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February 1993 ... Carolyn Striho with guitarists Wayne Gerard and Wayne Kramer, bassist Mark Andrews (Seduce) and drumme...
07/02/2024

February 1993 ... Carolyn Striho with guitarists Wayne Gerard and Wayne Kramer, bassist Mark Andrews (Seduce) and drummer Vinnie Dombroski (Loudhouse).

16/07/2023

This is "Sonics Rendezvous Band" by Terry Murphy on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

Dateline: May 1979. Smith photo by Sue Rynski, more images in comments below.DORATI INSPIRES PATTI - PUNK DISCOVERS DSOB...
18/05/2023

Dateline: May 1979. Smith photo by Sue Rynski, more images in comments below.

DORATI INSPIRES PATTI - PUNK DISCOVERS DSO
By Dave Zurawik - Detroit Free Press - 13 May 1979

This story will move in PST or Patti Smith Time, as opposed to DST or Daylight Savings Time that most of the rest of us move in.

Four p.m.

Twenty chairs. Two pitchers of ice water. Paper cups. A pot of coffee. Ashtrays.

Press conference time.

Only there's just one member of the press present in the Mason Room of the Radisson Hotel, and the stars of the press conference are nowhere around.

Patti Smith and Fred "Sonic"Smith. No relation. Their topic: the benefit concerts they are doing Thursday (at 7:30 p.m. at U-M Dearborn) and Friday (at 7:30 p.m. at the Punch and Judy Theatre in Grosse Pointe Farms) on behalf of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.

Strange combination, the Smiths and the DSO. She is a poet turned rock performer who has all but been canonized in the pop music columns of the New York Times. He is a songwriter-guitarist who has been compared to Bob Dylan and Chuck Berry by Rolling Stone editor Dave Marsh.

When Fred played with the rock-revolution oriented MC5, he used to pose for pictures with a bandolier over his shoulder. Her current band is called the Patti Smith Group; his is Sonic's Rendezvous band. The term most often used to describe their music and onstage demeanor is "punk" - a raucous style of musical theatrics currently trying to broaden its appeal. They think that image is misunderstood and maligned by the straight world.

The Smiths live together in Detroit now and say they want to do something to help the symphony. They said they wanted to talk about it, too. But it is 4:30 p.m., they are nowhere around, and someone says it's time to clear the Mason Room.

It seems like time to give up when someone at the front desk presents a schedule that shows the press conference was actually scheduled for 3 p.m. And then someone else says, "nobody's been in that room all afternoon."

Four forty-five.

The phone rings. It is Fred Smith. He asks where you are. You tell him you are on your way.

When you arrive back at the Mason Room, you apologize for being late. You are starting to get into the swing of Smith Time. You also act as though it is perfectly normal to be conducting this private interview in a roomful of empty chairs with a long speakers' table at the front.

Fred explains casually that there never was a press conference scheduled. They just booked the room because they thought it would be a good place for the interview.

The confusion about all of it shows, and after a while Patti says, "Hey, listen it's just the three of us. And we feel like talking about the symphony and the benefits. So relax. Okay?"

It's reassuring, since the Patti Smith of her press notices can be a little intimidating. She underlines every other point with references to writers like Baudelaire and Rimbaud. If you haven't kept up on your French Romantic poets, you can feel a little inadequate.

The most reassuring thing about the statement from Patti, though, is that when she speaks she sounds more like Laverne De Fazio telling Richie Cunningham to loosen up than someone delivering an admonishment. There is a warmth there.

So, a couple of press-conference-style questions about the benefits are tried even though the real question is how she's managing to look so cool in this room without air conditioning while the temperature outside is pushing 90.

She's wearing a little cross at her neck, a black sweater that girls wore in the '50's, black skirt, black stockings and black slippers. If it weren't for the big smile she flashes Fred from time to time, you'd think you were talking to someone in a French convent.

Fred and Patti are talking about what moved them to perform on behalf of the symphony.

Patti: " Detroit's my home. (She's actually from New Jersey). I'd never been to a symphony performance. I love classical music. But it always seemed inaccessible. And then we started watching the Beethoven series on television and listening to Dorati talk.

"It became something that we started looking forward to every week. We started looking forward to that the way we might have looked forward to a Rolling Stones concert. I mean, listening to the music and Dorati talk and ignoring E.G. Marshall.

"He (Dorati) reminded me of John Paul I, so gentle. He just makes me feel good. There was nothing elitist about it. He had this dignity and grace.

"Having lived in New York where the orchestra is very aggressive and flamboyant, there was something inspiring for me about the way Dorati presented the symphony.

"And, having gone to see the symphony several times since, we feel like there's a nice cross section in the audience – working class people. I don't feel like I'm at the Chicago Opera.

"Hey, we just want to help support the symphony and get more people to share the experience of listening to the symphony play."

Fred: "There are a lot of people exactly like us … people who have stayed away from the symphony because they didn't understand it. Once they hear it, they love it – young people, moved by that 100 piece orchestra – they love it, they just are not sure how to deal with it. It's image. Like you said, some people who don't know have always thought about symphonies as elitist institutions."

Patti: "Yeah, there's confusion over image. People have weird concepts. I'm sure some symphony supporters think of us as something out of 'West Side Story,' where we all wear leather jackets and carry switchblades. (Aside to Fred) we do have some of those, don't we?"

From here on, Patti and Fred begin a pattern of defecting more personal questions with statements that lead back to their support of the symphony, which leads to the conclusion that maybe they knew exactly what they were doing wen they termed this a press conference as opposed to an interview.

Patti is asked why she gave up New York for Detroit.

Patti: "I had an offer I couldn't refuse (shared laughter with Fred). No, there are a lot of reasons. Mainly personal, though, which I don't really want to…"

Fred:" Just say she didn't choose Detroit because of the Renaissance Center" (more shared laughter).

Patti: "You seek as much energy as possible. So when I say how moved I was by Dorati and the symphony, that is not a light comment. I mean it in the same sense as Rimbaud or Jimi Hendrix. It opened up a whole new field of experience for us, listening to the music. And when you look at a guy like Dorati – stature, youth, balance, energy, light …You asked about burning out in relation to rock. How about Dorati? He's never burned out. You seek energy experiences.

Specifically, we keep from burning out the way Beethoven did, 'by throwing ice water on our heads every morning.' At least that's what Beethoven did, according to Dorati. He said that."

When asked if either of them can remember anyone inspiring them as much as Dorati seems to have, Fred says, "Ziggy Vincenti, my guitar teacher when I was 11. And there are certain similarities between the impact both he and Dorati have had on me. " Patti says. "I think it would have to be Mr. Smith, my old clarinet teacher."

Fred: By the way we were invited to meet the maestro Friday after his concert. We think it's quite an honor (the meeting was subsequently canceled by Dorati, reportedly for reasons that had nothing to do with either Smith)."

When asked if they were aware going into the benefits that the press could hardly resist playing off the sensationalism of artists termed "punk" performing on behalf of the symphony, both said they were aware of that likelihood and that it didn't bother them.

Patti, though, responds to a question about critics with, "People should be professional. Baudelaire said the critic's role is to open peoples' eyes. Today, they're more like gossip columnists."

A few moments later, when asked if she doesn't like all critics or just some, she says, "I didn't say I don't like critics. I think some abuse their role. I used to do some of that writing myself."

It is the kind of distinction she makes throughout the interview, which perhaps explains why she isn't interested in much that's written about her.

She makes another distinction when Fred is asked if all this thinking he and Patti do isn't at odds with the image he sometimes projects from the stage.

Patti: "I disagree with you very much about Fred's image on stage. I think he's capable of making even finer distinctions than me. And onstage I seem him as sort of a roadhouse Johnny Carson. A great sense of fun and humor."

Fred: "And the use of the term 'punk' in describing Patti, I see her performances more as dance and the good aspects of a piano concerto. Lily Tomlin."

Patti: "Listen, we're both big kidders. Ya know? You're like E.G. Marshall on the Dorati series, ya don't get any of the jokes. All this is about is that we care about the symphony a lot and want to help in our own way."

Fred: "Yeah, humor is a very serious thing.

Patti: "It's like Beethoven's Fifth. The da da da dum. It makes you laugh…Most great masterpieces make people laugh. Dorati does that with the orchestra; it just makes me bubble up. I stood in front of 'Guernica' (Picasso's painting of the Spanish Civil War) and started to bubble up in the same way. Call it God or whatever, there's a highest membrane in all of us that doesn't get pierced often enough. Sometimes it produces a twinkle in the eye, like with Dorati."

Fred: "It's a simple thing, and people don't seek the simple things in life often enough."

Patti: "It's the secret of being a kid. Hey, this is just all nice stuff we're talking about here. Not highbrow or anything. And this stuff gets back to the symphony."

Fred: "It makes you feel good, the music. It inspires you. It extracts this feeling out of you, and we want to help pay back the symphony for that enjoyment and lead other people to it who haven't experienced it."

Since Fred rises from his seat and says," thanks. Do you have enough?" much the way the UPI correspondent rises to end a presidential press conference, it seems safe to assume that this probably was a press conference and not an interview.

And since both Patti and Fred condemn newspaper stories that use pictures of them without calling them or getting pictures from them, a tentative photo appointment is set up for the next day and when they don't show up and can't be reached that next day, the conclusion is inescapable: they really wanted to make that appointment, but there was some confusion as to what noon we were dealing with, DST or PST.

Mother's Day 1995 would mark the second night of Patti Smith's return to live performance, after almost 16 years away, j...
14/05/2023

Mother's Day 1995 would mark the second night of Patti Smith's return to live performance, after almost 16 years away, joining the Detroit Energy Asylum for a pair low-key dates at Steve Milgrom's Magic Bag in Ferndale.

The several hundred in attendance at the intimate music venue would be treated to the first public performance of "Don't Smoke In Bed"; "Up There, Down There,” "The Jackson Song," and ”Wild Leaves" from the Dream Of Life album; and the debut of the then-unrecorded "About A Boy."

What began with the March 1995 recording session for "Don’t Smoke In Bed" would become an intense four-month period of rehearsals, recording and performance, including dates at Pontiac's Industry and the 89X Birthday Bash at the Phoenix Plaza Amphitheatre, concluding with two sold-out shows at the Phoenix Concert Theatre in Toronto.
--
"Detroit has recently been blessed with a sort of second coming of Patti Smith Live, her vehicle being a half dozen gigs billed as Carolyn Striho and Detroit Energy Asylum with very special guest." -- "Fly On The Wall" by Anita Mann, Metro Times (Detroit) June 1995

But those were trickles and spurts compared to the burst of activity this year: reading with Allen Ginsberg in Ann Arbor, performing with Kaye at St. Mark’s Church on New Year’s Day, recording a cover of Nina Simone’s “Don’t Smoke in Bed” for the benefit album Ain’t Nothing but a She Thing, and sit­ting in with Carolyn Striho and the Detroit Energy Asylum at several gigs in Michigan...

“All of them are very heartfelt,” Smith says. “To give somebody to your people is really generous. That group of people really cared about Fred, and they really wanted to help me get back to work. It’s been good for getting me focused for this record.” - "The Return of Patti Smith" by Evelyn McConnell, Village Voice (NYC) August 1995

photos by Bill Schwab

This is the authentic 1978 poster for this gig, which also marked the release of the "City Slang" single. There's also a...
11/10/2022

This is the authentic 1978 poster for this gig, which also marked the release of the "City Slang" single. There's also a flyer with the billing superimposed over a photo of Patti and Fred Smith playing guitars onstage. Both are legitimate.

However there's a poster in circulation with Patti in the center, flanked by individual images of Fred and Scott Morgan, some reference to "kicking out the jams" and a date of 1981. That item is an absolute fraud. Buyer beware.

Sonic's Rendezvous, The Romantics and the Mutants, one night in 1977, the pre-Bookie's era.
26/09/2022

Sonic's Rendezvous, The Romantics and the Mutants, one night in 1977, the pre-Bookie's era.

>> Imagination, razor blades and g***a: How Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry changed the sound of popular music By Randall RobertsAsk...
01/09/2021

>> Imagination, razor blades and g***a: How Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry changed the sound of popular music

By Randall Roberts

Asked about the revolutionary rhythms and songs created at his Black Ark studios in Kingston, Jamaica, reggae producer, dub innovator and studio icon Lee “Scratch” Perry described a cosmic process occurring deep within his early four-track studio tape recorder.

Although the machine afforded only use of four tracks during production, “I was picking up 20 from the extraterrestrial squad,” he said, adding matter-of-factly, “I am the dub shepherd.”

With his colorfully dyed hair, jangly jewelry, bedazzled hats and neon outfits, Perry, who died Sunday in Lucea, Jamaica, at age 85, presented himself as an eccentric island mystic. The sounds he shepherded across a lifetime behind the mixing board, though, were sophisticated and driven by a laser-like intent that helped change the course of popular music.

Although half a decade prior, George Martin and the Beatles had made grand, studio-built experiments in world-class rooms, Perry in the early 1970s constructed technological workarounds that multiplied the potential at a fraction of the price. Listing his many influential productions for Max Romeo, the Congos, Augustus Pablo, the Meditations and hundreds more might help quantify his contributions, but Perry’s influence extends far beyond reggae and dub.

Among the most innovative producers of the analog recording era, Perry built a ragtag four-track studio centered on a TEAC reel-to-reel, a Soundcraft mixing board, an Echoplex delay box and a Mu-Tron phaser. Seemingly duct-taped together, his gear generated stoned-immaculate sounds and ideas that served as the building blocks of remix culture.

“Rhyming live over records. Subtracting elements from a ‘completed’ song to make a ghostly new one. Studio engineer as creative artist. DJing as performance. Sound-system operators as hero-librarian-curators. It all sprang from Kingston, Jamaica,” electronic music producer and essayist Jace Clayton, who performs as DJ/rupture, wrote in his book “Uproot: Travels in 21st-Century Music and Digital Culture.”

Clayton described Perry and fellow Jamaican dub producer King Tubby as the scene’s “Plato and Socrates, laying down the foundations of contemporary electronic music culture.”

Painter Jean-Michel Basquiat cited Perry’s aesthetic as an inspiration, and his music has been featured in movies including “The Brother From Another Planet,” “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,” “The Royal Tenenbaums” and, most recently, director Steve McQueen’s reggae-soundtracked anthology series “Small Axe.”

As news spread of Perry’s death, musicians shared remembrances on social media. Describing “his pioneering spirit and work,” the Beastie Boys’ Mike D and Adam Horovitz wrote that they were “truly grateful to have been inspired by and collaborated with this true legend.”

Steve Albini, who produced the Pixies’ “Surfer Rosa” and Nirvana’s “In Utero,” said Perry’s “records... became talismans for anybody who ever tried to manifest the sound in their head.”

Perry, born Rainford Hugh Perry on March 20, 1936, produced and co-wrote the Bob Marley classic “Punky Reggae Party,” and produced early Marley and Wailers jams including “Keep on Moving,” “Duppy Conqueror” and “Mr. Brown,” as well as the entirety of the Wailers’ 1970 album “Soul Rebels.”

The Perry-produced Junior Murvin hit “Police and Thieves,” a sweetly sung indictment of gangland wars and police brutality, earned Perry popularity among the “punky reggae” crowd when the Clash recorded a version for its debut album. The band invited Perry to produce songs including “Pressure Drop” and “Complete Control.” In 2013, Perry entered the consciousness of a new generation when he was a featured in the video game Grand Theft Auto V as a DJ on a dub and reggae radio station called “The Blue Ark.”

On the 1998 Beastie Boys’ song “Dr. Lee, PhD,” Perry — who at various points nicknamed himself Little, King, Scratch, the Upsetter, Pipecock Jackson, Super Ape, Ringo, Emmanuel, the Rockstone and Small Axe — toasted over a hazy, weed-fueled journey through reverberating organ, bass and drums. “They who want total control always lose control / Some always lose their soul for silver and gold,” Perry shouted in rhythm during the track.

His guiding philosophy, Perry said, involved creating what he called “music that can make wrongs right” by “getting help from God, through space, through the sky, through the firmament, through the earth, through the wind, through the fire.” Organized sound, for Perry, had to be “like a living thing,” and the recorder (“the machine”) “must be alive and intelligent. Then I put my mind into the machine by sending it through the controls and the knobs.”

As a young laborer, Perry took a job clearing rocks for a construction project. Soon, he explained in the liner notes to “Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry: Arkology,” a set that gathered his Black Ark recordings, “I started making positive connections with stones. By throwing stones to stones I start to hear sounds. When the stones clash, I hear like the thunder clash, and I hear the lightning flash, and I hear words, and I don’t know where the words [were] coming from.”

The voices guided him in the late 1950s to Kingston, where he landed a job with producer and Studio One owner Clement “Coxsone” Dodd. Perry was soon scouting for talent — and helping to discover the vocal trio the Maytals. After an unsatisfying stint working with producer Joe Gibbs, Perry formed Upsetter Records and released “People Funny Boy,” his first hit. He followed that with a run of joyful instrumental singles based on themes from spaghetti westerns and action films.

Construction of Black Ark was concluded in late 1973, and the studio quickly became a magnet for vocal groups and solo singers. Born of necessity — and lots and lots of ma*****na — Perry’s pre-computer cut-and-paste technology involved razor blades, recording tape, a sharp ear for rhythmic intricacies, thin strips of adhesive ribbon to lock sections together and lots of tummy-rumbling bass. Within a few years, the sound Perry advanced would inspire international superstars including Stevie Wonder, the Rolling Stones and Paul Simon.

As roots reggae’s foremost producer, Perry, wrote essayist and musician David Toop, built “an imaginal chamber over which presided the electronic wizard, evangelist, gossip columnist and Dr. Frankenstein.” In doing so, the producer advanced the idea of remixing already-existing recordings through editing, reverb, electronic effects, reworked rhythm tracks and stuttering vocal edits to create hallucinogenic sound trips that seemed to hit your eardrums like wafts of sunlit g***a-smoke.

Perry used his system’s weaknesses to his advantage: over-saturating tapes with sound waves and manipulating the results; harnessing distortion and feedback for use as sound effects; reversing and slowing tape to transform voices into ghostly moans; feeding drums through electronic echo chambers to make them wobble and jerk.

Perry’s 7-minute dub version of Max Romeo’s “Chase the Devil,” called “Disco Devil,” is a lesson in the ways in which repetition, subtraction and silence, combined with sonic accents and pew-pew space-gun noises, could reenergize songs designed for the easy roots-reggae sway transforming Jamaican dance floors in the 1970s.

That distinctive quality was foundational in a music scene where shops such as Rockers International and Randy’s Records promoted both releases and parties, selling new 45s daily from the dozens of labels trying to break their records on the sound-system scene in and around Kingston. The most exciting productions resonated not just in the former British colony of Jamaica but also in the expat community in London and the dense Jamaican population in New York City.

The competition for ears rewarded songs that stuck out, and Perry imbued his music with surprise tones, sonic witticisms and oddly reverbed vocals. As a way to cut costs, the B-sides of singles at the time often featured bass-heavy instrumental “versions” of the A-side.

That reverberating bass was the key to dub, the reggae subgenre that artists including Perry and, earlier, his friend King Tubby invented in the late 1960s. As writer Luke Ehrlich famously described the difference between reggae and dub in an early 1980s essay: “If reggae is Africa in the New World, dub is Africa on the moon.”

When, in 1973, Perry’s band the Upsetters teamed with King Tubby to release “Blackboard Jungle Dub,” the Upsetters became one of the first groups to issue an entire album of dub versions.

Until dub came along, a recording was finished when it was pressed onto a record. King Tubby and Perry advanced the notion that a recording is never really done, since it can be infinitely re-recorded, remixed and reinvigorated anew with each edit. Dub versions also enabled DJs to extend dance-floor enthusiasm well beyond the song’s three-minute mark. Armed with two turntables and 45s, DJs could blend and mix versions on the fly. That practice reverberated in America when the Jamaican-born DJ Kool Herc started doing the same with funk and disco breaks in the Bronx to create the foundations of hip-hop.

Perry was obsessed with making music that was fun, he said, so he giddily experimented in the studio. In the Congos’ ”Children Crying,” Perry slowed down a tape of a crying baby until it roared like a lion. Years before sample culture changed popular music Perry’s uptempo groover “Station Underground News” found him splicing the recorded chorus of the Chi-Lites’ “(For God’s Sake) Give More Power to the People” directly into the tape to incorporate it into the song. Believing it affected the sound, Perry exhaled streams of g***a smoke onto his tape reels, or buried them in his garden for a few days. For Jah Lion’s “Hay Fever,” a rework of Peggy Lee’s “Fever,” Perry looped into the recording the sound of a squeaking door.

On “Cow Thief Skank,” he merged reel-to-reel tapes of two different rhythm tracks to create a third. To produce one curious percussion sound that he used across his career, Perry stood close to a studio microphone and popped his open mouth with his hand to make a racquet-hitting-ball sound — then used edits and loops of that tape in drum patterns.

And then there was “Heart of the Congos,” the spine-tingling 1977 studio album by vocal duo the Congos. Often cited as Perry’s greatest full-length production, it’s an exquisite work filled with sweetly soulful hymns to Jah. The album found Perry mixing synthetic drums with musicians including Sly Dunbar, Ernest Ranglin and Gregory Isaacs. Singers Cedric Myton and Roydel Johnson offered song that dwelled on questions of biblical proportions involving truth, justice, God and Rastafarian beliefs on the location for the Ark of the Covenant.

“Heart of the Congos” was recorded at Black Ark a few years before a fire of dubious origins destroyed the studio and everything within it. Before Black Ark went up in flames in 1979, an increasingly drunken and stoned Perry had affixed to studio walls cut-out images, artwork, circular 45 labels, headshots and photos of the late Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie, upon which he had written countless words, symbols and phrases. As relayed in the “Arkology” liner notes, in the days leading up to the blaze, Perry crossed out every “A” and “E” on the wall; at one point, he was spotted carrying a hammer and walking backward around Kingston neighborhoods.

Though Perry was detained on suspicion of arson, he wasn’t charged. But minus a studio, Perry was an untethered presence. It didn’t help that his inheritors had adapted some of Perry’s innovations to create a new sound. Called dancehall, its rise in the early 1980s eclipsed his efforts in the decades that followed. His two “Megaton Dub” albums in the mid-1980s featured solid grooves, but they were no match for the synth-heavy new tracks by Yellowman, Sugar Minott and Frankie Paul.

In England, however, Perry’s influence started seeping into the variant of hip-hop being made in Bristol by Massive Attack, Tricky and Portishead. Called trip hop, the subgenre adopted and amplified Perry’s love of bass and echo. In Europe, minimal electronic producers such as Vladislav Delay, Stefan Betke and Basic Channel absorbed Perry’s vibe to create dub techno.

By then, Perry had moved to England and commenced a series of collaborations with peers including Mad Professor, the Scientist and Dub Syndicate. For Perry and Mad Professor’s 2000 album “Techno Dub,” the two went fully digital to explore the depths within silicon chips.

Perry moved to Switzerland in 1989 and married Mireille Campbell-Rüegg soon after. He lived the rest of his life in Zurich, London and Kingston. A constant traveler, Perry was spotted in late 2019 in Highland Park, where he was visiting Stones Throw Records’ studio for a collaboration.

Endlessly creative, Perry popped into studios whenever he had the chance. According to the site Discogs, Perry produced more than 1,100 releases and wrote or co-wrote just as many. Perry issued 222 singles under various monikers and 93 studio albums, as well as 100 compilation packages.

“Rainford,” his final solo album, came out via Adrian Sherwood’s On-U Sound label in 2019, and closes with what sounds like a benediction. “Autobiography of the Upsetter” features Perry recalling in rhythm his birth, youth, upbringing and inspirations. “I am the upsetter,” he chants, well aware that his philosophy upset the status quo and forged new ways of creating and hearing sound. As the music fades, Perry continues for a few measures more: “I am the upsetter,” he repeats before concluding, “I am the black angel.”

Lee "Scratch" Perry, who produced landmark recordings for Bob Marley and helped invent dub music at his famed Black Ark studios, died Sunday at age 85.

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