Neha Patil (Editor)

The Deadly Nightshade

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Also known as
  
Ariel

Genres
  
Country rock, Folk rock

Associated acts
  
The Moppets, Ariel

The Deadly Nightshade httpslh3googleusercontentcomIHUrHgg8FpUAAA

Years active
  
1967-1970, 1972-1977, 2008-Present

Past members
  
Gretchen Pfeifer Beverly Rodgers Florence Ballard (one show, 1975) Pamela Brandt (deceased)

Origin
  
Northampton, United Kingdom

Members
  
Helen Hooke, Pamela Robin Brandt, Anne Bowen, Florence Ballard, Beverly Rodgers, Gretchen Pfeifer

Record labels
  
RCA Records, Phantom Records

Similar
  
BeBe K'Roche, Chicago and New Haven W, The Holy Sisters of the Gaga, The Applicators, The Feminine Complex

Profiles

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The Deadly Nightshade is a New England-based rock and country trio consisting of members Anne Bowen, Pamela Brandt, and Helen Hooke, who originally began performing under the name Ariel in 1967, along with Gretchen Pfeifer and Beverly Rodgers. They were one of the earliest all women rock bands signed to a major label, and an early women's music group. Some early members of the group originally performed as The Moppets.

Contents

In 1970, Ariel separated. Bowen then reunited with former bandmates Brandt and Hooke in 1972, to play at a women's festival, now as The Deadly Nightshade. In 1974 the band secured one of the first record contracts as an all female band to a major label, RCA, and went on to release two albums, to mixed reviews. They performed at Ms. Magazine's second annual party in 1974.During the height of their success in the mid-seventies, The Deadly Nightshade appeared on Sesame Street, singing their version of the Carter Family hit, "Keep on the Sunny Side", as well as several of their own songs.

The band broke up in 1977, when Bowen decided to leave the band to pursue other interests. Brandt went on to work as a feminist writer, co-author of The Girls Next Door: Into the Heart of Lesbian America with Lindsy Van Gelder (Simon & Schuster, 1996). Her work included commentary on the band and its relation to the women's movement and the music business. In 1978 the Smithsonian Institution reissued both albums as examples of creative women in the music. The band was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

The band reunited in 2008, and performed again in 2009.

Rock critic Robert Christgau wrote that despite their being avowed feminists, which he sympathized with, he hated their music as "Squeaky-clean folk rock".

Bassist Pamela Brandt died of a heart attack on July 31, 2015 in Miami, Florida. As a result, the surviving members face the prospect of folding the band for good and retiring from the musical scene.

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Singles

  • "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman" (theme song), ca. 1975
  • References

    The Deadly Nightshade Wikipedia