The Runaways (1975–1979) In 1975, at age sixteen, Ford was recruited by recording
impresario Kim Fowley to join the all-female rock band
The Runaways. The band soon secured a recording contract and released their
first album in 1976. The band garnered significant media attention and the Runaways became a successful recording and touring act during their late-1970s heyday. Ford's lead-guitar playing became an integral element of the band's sound until their eventual break-up in April 1979. In 2016, Ford published her autobiography,
Living Like a Runaway: A Memoir, through Dey Street Books. In the book, Ford claimed that she left The Runaways temporarily in 1976, after coming to the conclusion that her bandmates "were all into girls. All of them except for Jackie [Fox]", a situation with which she did not feel comfortable. In 1977, internal conflicts were erupting within the Runaways, who had by that time already parted ways with producer Fowley, lead singer
Cherie Currie, and bassist
Jackie Fox. Vocalist/guitarist
Joan Jett wanted the band to shift to a more
Ramones-influenced
punk rock sound, while Ford and drummer
Sandy West wanted to continue playing the
hard rock-oriented songs for which the band had become known. With neither faction willing to compromise, the band finally broke up in April 1979. In June 2009, she toured the United States and Europe with a new line-up on her last fourteen shows, consisting of former
Guns N' Roses guitarist
Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal, drummer
Dennis Leeflang, and
Deepfield bassist PJ Farley. After a long recording hiatus, Ford released
Wicked Wonderland on October 6, 2009, on the JLRG Entertainment label. In an interview with ExclusiveMagazine.com, Ford spoke about her new material: "I just wanted to kick ass! I don't know what's popular, or the flavor of the day. I just wanted the music to rock! The lyrics are very personal and that's it. I wasn't going to come out in sandals with hairy armpits!" In May 2011, Ford promised to release a "real comeback album" later in the year with drummer Chuck Spradlin, saying that 2009's
nu metal-inspired
Wicked Wonderland was too much of a collaborative project with ex-husband
Jim Gillette. "A lot of people have told me that they want a real Lita Ford album, and I know what they mean. They are going to get it", she was quoted as saying at the time.
Living Like a Runaway was released in June 2012 on
SPV/Steamhammer Records. True to her word, the album was much more in line with her earlier work. The title is also celebratory, as Ford had recently settled differences with her former Runaways' bandmates. During 2014, she was bestowed with The Certified Legend Award by
Guitar Player. In November 2014,
Heaven Below guitarist
Patrick Kennison joined Ford's band. In 2016, Ford released
Time Capsule, a collection of songs she discovered on old analogue tapes from the 1980s, featuring recordings she had made with
Billy Sheehan,
Gene Simmons,
Bruce Kulick,
Robin Zander,
Rick Nielsen,
Dave Navarro, Rodger Carter, and
Jeff Scott Soto. ==Acting and other projects==