Correction to a previous post of mine that Liz Phair was one of if not the first female solo rock artists. I forgot Joan Jett and, most importantly...
Patti Smith.
It was amazing.
I could really see her influence in Moz's performance now (one foot on the monitors, singing and connecting straight at you in the audience. Thankfully Moz doesn't spit, though. But when Smith does it, it's hardcore). She is such a warm performer/host, with many spikes of Hot! Hot! Hot!
What was interesting (as a Moz fan) was that her hair is very much like Julia's. So imagine a taller Julia going balls out spitting and going punk rock on stage. It's kind of surreal. (Has Julia karaoke-sung Patti Smith? hmm...)
Smith and her band opened with Redondo Beach (awwwesome!). In the set also was Dancing Barefoot, Because the Night, Gloria ("G-L-O-R-I-Ayeh!!"), Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nirvana cover, she conjured Kurt's spirit first, everyone was quiet, it was very touching) and Are You Experienced (Jimi Hendrix).
Lenny Kaye gave a great tribute to (LA's) KROQ FM dj Rodney Bingenheimer (Rodney on the Roq, who is responsible for The Smiths breaking out in the States) when the band was stretching time while Smith (Patti) left the stage to take a piss (she was humourously open about it). They also tributed songwriter Dave/Dan (?) Whitfield who seemed to be in the audience (writer of hits such as Heard it Through the Grapevine) and proceeded to rock into Rock N' Roll N*****.
Her son also played guitar. He was really good.
There was a nice song in tribute to Fred "Sonic" Smith (Neil Young's "Helpless").
The crowd went wild when Smith (Patti) put an Obama shirt over her head. She threw five of them out to the crowd. I think this was around the time they sang "People Have the Power."
An unforgettable night. It was cool to see the types of people who came out to see her, too. Baby-boomers who rocked with her from the 70s as well as beatnik/hipsters in their younger 30s. Artist mods, regular people, hippies.
The most awesome thing about her is she makes you feel Relevant. The vote is coming up in about 2 weeks. At one point she said she was trying to stretch time so we'd miss Saturday Night Live. I didn't understand until I got home and turned on the tele. A bit of queasiness set in when (the real) Palin appeared onscreen. Amy Pollard did a great job setting it straight during the news segment, in front of Palin, who obviously didn't get it and tried to play along.
sigh...
But anyway, Patti Smith was great and empowering. She reminded us that the future is in our hands and we (in the US) need to show up at the polls on Nov. 4 and Vote.
Patti Smith.
It was amazing.
I could really see her influence in Moz's performance now (one foot on the monitors, singing and connecting straight at you in the audience. Thankfully Moz doesn't spit, though. But when Smith does it, it's hardcore). She is such a warm performer/host, with many spikes of Hot! Hot! Hot!
What was interesting (as a Moz fan) was that her hair is very much like Julia's. So imagine a taller Julia going balls out spitting and going punk rock on stage. It's kind of surreal. (Has Julia karaoke-sung Patti Smith? hmm...)
Smith and her band opened with Redondo Beach (awwwesome!). In the set also was Dancing Barefoot, Because the Night, Gloria ("G-L-O-R-I-Ayeh!!"), Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nirvana cover, she conjured Kurt's spirit first, everyone was quiet, it was very touching) and Are You Experienced (Jimi Hendrix).
Lenny Kaye gave a great tribute to (LA's) KROQ FM dj Rodney Bingenheimer (Rodney on the Roq, who is responsible for The Smiths breaking out in the States) when the band was stretching time while Smith (Patti) left the stage to take a piss (she was humourously open about it). They also tributed songwriter Dave/Dan (?) Whitfield who seemed to be in the audience (writer of hits such as Heard it Through the Grapevine) and proceeded to rock into Rock N' Roll N*****.
Her son also played guitar. He was really good.
There was a nice song in tribute to Fred "Sonic" Smith (Neil Young's "Helpless").
The crowd went wild when Smith (Patti) put an Obama shirt over her head. She threw five of them out to the crowd. I think this was around the time they sang "People Have the Power."
An unforgettable night. It was cool to see the types of people who came out to see her, too. Baby-boomers who rocked with her from the 70s as well as beatnik/hipsters in their younger 30s. Artist mods, regular people, hippies.
The most awesome thing about her is she makes you feel Relevant. The vote is coming up in about 2 weeks. At one point she said she was trying to stretch time so we'd miss Saturday Night Live. I didn't understand until I got home and turned on the tele. A bit of queasiness set in when (the real) Palin appeared onscreen. Amy Pollard did a great job setting it straight during the news segment, in front of Palin, who obviously didn't get it and tried to play along.
sigh...
But anyway, Patti Smith was great and empowering. She reminded us that the future is in our hands and we (in the US) need to show up at the polls on Nov. 4 and Vote.
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