To me that was special

Posted by admin on Aug 28, 2010 | Comments Off

To me that was special.”At a time when rock’n'roll had yet to be absorbed fully into the consumer mainstream, stars such as Bowie or Mick Jagger were youth culture royalty. Josette was a sexually inexperienced 16-year-old from New Jersey Like most teenagers she was obsessed with rock stars. One day in 1969 she found herself sitting in a restaurant adjacent to Fillmore East, Bill Graham’s famous New York concert hall. Nearby sat Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page and that other prominent British guitar strangler of the day, Jeff Beck Josette approached them, trembling. Page took her by the hand, pulled her on to his lap and asked her to come up to his room later She consented “What else was I going to do?” she says now.

“Here I was on Jimmy Page’s lap; it was my fantasy come true.” Josette stayed with Page for several days knowing full well that her single mother – whose only child she was – would be desperately worried.When Led Zeppelin came back to New York to play Madison Square Garden, Josette asked her mother to meet the band and bring her some clothes She expected to be dragged home immediately. Instead, her mother was all smiles and went home apparently quite content for her daughter to cuddle up with the group. “Years afterwards I said to her: why did you let me do that? Her answer brought tears to my eyes. She said she was afraid that, if she didn’t let me, I would leave her.”Other bands followed when the Zeppelin tour finished. “Before then boys had not really been part of my life, but suddenly it just snowballed,” says Josette “There was always a new band coming into town.

I met Deep Purple, Ten Years After and all the other British bands of the time.” She left high school and became a full-time party girl, continuing to live at home, supported financially by her mother, who took phone messages if bands wanted to see Josette.The groupie’s attitude to sex was that it constituted a currency to be traded for a share in the Olympian glamour radiated by rock stars. Josette maintains that there was nothing wrong with the way she used her body “The sexual revolution was all happening Sex was good I was living out fantasies. For example, I saw Ian Gillan from Deep Purple on the cover of Circus magazine and I fell in love with him I called his hotel and told him I wanted him And he just invited me up. It was that easy.”What now seems like a form of prostitution was, according to Josette, an empowering experience. “I could scope somebody out and be in bed with him in 15 minutes if I wanted to. I knew who was in town, where they would be and if I wanted to do them was up to me.

It was like magic.” In a world where she never had any reason to doubt her own choices and in an environment where it was normal for a woman to be f?d for being merely decorative, Josette claims she felt in total control of her life.It seems hard to believe, but Josette says she was never looking for love, and that she never harboured any ambition to become the girlfriend or wife of any of the rock stars she slept with This may sound like self-delusion but Josette is insistent. “I think I was so well liked by everyone because I wasn’t trying to get an ‘I love you’ out of them. I didn’t love them.”Initially, Josette insists that there were never any bad moments, that it was just “free sex and very frivolous” and that she was well respected. But as we talk more, the cracks begin to show.Even at the height of the sexual revolution, the rules of the groupie game were still set by men and none of the girls was invulnerable. Josette recalls how, during a Deep Purple tour, Ian Gillan rejected her one day and she found herself stranded in the middle of nowhere without a cent to her name.

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