You don't need to tell Lzzy Hale she has turned into something of a role model.
"I've been trying to keep my drunken tweeting to a minimum," laughed the frontwoman for burgeoning hard-rock band Halestorm.
Revolver magazine just put Hale, 28, on the cover of its "Hottest Chicks in Hard Rock" issue. The brawny dudes on VH1's "That Metal Show" recently ranked her one of the five greatest frontwomen of all time. Even Billboard gave her band the distinction of being the first female-fronted act to land at No. 1 on the Active Rock singles chart earlier this year with "Love Bites (So Do I)."
"I thought that [Billboard] thing was a mistake, like they forgot Evanescence or something like that," said Hale. (Her real name is Elizabeth Hale but "Lzzy" is way more Googleable.)
If those credentials don't prove Hale is one kick-butt singer in a genre dominated by men, then Tuesday's long-sold-out show at First Avenue should do the trick, locally at least. Halestorm arrives atop the lineup for this year's Jägermeister Music Tour, whose past headliners have included Staind, Slayer and Slipknot.
Calling from a tour stop last week opening for none other than Alice Cooper -- "He's pretty close to what you see in 'Wayne's World,'" she happily reported -- Hale admitted there's a less celebratory story behind her being singled out as the new queen of metal. "There just aren't a lot of us these days," she pointed out.
The 1970s and '80s saw the likes of Heart, Joan Jett and Lita Ford make a sizable dent in hard-rock's manly veneer. Evanescence has pretty much been it at mainstream rock stations such as 93X (93.7 FM) over the past couple decades, though. Like Evanescence's Amy Lee -- a friend of hers -- Hale can raise her voice from a soft bellow to a glass-shattering scream at the crash of a cymbal, but she's more of a flashy, leather-pants-wearing lead singer who can also be as saucy and sexually explicit as her male peers.
"I think it still takes twice the amount of work to maybe get a quarter of the amount of attention," she said about being a female hard-rocker. However, she added, it can also be doubly satisfying when you do finally achieve the success currently enjoyed by her band.