About
Suzi Quatro was hardly the first Tough Girl in rock & roll, there were plenty of precursors, from Wanda Jackson and the Shangri-Las to Grace Slick and Janis Joplin, but Quatro codified a type of rock & roll woman who didn’t exist before she took the stage, one who looked as tough as the guys and wasn’t merely a singer but also an instrumentalist, the leader of the band who made the noise right along with the rest of the group.
Suzi Quatro
With her trademark leather jumpsuit and big bass guitar (which seemed even bigger given her diminutive stature of just five
feet), Quatro created a new and potent image for women in rock, one that spoke of both strength and sexiness, and
she became a major international star in the ’70s, though it would take a while before she was as readily recognized
in the United States as in the United Kingdom. Quatro’s career began in the garage rock era of the ’60s with the
band the Pleasure Seekers, but she became a genuine star in 1973 with “Can the Can,” a stomping bit of glam rock
that kicked off a series of hit singles in the U.K. and defined the sound of her best-known work. Quatro would
finally break big in the States in 1978 with a more pop-oriented single, “Stumblin’ In,” but while her future work
would encompass everything from new wave pop to Broadway show tunes, at heart Quatro would never lose her
instincts as a rocker, and she returned to hard rock with 2006’s Back to the Drive and 2019’s No Control.
Susan Kay Quatro was born in Detroit, Michigan on June 3, 1950. Her father, Art Quatro, played in a local jazz
combo, and as a child Quatro occasionally sat in with the group as a percussionist; she also studied piano and
drums. Art Quatro played bass, and would later present Quatro with one of his instruments, a 1957 Fender
Precision Bass, which she would go on to play on-stage. Quatro got the rock & roll bug early in life when she saw
Elvis Presley perform on television and became an instant fan; in 1964, Quatro and her sister saw the Beatles on
The Ed Sullivan Show, and like millions of other teenagers, they were inspired to form a band of their own. Quatro
and her siblings Patti and Arlene assembled an all-female garage band, the Pleasure Seekers, who played on the
Detroit nightclub circuit and at teen clubs. The group’s debut single, “What a Way to Die,” would go on to become a
collector’s item among garage fans, with Quatro comparing her boyfriend to a bottle of beer, and deciding the beer
was better company. The Pleasure Seekers later scored a deal with Mercury Records, and released a single for the
label before parting ways with Mercury when they wanted to boost the group’s sex appeal in a bid to sell more
records.
In 1969, the Pleasure Seekers evolved into a group called Cradle, who played the rock ballroom circuit in the
Midwest. In 1971, noted British record producer Mickie Most was in Detroit with Jeff Beck when he was
persuaded to see Cradle by Michael Quatro, Suzi’s brother and Cradle’s manager, as well as a promoter and
musician in his own right. Most wasn’t bowled over by Cradle, but he was very impressed with Suzi, and offered her
a deal with his RAK Records label as a solo act. Quatro moved to England as she and Most strategized her solo
career; her first single, 1972’s “Rolling Stone” b/w “Brain Confusion,” which featured Peter Frampton on guitar, was
a flop everywhere but Portugal, but her next 45 was another story altogether. Most recruited Mike Chapman and
Nicky Chinn, who had written and produced hits for the Sweet, Mud, and the Arrows, to work on Quatro’s next
disc, and “Can the Can,” a stomping, glam-inspired number with silly lyrics but an unstoppable rhythmic tune, was a
number one hit in Britain and Australia. It was the first in a series of hits that Quatro would enjoy in the U.K. and
Australia over the next five years, most from the Chapman & Chinn team and included such glam rock gems as “48
Crash,” “Devil Gate Drive,” and “The Wild One,” but despite periodic touring in her homeland (including one road
trip where her opening act was a scruffy but ambitious New York band called Kiss), Quatro would have to wait until
1978 to finally score a hit in America.
In 1977, she was cast as Leather Tuscadero, a rock & roll singer, on the popular American sitcom Happy Days, and
while the character was originally meant to appear in only two episodes, the viewers’ reaction was strong enough
that Quatro would appear on the show seven times in the 1977-1978 season. Quatro’s run on Happy Days
coincided with the release of her fifth album, 1978’s If You Knew Suzi (her first for RSO Records after Bell Records
failed to break her in the States), and the LP rose to 37 on the U.S. charts (her previous high rank had been 125),
while the single “Stumblin’ In,” a duet with Chris Norman of Smokie, reached number four on the U.S. singles charts
(curiously, it only went to 41 in the U.K.). Quatro’s next album, 1979’s Suzi…And Other Four Letter Words, didn’t
fare quite as well, but it did spawn “She’s in Love with You,” which just missed hitting the American Top 40 and rose
to 11 in England. When Mike Chapman founded his own label, Dreamland Records, in 1980, Quatro was one of his
first signings. 1980’s Rock Hard turned out to be one of Dreamland’s most successful releases, but the label
crashed and burned in 1981, and 1983’s Main Attraction, which found Quatro dipping her toes into new wave-
influenced material, was a commercial and critical disappointment; Quatro’s days as a hitmaker were over.
Undaunted, Quatro set out to reinvent herself as an actress, and in 1986, she starred in a revival of the celebrated
musical Annie, Get Your Gun on London’s West End. The show was a rousing success, and Quatro pursued an
eclectic show biz career, hosting a TV chat show (Gas Street), acting on British television, starring in another West
End musical about the life of Tallulah Bankhead, serving as a disc jockey for BBC radio, presenting a series of music
documentaries for BBC TV, penning her autobiography, and starring in a one-woman show adapted from her
memoirs. In between all this, Quatro continued to periodically release albums that found her defiantly playing the
sort of hard rock that made her name in the ’70s, including 2003’s What Goes Around, 2006’s Back to the Drive,
and 2011’s In the Spotlight. In 2014, Quatro, who was still successfully touring the U.K., Australia, and Japan,
celebrated the 50th anniversary of her career in rock & roll with a four-CD box set, The Girl from Detroit City,
which traced her years in music from the first Pleasure Seekers’ single to her 21st century recordings. In 2019,
Quatro began speaking out in interviews about her anger that she had not yet been inducted into the Rock & Roll
Hall of Fame, given her history as a pioneering woman in rock. “I was there before anybody else had a twinkle in
their eye, that’s a fact of life,” she told a reporter in February 2019. As if to show that she was still worthy of the
honor, Quatro would release her toughest album in years, No Control, the following March.