Patti Smith |
"Three chord rock merged with the power of the word" So Patti Smith described her music on the 1975 release of Horses, her celebrated debut album; and so she has continued to blend the spoken and sung arts in incantatory fashion with her latest work, Gone Again. Impossible to categorize, moving easily between the literary and musical worlds, always unpredictable and impassioned, she is an idiosyncratically unique performer who has always remained true to her artistic vision.
Born in Chicago and raised in Woodbury, New Jersey, just across
the state line from Philadelphia, Patti's mother, Beverly, was a
jazz singer cum waitress. Her father, Grant, worked at the
Honeywell plant; she was the oldest of four siblings: her sisters
Linda and Kimberly (the latter plays mandolin on Gone Again's
"Ravens,"), and brother Todd. Unable to find her place in high
school society, she took refuge in the images of Rimbaud, Bob
Dylan, James Brown, and the Rolling Stones. Dropping out of
Glassboro State Teacher's College, she headed for the
bright
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When she arrived in town, she met an art student named Robert
Mapplethorpe and they moved in together. Patti found a job as a
bookstore clerk at the Strand and Scribner's. In 1969, she
traveled to Paris with her sister Linda, working on the street as
a performance artist, and making her first forays into the visual
arts. Returning to New York as the seventies got underway, she
rebounded between the back room at Max's Kansas City and the
Hotel Chelsea. Encouraged by such as Dylan cohort Bobby Neuwirth
and blues virtuoso Johnny Winter, Patti made a name for herself
in underground theatre (starring in such plays as Jackie Curtis'
Vain Victory at the Cafe La Mama), and collaborating with the
playwright Sam Shepherd, with whom she co-authored Cowboy Mouth.
She was also writing poetry.
On February 10, 1971, she opened for Gerard Malanga at a Poetry
Project weekly reading at St. Mark's Church on the Lower East
Side. She was joined for three songs by Lenny Kaye, a rock writer
and record store clerk whom she had met through an article he'd
written for Jazz and Pop magazine about "Accapella" music, the
unaccompanied doo-
Patti continued performing as a poet/actress over the next two
years, opening for the New York Dolls at the Mercer Arts Center,
writing songs for The Blue Oyster Cult, "reviewing" records for
Creem and Rock magazines, and publishing her first volumes of
poetry, Seventh Heaven and Witt. In November of 1973, she and
Kaye reunited for a "Rock 'n' Rimbaud" performance at Le Jardin
off New York's Times Square, and the seeds for a band were sown.
They were accompanied by a succession of piano players,
culminating in the arrival of Richard "DNV" Sohl in the Spring of
1974. As a trio, they began to play more regularly, a curious
blend centered on Patti's improvised wordplay, between free rock
and free jazz, original songs mingling with strange cover
versions that were used as counterpoint and segue.
One of these, Patti's version of "Hey Joe," taking as its
backdrop the Patty Hearst kidnapping, became her first recorded
work. Going into Electric Ladyland Studio on the evening of June 5,
1974, the group attempted to see if the electricity they were
generating live could be translated to vinyl. Helped out by Tom
Verlaine (of the new band, Television) on lead guitar, funded by
Robert Mapplethorpe, and released on their own Mer Records, the
result was one of the first indie-
Buoyed by an energetic New Band scene centered around CBGB's in
New York, the group
Drummer Jay Dee Daugherty had overseen their sound at CBGB's and
had sat in with them several times. He joined the band in time to
record their debut album, with John Cale at the producer's helm.
Recorded at Electric Ladyland, Horses was released in November 1975.
It contained Patti's incantatory reworkings of rock classics like
"Gloria" and "Land (Of A Thousand Dances)", more traditional song
forms (the reggae "Redondo Beach," "Free Money"), and
streams-
After successfully touring America and Europe, sounding a
"wake-up call" to the legions of aspiring guitarists waiting in
the wings, the Group returned to the studio in the summer of 1976
to record Radio Ethiopia with producer Jack Douglas. Featuring a
more rock-
The time off was spent preparing a volume of poetry, Babel, and
Easter, the 1978 release which not only gave the Group its first
Top 20 hit
But with so many of their artistic and idealistic goals
accomplished, the end was inevitably in sight. In 1979, Patti
released Wave, produced by Todd Rundgren, which seemed to
complete her seventies' saga. Even while the band's cover of "(So
You Want To Be A) Rock And Roll Star" spoke of her disenchantment
with the trapping of rock stardom, "Dancing Barefoot" and
"Frederick" were inspired by the new love in her life, Fred
"Sonic" Smith, ex-MC5 guitarist and leader of Detroit's Sonic
Rendezvous Band. In the fall of 1979, after performing what would
be a farewell concert before 70,000 fans in a Florence, Italy
soccer stadium, Patti waved "bye, bye, hey hey" to her Group
persona and moved to the Motor City. She married Fred on March 1,
1980.
They lived a quiet, private life in a Detroit suburb, with their
children Jackson (now 14) and Jesse (9), concentrating their
energies on raising a family and following their musical muse. In
1988, they released Dream of Life as a symbol of their creative
work together. It featured "People Have The Power" and "Paths
That Cross," the Smiths' tribute to the infinite positive
possibilities within us all, as well as a lullaby to children
everywhere in "The Jackson Song."
Patti continued to write, releasing a compendium of her
seventies' poetry in Early Work (Norton); Woolgathering
(Hanuman); and beginning a novel. She and Fred created songs
together, with an eye to recording in the summer of 1995, until
Fred's death of heart failure on November 4, 1994; among his last
accomplishments was to teach Patti her guitar chords. The passing
of her brother, Todd, of a heart attack a month later, further
brought home to her how slight is our time on this earth. She
worked through her grief with song, as singers have done
immemorial, in memorium.
She had given a handful of performances, mostly poetry
In the summer of 1995, she entered New York's Electric Lady
land
studios to begin recording her sixth album. Produced by Malcolm
Burn and Lenny Kaye, Gone Again features old friends like Tom
Verlaine and John Cale, new friends like keyboardist Luis Resto
and guitarist Oliver Ray, guest appearances by singer Jeff
Buckley, cellist Jane Scarpantoni, and mandolin player Kimberly
Smith; and the inimitable Smith magic of song and the spoken
word.
A meditation on passage and mortality, Gone Again celebrates
life's illumination, and our place in the celestial heavens. As
the poet Allen Ginsberg says, "Light a candle, and continue the
dance."
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