Michael Stipe, Lenny Kaye, Patti’s kids and others at Webster Hall wish Patti Smith a happy birthday on December 30, 2013.
And another view:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Michael Stipe, Lenny Kaye, Patti’s kids and others at Webster Hall wish Patti Smith a happy birthday on December 30, 2013.
And another view:
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Patti Smith and her band played at The Space in Westbury on Long Island on December 27, 2013.
The video below is very cool. It’s an hour and 12 minutes long. The sound is excellent. The video quality is pretty good. The fan who shot this was in a good location, so some of the footage is a zoomed-in closeup and you can really see her. Later they pull back a bit, which is even better.
At one point Smith makes fun of Russian President Putin in support of the recently freed Pussy Riot members. The video ends during the final song, “Rock ‘n’ Roll Nigger.”
If you want to read a review of the show, there’s one here.
Here’s the set list.
-– A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post: sounds, visuals and/or news –-
Yesterday a private invitation-only memorial was held for Lou Reed at New York’s Apollo Theater.
Attending and speaking or performing were Lou Reed’s wife, Laurie Anderson, Velvet Underground founding member Moe Tucker, Patti Smith, Hal Wilner, Antony, John Zorn and others.
Paul Simon sang “Pale Blue Eyes,” Patti Smith and guitarist Lenny Kaye performed “Perfect Day,” Debbie Harry sang “White Light, White Heat” and Antony Hegarty from Antony and the Johnsons sang “Candy Says.”
Check out the clips below:
Lou Reed memorial 1 Patti Smith A PERFECT DAY with Lenny Kaye
lou reed memorial 2 Paul Simon Pale Blue Eyes
lou reed memorial 3 John Zorn tribute to Metal Machine
lou reed memorial 4 his tai chi teacher
lou reed memorial 5 Hal Wilner and surprise memories
Lou Reed memorial 6 Antony sings CANDY SAYS
lou reed memorial 7 spoken word memories
lou 8 Mo Tucker reads a letter from John Cale
lou reed memorial 9 The Persuasions
lou reed memorial 10 his doctor talks of his patient and his friend
— continued —
Use this link or the one below below to get to the rest of this post.
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I came across this very cool eight minute film, “Raven,” that Ivan Kral made about Patti Smith and her band in 1975. It’s beautiful, and maybe four minutes into it Patti starts reciting her poetry.
“Raven,” from Prelinger Archives, directed by Ivan Kral with voiceover by Patti Smith.
These others have audio of Patti Smith reading her poetry.
Patti Smith Poetry Reading, 1973 NYC
Patti Smith: Poetry Reading at St. Mark’s Church, NYC (1972)
— A Days of the Crazy-Wild blog post —
Sound and visuals are great. Patti Smith and band are in great form.
Patti Smith performed in Corsica, France this past summer.
Check this out:
In a beautiful tribute to Lou Reed, Patti Smith wrote in the current issue of New Yorker:
I met Lou at Max’s Kansas City in 1970. The Velvet Underground played two sets a night for several weeks that summer. The critic and scholar Donald Lyons was shocked that I had never seen them, and he escorted me upstairs for the second set of their first night. I loved to dance, and you could dance for hours to the music of the Velvet Underground. A dissonant surf doo-wop drone allowing you to move very fast or very slow. It was my late and revelatory introduction to “Sister Ray.”
Within a few years, in that same room upstairs at Max’s, Lenny Kaye, Richard Sohl, and I presented our own land of a thousand dances. Lou would often stop by to see what we were up to. A complicated man, he encouraged our efforts, then turned and provoked me like a Machiavellian schoolboy. I would try to steer clear of him, but, catlike, he would suddenly reappear, and disarm me with some Delmore Schwartz line about love or courage. I didn’t understand his erratic behavior or the intensity of his moods, which shifted, like his speech patterns, from speedy to laconic. But I understood his devotion to poetry and the transporting quality of his performances. He had black eyes, black T-shirt, pale skin. He was curious, sometimes suspicious, a voracious reader, and a sonic explorer. An obscure guitar pedal was for him another kind of poem. He was our connection to the infamous air of the Factory. He had made Edie Sedgwick dance. Andy Warhol whispered in his ear. Lou brought the sensibilities of art and literature into his music. He was our generation’s New York poet, championing its misfits as Whitman had championed its workingman and Lorca its persecuted.
For more head to the New Yorker.
Patti Smith spoke about Lou Reed and the Velvet Underground in an interview with the Associated Press today (October 28, 2013).
“I was so taken with their [the Velvet Underground] music. I made it my business to study him. His process completely spoke to me, the process of merging poetry with these surf rhythms, this pulsing loop. You could get into a trance listening to 12 minutes of Sister Ray.”
Smith said Reed brought “the sensibility of art and literature” to rock music. Smith and Reed often spoke about poetry, and such poets as Hart Crane or Walt Whitman or Federico Garcia Lorca.
Smith said that “Pale Blue Eyes,” a song she often performed at the beginning of her career, is a favorite, and that it reminds her of her late husband, Fred “Sonic” Smith.
“I never fail to think of him and his gaze when I’m singing that or hear that song. Lou had a gift of taking very simple lines, ‘Linger on, your pale blue eyes,’ and make it so they magnify on their own. That song has always haunted me.”
For the whole story go here.
Patti Smith sings “Pale Blue Eyes” in 1976.
Lou Reed was, of course, a big influence on Lou Reed.
Here are three videos in which Patti covers Lou.
“We’re Gonna Have A Real Good Time Together”
“Perfect Day”
“perfect Day” (studio version)
So here’s the thing. If you were making a list of the best 500 albums of all time, would you really include Foo Fighters? How about MGMT’s Oracular Spectacular? I mean really? Come on. Seriously?
How about Nirvana’s “Bleach”? I’m a huge Nirvana fans. But if you’re picking 500 albums and you’ve got albums by James Brown and the Rolling Stones and Radiohead and Bob Dylan and Miles Davis and John Coltrane and Billie Holiday and Prince and Johnny Cash and Sleater-Kinney and Tom Waits and the Beach Boys and Woody Guthrie and Joanna Newsom and Bob Iver’s For Emma, Forever Ago, and on and on, would you really include include “Bleach”? Or two Kings of Leon albums?
Or how about Arctic Monkeys’ Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not as the 20th best of all time.
Oh well.
Here’s the Top 20:
1. The Smiths – The Queen Is Dead
2. The Beatles – Revolver
3. David Bowie – Hunky Dory
4. The Strokes – Is This It
5. The Velvet Underground – The Velvet Underground & Nico
6. Pulp – Different Class
7. The Stone Roses – The Stone Roses
8. Pixies – Doolittle
9. The Beatles – The Beatles
10. Oasis – Definitely Maybe
11. Nirvana – Nevermind
12. Patti Smith – Horses
13. Arcade Fire – Funeral
14. David Bowie – Low
15. PJ Harvey – Let England Shake
16. Joy Division – Closer
17. Public Enemy – It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back
18. My Bloody Valentine – Loveless
19. Arctic Monkeys – Whatever People Say I Am, That’s What I’m Not
20. Radiohead – OK Computer
Check the rest here.
Thanks, Stereogum.