Patti Smith
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 77 |
Web site | www.pattismith.net |
Date of birth | December 30,1946 |
Zodiac sign | Capricorn |
Born | Chicago |
Illinois | |
United States | |
Spouse | Fred Smith |
Albums | Horses |
Dream of Life | |
Gone Again | |
Banga | |
Trampin' | |
Children | Jackson Smith |
Jesse Smith | |
Height | 173 (cm) |
Awards | National Book Award for Nonfiction |
NME Award for Best Book | |
Polar Music Prize for Popular Music | |
Official site | pattismith.net |
Listen artist | www.youtube.com |
Groups | Patti Smith Group |
Books | Just Kids |
Upcoming events | Cirque Royal - Koninklijk Circus |
Parents | Beverly Smith |
Grant Smith | |
Inducted date | 2007 |
Poems | Woolgathering |
The Coral Sea | |
Babel | |
Seventh Heaven | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 413469 |
Horses: Patti Smith and Her Band
William S. Burroughs: A Man Within
Black White + Gray
Lou Reed: Rock & Roll Heart
Burroughs: The Movie
Patti Smith: Long for the City
The Rugrats Movie
The House of the Rising Punk
Museum Hours
The Blank Generation
Brian Wilson: On Tour
Arista Records' 25th Anniversary Celebration
Words of Advice: William S. Burroughs on the Road
Benjamin Smoke
Patti Smith: Under Review
Spheres
Diner
New Wave
Dani, Michi, Renato & Max
Later . . . with Jools Holland: Legends
The Best of Sessions at West 54th: Vol. 1
Patti Smith: Dream of Life
Patti Smith Life story
Patricia Lee "Patti" Smith is an American singer, songwriter, poet, painter, and author who became an influential component of the New York City punk rock movement with her 1975 debut album Horses. Called the "punk poet laureate", Smith fused rock and poetry in her work.
Bruce Springsteen settles an old score in Hyde Park
... There are wonderful, extended jams on Mary s Place and Kitty s Back, where the band, the horn section and the E Street Choir, get to show off their considerable might; and rousing singalongs to The River and Because The Night - a song Springsteen gave to Patti Smith in 1977 but has latterly reclaimed as his own...
Christine and the Queens on enlisting Madonna for 'weird musical'
... " My, it was super intimidating, " Chris says of following in the footsteps previous Meltdown curators like Grace Jones, The Cure s Robert Smith, David Bowie, Yoko Ono, Patti Smith and Nick Cave...
Television frontman Tom Verlaine dies at 73
... Verlaine s death was announced by Jesse Paris Smith, the daughter of long-time associate and collaborator Patti Smith...
Jet Black: 'Inspirational' drummer for the Stranglers dies aged 84
... " Supporting US punk stars the Ramones and Patti Smith at their UK gigs, The Strangers musical virtuosity set them apart from the more DIY aesthetic of their peers...
An incomplete history of pop on BBC television
... Along the way, it showcased everyone from Bob Marley and Roxy Music to Patti Smith and Meat Loaf - whose first ever performance of Bat Out Of Hell was so popular it was given an unprecedented repeat the following week...
Shirley Manson: 'Garbage got it in the neck from everyone'
... Taking a cue from Manson s podcast - in which she interviews artists like Patti Smith and Alanis Morissette about writing their biggest hits - we asked her for the stories behind Garbage s greatest...
Eurovision 2022: Ireland's Brooke fails to qualify for the final
... Hosts Laura Pausini and Mika also teamed up for a tender cover of Sting s Fragile, as well as " People Have The Power" by Patti Smith...
Shirley Manson: 'Garbage got it in the neck from everyone'
By Mark SavageBBC Music Correspondent
Nearly 30 years after Shirley Manson promised to " tear your Little World apart" Garbage are Still One of rock's most captivating and ferocious propositions.
The Band emerged in 1995 with a blend of rock riffs, glitching electronics and seductive dance beats that shifted The Sound of Pop Music .
But they were treated with suspicion by critics, who sniffed at their origins as a studio project - Put together by Nirvana producer Butch Vig , who hired Manson despite a " disastrous" audition where nerves rendered her " practically mute".
" We were criticised for not being a real band, " says Manson. " To This Day , people dismiss us as a 'producer's band'. We've got it in The Neck from everyone, no matter what we've done. "
Even when they broke new ground by using samplers and loops In Concert , it was dismissed as inauthentic.
" We were scoffed at, but now everybody's doing it, " says The Singer .
" We were The First band to Put sonic shields up around The Drum kit and people went nuts. You would have thought we killed their granny. And now everybody's doing that, too, because all the vocalists want a clean, pure signal. "
In spite (or maybe because of) their underdog status, The Band survived - with Last Year 's potent, political album No Gods , No Masters described as " " and " ".
" We've somehow managed to build a career by refusing to listen to people, " says Manson. " We have, in inverted commas, 'a Bad Attitude ', but that attitude has allowed us to carve out a niche for ourselves. "
To celebrate their third decade, The Band have released a riotous, career-spanning Anthology album. Taking a cue from Manson's podcast - in which she interviews artists Like Patti Smith and Alanis Morissette About Writing their biggest hits - we asked her for the stories behind Garbage's greatest.
Vow (1995)" To be Perfectly Frank , I didn't really write the bulk of those lyrics. Vow was More or less written when I came To My audition but I loved The Line , '. ' I was Like , 'This is Patti Smith -level stuff'. She's one of My All time touchstones - and I think you can hear Patti's influence on every single record we've done - so I was well into it, and remain so.
" But Butch was really neurotic about Vow. He didn't think it was good enough. And in all fairness, he had More to lose than we did. I'd been in a couple of indie bands that nobody gave a stuff about, whereas Butch was a really well-known producer.
" Luckily for us, Volume Magazine - which was at that time a very hip CD Magazine - approached us while we were recording The Debut album and said, 'We'd Like to Put out a Garbage track', and Vow was the only song that was really remotely close to being finished. And as a result of that Magazine , Vow got played on radio and we took off. "
Stupid Girl (1996)" People think it's our most successful song but it's far from it. I just think Stupid Girl was The Moment everyone fell in love With Us .
" It's very poppy, the production is unique and, of course, it's got that incredible. Then Samuel Bayer made us a brilliant video (based on the title sequence to David Fincher 's Se7en) and that's how a lot of people remember seeing us for the First Time . And if I do say so myself, I looked extraordinary in that video. The Band looked cool and it caught people's imagination.
" And who is the Stupid Girl? Well, there was a target but a lady never says! "
I Think I'm Paranoid (1998)" The Music Industry hasn't changed. Not really. Not the principles of it. It's an industry that's based around Making Money from needy creatives - and I think, as an artist, you do well to accept those parameters, because they do not change.
" That is The Deal : Creative people need systems by which they can reach the population and the industry exploits that need. They make a lot of money and they are very careless with artists - who are The Last people to get paid.
" We were lucky in that we emerged at a time before streaming when you could build a career. These Days , alternative artists, who aren't Making Music to appeal to the mainstream, are getting drowned every single day. "
The World Is Not Enough (1999)" David Arnold , who's the composer of The Movie , asked to meet me in a Coffee Shop in London. He'd done this beautiful song, Play Dead , with Bjork and I was thrilled someone Like him even wanted to meet me. Then over coffee he literally said, 'Do you want to sing The Next Bond theme?'
" I, of course went mental and agreed immediately. "
Androgyny (2001)" We had no idea that that we were tapping Into Something that would become common parlance, but I love the fact that we're all talking now about non-binary sexuality and gender. That excites me. I feel it's really important that we start to discipline ourselves to to think about [gender] differently and in a More nuanced, informed way.
" It's not about being attracted to people or sex. It's about being yourself, being a fulfilled happy person. And why Some People feel the need to stamp on The Necks of others because of some weird Victorian thinking is utterly beyond my understanding. "
Why Do You Love Me (2005)" I have struggled with body dysmorphia and depression and self-harm in My Life , and at times continue to, in varying degrees, and this song is definitely tackling those familiar feelings.
" I think it's important, as someone who's viewed as a well-known musician, to tell The Truth about who I Am - because it's so easy to look at so-called celebrities and only see The Glamour .
" When we're in public, we get our hair and our make-up done and we get given incredible clothes by ridiculously talented designers. Then we wake up The Next day and we're just Normal People . The whole celebrity thing is an illusion. And it's an illusion that's fostered by a really greedy industry in order to make money.
" So I felt a responsibility as a musician to say, 'Hey, look, this is The Truth of it. '"
The Men Who Rule The World (2021)" I want to finish up with The Men Who Ruled The World just because of the astounding prescience of that song. When you see what's happening in Iran or what the Republican Party is is doing with women's rights In America , it's mind-boggling. If you think it's OK that a 10 year old should birth a child after being raped by A Family member, I'm sorry, you've lost your moral compass.
" I'm proud of The Song because it's not holding back any punches. When we first released it, a lot of male journalists were very rude about my so-called mental state. It was suggested that I take anti-depressants because of my mindset towards white male supremacy and, again, that underscores the crazy, unfettered male dominance in The World . It's terrifying.
" But don't get me wrong. I love men. I work with men, predominantly. This is not an anti-male stance. It's an anti-idiot stance. "
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Source of news: bbc.com