Nita Strauss walking onto an Alice Cooper stage looks almost too modern for such a gloriously old-school freak show. Stiletto boots, custom Ibanez, hair like a wind tunnel, and riffs that could slice the confetti in mid air. Yet her route into that gig is not TikTok fame but something much more dangerous: relentless hustle, smart networking, and being willing to completely rethink her own playing.
Her story runs from under-attended club dates and a 1 a.m. cruise-ship slot to YouTube auditions and a brutally honest phone call from producer Bob Ezrin. It is a reminder that even in the era of viral clips, the big rock jobs still go to the player who can take a punch to the ego and come back better the next week.
From teenage metal diehard to hired gun
Strauss grew up in Los Angeles, obsessed with guitar enough to walk out of high school in her junior year so she could tour with her first band, Lia-Fail, alongside future boxing champion Mikaela Mayer. After that she cut her teeth in the all-female Iron Maiden tribute The Iron Maidens and projects like Consume the Fire, Femme Fatale and the video game supergroup Critical Hit. By 2014 she was the in-house guitarist for LA KISS, hammering out anthems for a football team owned by Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley, before being hired that same year to replace Orianthi in Alice Cooper’s touring band.
In other words, by the time Cooper’s camp ever heard her name, Strauss was already a seasoned hired gun who could survive anything from dive bars to pyro-heavy arenas. But the leap from tribute bands and LA sports gigs to one of rock’s most notorious touring circuses still needed one very specific stroke of timing.

Networking, Kip Winger and the Alice Cooper offer
That turning point came when she joined 80s glam survivors Femme Fatale and ended up on the Monsters of Rock cruise alongside Winger. After a late-night set in a tiny lounge, bassist and bandleader Kip Winger told her how impressed he was; Strauss, ever direct, replied that she was on the market for a bigger gig and asked him to keep her in mind, later describing the encounter as good luck meeting preparation.
A few weeks later Winger heard that Alice Cooper needed a new guitarist for an upcoming run that would include a co-headline tour with Mötley Crüe. He sent Cooper’s manager Shep Gordon and producer Bob Ezrin links of Strauss onstage, they responded by emailing her several tracks to learn and record, and within days she had been invited into the camp and was preparing for her first Michigan shows with Cooper’s band.
| Step | What happened | Takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| Monsters of Rock cruise | Femme Fatale set floors Kip Winger in a tiny lounge. | Play like it matters, even when the room does not. |
| Winger’s recommendation | He hears Cooper needs a guitarist and sends Nita’s videos to Shep Gordon and Bob Ezrin. | Your network is your audition tape. |
| Test tracks | Ezrin emails songs for her to learn and record, kicking off the formal audition. | Be ready to deliver studio-quality work at short notice. |
The audition that almost cost her the job
Strauss likes to joke that she almost blew the Cooper job before she even met the man. For her first video audition she went all in on circus-level shredding, playing over the neck, upside down and cramming every outrageous lick she knew into two songs; Ezrin phoned back within minutes to say it was the opposite of what they wanted, but after two more, much more song-focused submissions that leaned into big classic rock licks and space, she finally convinced them she understood Alice’s sound.
Most guitarists would have sulked, blamed the industry and doubled down on flash. Strauss instead treated the criticism as free education, accepting that nobody cares how fast you are if you cannot play the song the way the artist hears it in their head. That mindset would turn out to be more valuable than any sweep-picked lick in her arsenal.
Bob Ezrin’s blunt feedback and a crash course in rock guitar
In a later conversation, Ezrin spelled that out even more clearly, telling her that Alice Cooper did not need a shred guitar hero so much as a rock guitarist steeped in bluesy feel and old school riffing. Strauss hung up, realised a producer had just told her she did not truly know how to play rock yet, and booked intensive guitar lessons specifically to add classic-rock vocabulary, from minor-blues inflections to AC/DC and Kiss style phrasing, into her already ferocious technique.
That is the part of the story most aspiring players skip past. A lot of virtuosos would rather cling to their identity than admit they need to go back to basics; Strauss essentially rebuilt part of her style in a matter of weeks so that her speed and showmanship served the songs instead of smothering them.
Why Alice Cooper wanted Nita in the first place
When people complain that rock is a closed boys’ club, this next detail makes the story sweeter. Asked why he chose Strauss, Alice Cooper later said that with Ryan Roxie and Tommy Henriksen already in the band he had two straight-ahead rock players, but for the high drama of the Mötley Crüe tour he needed a shredder and instantly knew she was the one after hearing her play.
That mix of classic-rock sensibility and modern metal firepower was exactly what his horror-show needed. Old-school fans still heard the big themes and twin-guitar harmonies they grew up on, but there was suddenly this hurricane of a player at stage left dragging the whole production out of nostalgia and into the present.
Crucially, their working relationship turned out to be flexible rather than fragile. When Strauss stepped away from Cooper’s fall 2022 tour to pursue other opportunities, including a run with Demi Lovato, he publicly framed it as a leave of absence rather than a firing, and by the following year was announcing that she would be back in the lineup for a new round of shows.

What kept her in the band once the spotlight moved on
Plenty of players get one high-profile tour; far fewer turn that into a long-term calling card. Strauss did it by being the opposite of the stereotypical rock diva: always early, relentlessly prepared and perfectly happy to be the assassin rather than the star, even as her profile kept climbing.
At the same time, she was quietly building leverage of her own. Outside the Cooper camp she released the instrumental solo album ‘Controlled Chaos’ and then the single ‘Dead Inside’, which rock radio outlet ABC reported had become the first song by a solo female artist in 32 years to hit number one on Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Airplay chart, all while she was still officially the guitarist in Alice Cooper’s band. That success helped explain why, when she initially left the band in 2022, she described herself as forever thankful for the opportunity even as she moved into a new phase of her career.
The difference was not just talent; it was discipline. In a candid Jammcard piece, Strauss admits that in her early band days she partied hard and sometimes showed up underprepared, but that she is now sober and refuses to walk into a gig without knowing everyone else’s parts as well as her own, summing up her philosophy with the mantra that you should play every gig as if someone is watching who can take you to the next level.
What guitarists can steal from Nita’s playbook
For guitar players raised on 70s, 80s and 90s records, Strauss’s path into Alice Cooper’s band is oddly reassuring. It shows that the old rules of rock employment still apply: play great, show up early, do the homework and do not implode when a legend tells you to change.
- Small rooms matter. The gig that changed her life was not an awards show but a half-empty cruise-ship lounge at 1 a.m., where she played like it was Madison Square Garden.
- Network without being sleazy. She did not beg Kip Winger for a favor; she simply told him she was available, hungry and professional, then let her playing do the convincing.
- Learn the artist, not just the instrument. Ezrin and Cooper wanted someone who could think in Alice Cooper language, which meant big themes, theatre and classic rock feel, not just fretboard gymnastics.
- Stay coachable even when you are already good. Booking guitar lessons after you have already toured the world is a hit to the ego, but that humility separated her from a thousand other shredders.
- Treat the gig like a career, not a vacation. By going sober and overpreparing, Strauss quietly demolished the old stereotype that the real rock lifestyle is about excess instead of excellence.
- Build your own thing on the side. Her solo work and rock-radio success mean that if Cooper retired tomorrow, she would still have an audience that knows her name, not just the guy in the top hat’s.
In the end, Nita Strauss did something very punk inside one of rock’s longest-running theatre shows: she proved that the most shocking move a guitarist can make is to combine old-school work ethic with modern-level technique. That is how a former tribute-band kid from Los Angeles ended up standing next to Alice Cooper every night while monsters, nurses and executioners swirl around them, ripping solos that feel as dangerous as anything in his catalogue.



