
When I was 16, I listened to records with three friends: Joel, Glenn, Davidโall connoisseurs of avant-garde Rock. We spun records by Gong, King Crimson, Pink Floyd, Soft Machine, the Bonzo Dog Band. One record we sampled was by Fanny, the first successful โall-girlโ rock band on a major label. Their music was generic, I thought. They were a kind of gimmick.
Recently, my YouTube algorithm suggested Fannyโvideos they made on TV shows in 1970. Now I rather like them. Two of the women were Filipino-American, I suddenly noticed. The band had energy, and a subtle kind of courage.
Three days ago, at the Woodstock Film Festival, I saw Fanny: The Right to Rock, the first documentary about the group. At one point the musicians lived in a house together in LA called Fanny Hill. In the documentary, Bonnie Raitt remembers: โIt was very frustrating for the guys in my band. All these gorgeous women were running around nakedโand they were all lesbians!โ
Fanny put out four albums, but never had a pop hit; they were a โhard rockโ band. In 1975, they broke up. But recently, the group has reunited, and recorded Fanny Walked the Earth, their best record yet.
And after the movie, two of the original members played a show, in the Bearsville Theater bar. These grandmotherly women smashed out rock music with glee: Brie Brandt on drums, June Millington playing sharp, almost dissonant guitar linesโaccompanied by the legendary Gail Ann Dorsey on bass. Local rock star John Sebastian came up on stage to lead them in โDo You Believe in Magicโ (with Kate Pearson of the B-52s on backup vocals):
Believe in the magic
of a young girlโs soul,
believe in the magic
of rock โnโ roll,
believe in the magic
that can set you free!
You could almost see the soul of Little Richard hovering above them.











Fanny had several singles chart on the Billboard Top 100. Charity Ball and Butter Boy. Charity Ball peaked at #40 on November 5, 1971. Butter Boy peaked at #29 and April 4, 1974.
I’ve Had It peaked at #79 on July 5, 1974. Ain’t That Peculiar peaked at #85 on May 5, 1972.
They released five albums in the early seventies.
Fanny Hill (3rd) peaked at No. 135 on the Billboard 200 charts.
Charity Ball (2nd) reached No. 150 on the Billboard 200.
So far, I did not find the positions of their first LP Fanny, their fourth Mother’s Pride, and their fifth with a different lineup, Rock and Roll Survivors.
John Harrold – a fan since 1971.
Gotta say, I find this article a bit condescending. I’ve seen so many of the same ilk, and can smell it a mile away. “Fanny, the first successful โall-girlโ rock band on a major label. Their music was generic, I thought. They were a kind of gimmick.” Gimmick? Only to you, because you were a man. To us, not a gimmick at all – we worked so hard. And to have you *still* come up with this drivel?? Is this the best you can do??
“Now I rather like them. Two of the women were Filipino-American, I suddenly noticed. The band had energy, and a subtle kind of courage.” Oh, you do? You rather like us? More condescension. And there’s nothing subtle about our courage. You just missed it all. And, you suddenly noticed we’re Filipina-American? Man, where you been???
~ June Millington