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Description
Nicknamed the “Godmother of Punk,” Patti Smith rose to fame during the 1970s New York counterculture movement where she welcomed a new breed of rock and roll. Smith sanctioned the presence of a strong-willed woman in the mainstream rock community by breaking not only the fragile glass ceiling, but also the “rules” about women on the rock stage. Smith pushed right up to the front of the punk scene, stripping down sexual, religious, and emotional barriers to create a raw, viscerally personal message.
In Patti Smith: America’s Punk Rock Rhapsodist,musician and historian Eric Wendell delves into the volatile mix of religious upbringing and musical and literary influences that gave shape to Smith’s lyrics, music, and artistic output. Wendell explores how Smith’s androgynous stage presence pulled the various societal triggers, adding a new layer of meaning to popular music performance. Songwriter and singer, performance artist and poet, Smith created work that drew together biography, history, and music into a powerful collage of an artist who shaped a generation of musicians.
For poets and performers, as well as fans of Patti Smith and punk rock history, Patti Smith: America’s Punk Rock Rhapsodist is the perfect introduction to Smith’s achievements and the politics and art of a generation that is still felt.
Table of Contents
Timeline
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Sophistication, Shock, Subtly
Chapter 1: “For the Bible Tells Me So”: 1946-1967
Chapter 2: “Free Money”: 1967-1974
Chapter 3: “With Love We Sleep”: 1974-1975
Chapter 4: “Till Victory”: 1975-1978
Chapter 5: “So You Want to Be (A Rock ’N’ Roll Star)?: 1978-1986
Chapter 6: “I Was Looking for You”: 1986-1994
Chapter 7: “With a Strange Way of Walking and A Strange Way of Breathing”: 1994-1996
Chapter 8: “Don’t Say Nothing”: 1996-2000
Chapter 9: “New Party”: 2000-2010
Chapter 10: “Just Patti”: 2010 - Present
For Further Reading
For Further Listening
Index
About the Author
Product details
Published | Nov 06 2014 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 206 |
ISBN | 9780810886902 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 1 Table |
Dimensions | 235 x 161 mm |
Series | Tempo: A Rowman & Littlefield Music Series on Rock, Pop, and Culture |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Quintessential female punk rocker. Poet. Guitarist. Feminist hero. And a National Book Award–winner for her memoir, Just Kids (2010), Patti Smith grew up as a tomboy with a lyrical bent, discovered rock and roll at age seven when she first saw Little Richard, and has used religion her mother was a Jehovah’s Witness, her father an ardent but 'open-minded' atheist—as her most fundamental foundation. Wendell points out that her musical influences range from the obvious (Dylan) to the surprising (her vocal style comes from Hank Williams). He chronicles her life as she moves from New Jersey to New York, explores her friendship with the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, examines the impact living at the infamous Chelsea Hotel had on her artistic evolution, and looks at her early performances on the New York underground scene, where she rubbed shoulders with everyone from Andy Warhol to Lou Reed. He also offers critical observations on her recording output, from her critically acclaimed first album, Horses, onward. An excellent look at a premiere, multitalented artist.
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