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In the Heat of the Night,
Chrysalis Records, 1979
BILLBOARD CHART ACHIEVEMENTS:
Pop Singles: # 23
Top 20 hit at
MATT
RADIO
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It is a transformation scene in the
best Hollywood tradition. By day, the lithe, compact brunette
dresses plainly in sweaters and blue jeans and talks about her desire
to settle down and raise a family. But as the heat of the night
approaches, she starts to change. Her large green eyes begin to
flash with fire and ice as, clad in black tights and a form-hugging
tunic top, she dashes up the back stairs of a stage and into a burst of
light. "Hit Me With Your Best Shot," she sings to
thousands of screaming fans. That precious time has
arrived: Patty Andrzejewski, former cheerleader, has become Pat
Benatar, the heartbreaker queen of rock 'n' roll.
For a long time, Brooklyn-born Benatar thought she was
going to be an opera singer. Her mother
had been in the chorus at the New York City Opera, and their home
resounded with classical music. In Lindenhurst, NY, little
Patty started singing in the fourth grade, and by the age of twelve it
was obvious that she not only liked to sing, she really COULD
sing.
There was only one problem: she wanted to sing rock 'n' roll.
"I hated opera because it was my mom's
music, you know?" explains Benatar,
28. "I was into pop
and rock. But I never thought I was going to sing anything but
classical."
In the opera house, Benatar would have
been typecast as a pert soubrette because of her size (5 ft., 90 lbs.)
and high vocal range. Instead, she cracked the male-dominated
rock world in a hurry. In just two years since the release of her
first LP, In the Heat of the
Night, she has sold 3 million singles and 7
million albums, riding her sultry, powerful voice and sexy stage
demeanor to a 1981 Grammy Award.
Benatar's
music is a return to rock 'n'
roll's straight-ahead roots. Her best songs- "Promises In the
Dark," "Fire and Ice,""Heartbreaker"- are free of the fussy
overproduction that characterized so much of '70's music. They
have a
big beat and hummable melodies- a throwback to the '60's. But
what
she purveys is not nostalgia, even though she includes in her act such
songs as the Beatles' "Helter Skelter." "That's what we heard
when we were teething," she explains. "You can't escape it."
After marriage at age 19 to her high school
sweetheart, Dennis Benatar, an Army draftee, Pat stopped
singing. She found herself living
in Richmond and working in a bank. "But I couldn't reconcile our
poor lifestyle with the
sight of all that money," she recalls, "and when I got the first
thought of stealing it, I quit."
Determined to be a rock singer, Benatar
resumed voice lessons and began singing in local piano
bars. When
the couple returned to New York City, she worked in cabarets and clubs,
evolving her tough-as-nails performing style. In 1978 two
executives from Los Angeles-based Chrysalis Records signed her.
"Heartbreaker"
was her breakthrough single, followed the next year by her smash "Hit
Me With Your Best Shot." The days of living on rice and
beans were over.
source: "Time"
magazine,
October 12,
1981
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