AND can see MANY reasons that have nothing to do with racism. To pull the race card out of your behind as the reason is just absurd. Along with the implied “Their race invented rock & roll so they must rock by default”. It seems like YOU’RE the one hung up on race so much more then anyone else here. Simply put, I think most people that don’t feel Aretha or Tina Turner belong on this list simply don’t consider their music rock & roll. It IS possible to have a reason like this and not be racist. If you’re going to do that, then I will try to claim YOU’RE racist for not mentioning any musicians whom are Asian for instance. You must be bigoted against Asians to not come up with any. Now, is that an absurd statement? Yes, my real assumption is simply that you didn’t think of any female Asian rockers. But it’s just as absurd as your claims of racism based on people not understanding why Aretha and Tina Turner are on this list.
@Randall [92] and [134]: I was going to make my comment a lot longer but Blurgle already mentioned most of the points I was going to make.
All I’d like to add is that a) all movements have their cliche and crappy moments. Go ahead and tell me that punk hasn’t had any. Go ahead, and b) I like Heart and I happen to think that Ann Wilson was an awesome vocalist. If she was on this list I wouldn’t be too surprised. Yes, they’re not the greatest rock band in the world, and yes, that IS the riff to “Achilles Last Stand” you hear at the beginning of “Barracuda”, but hey, they’re not half bad. But I guess flaunting your “superior musical tastes” makes you feel good deep down inside. Here, have a freaking medal.
On a different note, I will have to second Karen O, Sleater Kinney, Amy Winehouse, and YES, Grace Slick (I am willing to forgive her for Starship), and a bunch of other suggestions. Definitely agree with a lot of the picks on the actual list. Props for the Girlschool mention and Janis Joplin, but she was an obvious pick.
I like Suzanne Vega a lot but I dunno if I can really say that she “rocks the house”. In middle school I also loved Tarja Turunen and Nightwish, but I don’t know if I can say she rocks the house, either, but she’s definitely an incredible vocalist. Really, all my choices have already been said.
Also, hi, I’m new here and made an account just to post a comment on this list. Definitely one of the best ever.
@Randall [141]:
No one cares what your daughter thinks and a 15 year olds opinion on music is really quite irrelevant. So you take advice from a child as to what is good music and what is not? Given this I bet you also think the Jonas Brothers are “soooooo hot!!!! (LOLS, LMAO, LOLCATZ)” etc etc.
You are a fool.
chrissie hynde..? hell yes! not only did she write tons of classic songs but guess what..the body of her work has not dated itself like half the crap here. she is an amazing vocalist and songwriter. And to boot, when half her band died she didn’t whine about it, instead she picked herself up and perservered through 30 more years. She is a survivor!
Props for kate bush, I’d add exene, freakwater, scrawl, adverts, slits, mary margaret o’hara, throwing muses, kim deal, kim gorden etc….
@Josh [187]:
it sounds to me like his 15 year old daughter knows what she is talking about
Best list ever!
Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth) and Kim Deal (Pixies/Breeders) might be in consideration here
What about Wanda Jackson (the Rockabilly Queen)? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pzJ3hiqsi0U http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFHBQ3LMP4Q&feature=related
Great list, btw
i believe there is a biased here. Most of these women are from at least 20 years ago. It doesn’t seem to me that it would be realistic to say that women just simply stopped rocking at some point. You should have picked at least one woman from the last ten years.
@Josh [187]:
Listen up, jackass. My daughter has five times the brains and taste you have, and I can say that definitively without even knowing you, just by going by the ridiculous bull***** that came out of your mouth. You’re a *****ing moron, quite clearly, and while I should be nice and forgiving to morons, I feel no need to act humanely in your case, as on top of being a moron, you’re also a clueless and rude dick.
A) Got news for you, idiot. Most Rock and Roll IS written for 15 year olds. Rock and Roll is teenage music, or weren’t you aware of that? The fact that adults can enjoy it too doesn’t belie its origins or what it’s really all about.
B) The POINT to what I said is that MY daughter, being a uniquely intelligent, talented, and tasteful creature—unlike you, who is clearly a mouthbreathing lout—finds pop drivel of ALL kinds to be detestable and laugh-inducing. THERFORE, muckhead, NO, she does NOT like the Jonas Brothers. In fact she despises them.
You not only didn’t pick up on this, (which any reasonably intelligent person would have found obvious) but you also had the blathering stupidity to call ME a “fool,” which is itself laughable.
What would further amuse me is if my 15 year old daughter could come on here and thrash you further, which I am quite confident she is more than capable of doing, as she regularly doles out intellectual thrashings to classmates who say unbelievably retarded things… as you have.
@Blurgle [185]:
“Simply put, I think most people that donât feel Aretha or Tina Turner belong on this list simply donât consider their music rock & roll. It IS possible to have a reason like this and not be racist.”
Uh, no. In fact it isn’t.
Turning the racist BS around on to me is a convenient little tactic, but it fails. Failing to acknowledge Tina or Arethra or Etta James or any number of others I could mention AS rock and roll artists because of some white definition of what “rock and roll is and isn’t” is racist, pure and simple.
And for proof, I would like you to attempt to justify and explain how it is that Arethra Franklin ALONE is not “rock and roll.”
@deadzeppelin [186]:
“All Iâd like to add is that a) all movements have their cliche and crappy moments. Go ahead and tell me that punk hasnât had any. Go ahead,”
To what end, chucklehead? What are you trying to argue here? No *****, all movements have crappy moments… and… so? Just how does that negate ANYTHING I said?
“and b) I like Heart and I happen to think that Ann Wilson was an awesome vocalist.”
Well good for you. So happy for you. Yup, no doubt she can carry a tune better than I can. And good for her. Nevertheless, the music she’s churned out in her career is pure crap. From start to finish.
“…but hey, theyâre not half bad. But I guess flaunting your âsuperior musical tastesâ makes you feel good deep down inside. Here, have a freaking medal.”
Yeah, no thanks. I accept no medals, bribes, or renumerations for my services.
And no, clown—my superior musical tastes are what they are–I can’t help being A) right and B) possessed of great taste and wisdom. YOU, however, COULD help being a Heart fan, which is lowbrow and barely defensible.
You like ‘em, good for you. It’s not for me to tell you not to listen to them. But DON’T try to tell me or anyone else that they belong here on a list with Arethra Franklin, Chrissie Hynde, or Janis Joplin. That’s just *****ing absurd.
People like you bring Heart up simply because such people–yourself included–are ill-informed, hopelessly conventional, unadventuresome types who haven’t the will or interest to expand their horizons and find out what else is out there—because there’s in fact an awesomely huge world of music in existence beyond middling pap and drivel like Heart. The very IDEA of suggesting that Ann Wilson ought to have a place on a list like this is itself proof of how glaringly out of touch you are.
And the world is now properly aligned.
@Scratch [197]:
It could cause more earthquakes if I didn’t respond!
Gail Ann Dorsey!
David Bowie’s bassist and currently bassist for Gwen Stefani. She’s a stunning performer, I was lucky enough to see her live at the Blue Note in NYC a few years ago and she is something else!
@Randall [198]:
We simply can’t have that happening.
I need to throw Katie-Jane Garside in here- as per usual there’s no mention of her, even in the comments. I don’t think a more underrated and terminally ignored band than Queenadreena exists.
have you never heard of nashville pussy!?
it's funny most of these women wouldn't have been on my list but they all truely rock, great list. Chrissie Hynde is my favourite from this list.
ps. lilith fair rocks!
also just read the bit about alanis, she's my no. 1
Without Grace Slick, I can’t take this list seriously.
bikini kill? carrie brownstein?
Hello?! Where the hell is Courtney Love? Live Through This is unquestionably one of the greatest albums of all time, not to mention Pretty on the Inside, Celebrity Skin and Nobody's Daughter. She might have some personal issues, but she never fails to deliver the goods on stage. Courtney IS the Queen of Noise.
Okay great list but WHERE for the love of GOD are Ann and Nancy Wilson?!?!?!?!?! FOUNDING MEMBERS OF HEART? BARRACUDA?
No Beth Hart = no Rock and roll , sorry
)!
god *****in bless Janis Joplin wish she was still here i miss her muchly peace and love…
dog *****in bless JANIS JOPLIN imiss her muchly…
uhhhh how about brody dalle!
How could this list not include Pat Benatar and Heart (Ann & Nancy Wilson)??? And Melissa Etheridge is another…
Joan Jett instead of Pat Benatar?
Seriously? WTF R U SMOKING?
what about Grace Slick, bro!
Very nice site!
Where is Ann Wilson of the rock group HEART ????
Very nice site!
Siouxsie Sioux, come on!!
No Jefferson Airplane!?
You could definitely see your skills within the paintings you write. The sector hopes for even more passionate writers such as you who aren’t afraid to say how they believe. At all times follow your heart.
What about Siouxsie!!???