Ann Spencer Gates, of Cambridge, known to her friends as
Spencer, died peacefully at home on July 6, 2008, after a courageous two-year
battle with breast cancer.
Spencer moved to Boston in 1978 from her hometown of Buffalo, to attend
Boston University. She quickly fell in love with the Boston music scene,
introduced by her brother Peter Gates, already established as a DJ at MIT’s
WMBR. In 1981, she and her best friend Sheena (Lisa Buchholz) became hosts
of the beloved show "The Mystery Girls" on WMBR, which ran Friday afternoons
for 5 years, and was, by Spencer's own admission, "the most unprofessional
thing ever on the radio." The show featured many of the bands of
the city's burgeoning punk rock scene, including Mission of Burma, Lemonheads,
Nervous Eaters, Sorry, and Moving Targets, and was an irreverent Friday
afternoon cocktail party on the air, signaling the start of the weekend.
Every week they would assume different personas. They were the Mystery
Girls, and had the power at will to become the characters they chose. It
didn't matter if they couldn't quite agree on who they should be or remember
who they decided to be. Said Mission of Burma’s Clint Conley, “As a person
Spencer was such a gas--so funny, and sassy and tuned in. I was a dedicated
listener of her show in the 80s--total irreverence, anarchic fun, such
a psych hearing them getting all jacked up over the music they'd be checking
out that weekend. Thinking of Spencer, I am more convinced than ever that
the most inspired part of any cool music scene usually has less to do with
the musicians than the musicians would like to think.”
Unlike shows of the time playing only the punk rock canon, the Mystery Girls
played country, blues, and even the odd show tune, as long as it was American
and fit their thread. It would not have been unusual to hear Patsy Cline
with Flipper, Fear or X. And if they changed their mind, it was equally likely
that they'd change tracks mid-song. If someone dared to play a British band
or anything else not to their liking, it wasn't unusual to hear the sound
of a needle scratching across a record. They were hostile to structure of
any kind. If a guest was perceived as whiny during an interview, Spencer
would cut him or her off unceremoniously. It was perhaps the most memorable
punk rock radio show of the era.
They recruited as their “official” phone answerer Michael Patrick MacDonald,
a traumatized Southie punk-kid they'd taken under their wing, who partly
recounts his time with them in his book Easter Rising. Said MacDonald, "It
didn't pay but it was the first time I ever felt proud of something I had
to show up for. And Spencer and Sheena were immediately my adopted big
sisters, introducing me to books, films at the Brattle, and music that
expanded the definition of 'punk.'” On most nights, Spencer and Sheena
could be found, dressed to kill in cocktail garb, at a club like the late
lamented Rat or Chet's Last Call hosting a party for a touring band who
would soon be famous. The Mystery Girls loft in downtown Boston, hosted
many legendary after-hours happenings of the time. According to former
Lemonheads manager Joyce Linehan, “The paradox of the Mystery Girls was
that they were finishing school girls who brought comic civility and good
manners to punk rock by being unbelievably uncivil and ill-mannered. Yet
it was never mean-spirited, and even the most outcast of the outcasts were
a welcome part of the fun. “
After leaving Boston, Spencer lived in the apartment above the legendary
Hoboken club Maxwell's, and also spent time in Minneapolis and Los Angeles.
She moved to New York in 1988, and later took a job as a publicist at Matador
Records, where she worked with Liz Phair, Pavement, Cat Power, Bettie Serveert,
The Fall, Mark Eitzel, and Yo La Tengo. After leaving Matador, she was a
publicist at Atlantic Records. Eventually disillusioned by an increasingly
corporate and less creative music business, Spencer moved to Rhinebeck in
2000, where she worked in retail. In 2005, she moved back to Boston, to the
delight of many of her friends, and took a job in Harvard University's Division
of Continuing Education, where she enjoyed working with new students to introduce
them to her beloved adopted hometown. When she became too sick to work full
time, she took a part time volunteer position in the marketing department
at the Huntington Theatre Company in Boston.
According to Tom Johnston, manager of Buffalo Tom and Bettie Serveert, “Spencer
was one of the greatest, most dazzling people I ever had privilege to get
to know. She had great taste, a wicked sense of humor, and was so extroverted
that many of the friends I have today, I credit directly to her and her charm
and gift of gab.”
Since her breast cancer diagnosis in April of 2006 until the final week of
her life, Spencer took every opportunity presented to spend time with family
and friends, and to go to plays, concerts, movies and other events. In addition
to being a fan of music, photography and theater, she was an environmental
activist and an animal lover.
She was the daughter of the late H. Hamilton Gates. She leaves her mother
Mrs. H. Hamilton Gates of Buffalo, brother Peter of Boston, David of Buffalo
and P. Bradford of Ithaca and many cousins and close friends. Donation in
Spencer’s memory can be made to Zumix, 202 Maverick St., E. Boston, MA 02128
or Future Chefs, c/o Third Sector New England, 89 South St., Suite 700, Boston,
MA 02111-2680.