Music
Johnette Napolitano (of Concrete Blonde)
About Johnette Napolitano (of Concrete Blonde)
The rock critic had just vomited all over his bed. It was 3:04 a.m. 1986 in New York City and the scribe had come off a three-day benderpalooza of self-prescribed medicines for the wounds of a break-up with a prevaricating witch. He hated his job, he hated his life – and more importantly – he hated rock 'n' roll.
As he gathered the soggy bed sheets to throw out the window, the 24-hour television set broadcast that voice. He turned and saw this dame for the first time and recognized the cry of a street angel whose epic vocal power contained human history, the strength of steel, and the vulnerability of someone insisting on freedom when she knows damn well she might not get it.
He dropped the sheets short of their eleven-story descent and sat at the edge of the bed to watch the tube. There she was – someone named Johnette Napolitano from some L.A. band called Concrete Blonde. She was beautiful and whip smart and had confidence and poise and wit. Again, there was that voice. "Mmmph. Hope for rock 'n' roll after all," he muttered, knowing full well he was talking about his own sorry ass.
Twenty-seven years later Johnette Napolitano is talking to the rock critic on the phone from her home in Joshua Tree, California. He wants to know about that voice. "When I was in junior high school and started goin' to parties, I wasn't the most socially graceful creature at all. So I'd take my guitar around and the one thing I know is that whenever I'd start singing, everyone would shut up and listen."
Shut up and listen. Shut up and listen. And so they did.
Concrete Blonde came howling out the chute in that year of our Ronnie Ray-Gun 1986 and knocked out three classic albums by 1990: Concrete Blonde, Free and Bloodletting. The latter begat the hit single "Joey" – a sobbing love song to a dying alcoholic – perfect rock balladry. Napolitano was born in Hollywood – the belly of the beast – and her songs were (and remain) cinematic – feature films compressed into three-minute rock 'n' roll: "Still In Hollywood," "God Is A Bullet," "True." Walking In London, Mexican Moon, and a collabo with Chicano punk-rockers Los Illegals followed. "Ghost Of A Texas Ladies' Man" and "Heal It Up" – among others -- hail from that period. She is also one of the great song interpreters of our time, as proven by the way she turned James Brown's "It's A Man's World" and Leonard Cohen's "Everybody Knows" into Johnette songs.
In between recording she toured the planet. "Gigging was always just as much about traveling," she explains. "Like my godmother told me when I was 9 years old 'you must travel, you must go to Europe, you must see these places.' I never forgot that – this was my way out and into the world." She worked on side projects -- Pretty & Twisted, The Heads with Talking Heads vets, and a legendary, much-bootlegged '90s solo album that went officially unreleased because of record racket shenanigans.
Just as importantly, the girl who'd dreamed of an unaffordable art school when she was a child became the woman who pursued all her dreams. She's been an artist and art gallery owner, conducted psychic readings, keeps horses, studied pottery with a master in Mexico as well as flamenco dance and song in Spain and is now a practicing tattooist. "I'm licensed to ill, baby!" she proudly exclaims in her delicious, throaty laugh. Her Joshua Tree Tattoo business focuses on "nature-based design." After moving from L.A. a dozen years ago, she's incorporated the desert aesthetic like she used to use Hollywood as a muse. "I absorb my surroundings," she explains.
The 21st Century brought the gorgeous, solo Scarred, various Concrete Blonde reunions and her book Rough Mix – a collection of short stories, lyrics and drawings. She's now touring on her own – just an acoustic guitar and her songs, passages read from Rough Mix against projected backdrops of original and found art – and that voice.
"I get a little impatient with people my age because they're always talkin' about the old days bein' so much fun and I'm thinkin' 'well why don't they just dig themselves a hole now?' This is the time to really fuckin' bring it. I've been doin' it long enough that I oughta know what I'm doin'. Insecurities that used to plague me aren't there cuz I'm too tired for 'em. It gives me the freedom of not giving a fuck. I've been having the best time of my life and I've never seen an audience have a better time." She pauses and then adds for emphasis: "I'm looking forward."
The rock critic whose faith in rock 'n' roll was restored all those years ago by Johnette Napolitano laughs. He knows they'll still shut up and listen.
----- Michael Simmons
Videos
Comments
Explore Nearby
-
1
Bennigan's Grill & Tavern
Restaurants -
2
Fun On The Run Paintball Park
Attractions -
3
National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame
Attractions -
4
Antojitos Latinos
Restaurants -
5
Sheraton Fort Worth
Hotels
-
1
Bennigan's Grill & Tavern
4833 S Hulen St -
2
Antojitos Latinos
5201 McCart Ave -
3
Uncle Julio's
5301 Camp Bowie Blvd. -
4
Charleston's Restaurant
3020 S Hulen St -
5
Rafain Brazilian Steakhouse - Fort Worth
2932 Crockett St -
6
Pop's Safari Cigars & Fine Wines
2929 2929 Morton St -
7
La Playa Maya
3200 Hemphill St -
8
Paris Coffee Shop
704 W Magnolia Ave -
9
Texas de Brazil
101 Houston St -
10
Casablanca Mediterranean Cuisine
7355 N Beach St. #173 -
11
Campesinos Cafe
2400 Vaughn Blvd -
12
The Aardvark
2905 West Berry Street -
13
Thai Rice 'N' Noodle
8577 N Beach St -
14
Gourmet Burrito
14200 Trinity Blvd -
15
Piranha Killer Sushi
335 W 3rd St -
16
Stevie's Diner
5500 North Tarrant Pkwy -
17
Oliva Italian Eatery
12477 Timberland Blvd
-
1
Fun On The Run Paintball Park
2621 Roberts CutT Off Road -
2
National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame
1720 1720 Gendy St -
3
Cowtown Cattlepen Maze
145 E Exchange Ave -
4
National Cowgirl Museum
1720 Gendy St -
5
Colonial Country Club
3735 Country Club Cir -
6
Amon Carter Museum of American Art
3501 Camp Bowie Blvd -
7
Fort Worth Zoo
1989 1989 Colonial Pkwy -
8
American Airlines C.R. Smith Museum
4601 Highway 360 -
9
Kimbell Art Museum
3333 Camp Bowie Blvd -
10
Omni Theater, an IMAX Dome - Ft Worth Museum of Science & History
1600 Gendy Street -
11
Fort Worth Botanic Garden
3220 Botanic Garden Blvd.
-
1
Sheraton Fort Worth
1701 Commerce Street -
2
Sheraton Arlington
1500 Convention Center Dr -
3
Hampton Inn & Suites N. Ft. Worth-Alliance Airport
13600 N Freeway -
4
Residence Inn by Marriott Fort Worth Alliance Airport
13400 North Fwy -
5
Candlewood Suites Dfw South
4200 Reggis Dr -
6
Dallas/Ft. Worth Marriott Hotel & Golf Club Champions Circle
3300 Championship Pkwy -
7
Holiday Inn Dfw South
14320 Centre Station Dr -
8
Dfw Airport Marriott South
4151 Centreport Blvd -
9
La Quinta Inn & Suites Fort Worth Eastchase
8250 Anderson Blvd -
10
Days Inn & Suites Ft. Worth Dfw Airport South
13954 Trinity Blvd
© 2025 Dallas.com: A City Guide by Boulevards. All Rights Reserved. Advertise with us | Contact us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Site Map