T’Pau’s back for 25th Anniversary Trek.

 Listening to the excitement in Carol Decker’s voice as she describes how she will play the Isle of Wight Festival this year, it is easy to understand how that same voice took T’Pau’s third single to number one in 1987, where it stayed for five weeks.

 

Still possessing the powerful voice that took her to the top, Decker is taking T’Pau (famously named after a Vulcan high priestess from Star Trek) on its first headline tour in 15 year to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the band’s debut album- the quadruple-platinum ‘Bridge of Spies’. 

 

“I thought I would mark our anniversary in some way and come out and sing a few tunes… hopefully some people will come and see me”, she laughs. “Of course I will play hits, but also classic album tracks. I’m thinking of having a little acoustic set in the middle.”

 

In the late 80’s, T’Pau seemed to permanently reside on Top of the Pops. ‘Bridge of Spies’ sold over five million copies, and ‘China in Your Hand’ was the biggest-selling single of 1987. Carol, 55, holds the rare honour of having a number one album and single at the same time.

 

 

Their next two albums, ‘Rage’ and ‘The Promise’, also made the top 10 in the UK.

Other hit singles include ‘Heart and Soul’ and ‘Valentine’.

 

However, Decker, once the flame-haired temptress pin-up for so many teenagers, has a very modest recollection of these memories.

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She describes the scene of a male crew member wearing a red wig to distract the crowd outside the stage door at her shows as “…my 15 minutes, as Andy Warhol would say. I couldn’t get out of the stage door at the Hammersmith Odeon for the fans and press. Our roadie just put on this red wig, leather jacket and shades and jumped into the back of the limo and everybody sped after him. He had better legs than me as I recall!”

 

After 1991, the original line-up of T’Pau disintegrated. As Carol describes it, “It’s ancient history now, but we were just arguing over creative differences. Also, the music-scene had changed. By the time we came out with ‘The Promise’, it was all club music and groove-orientated. We lost our footing.” 

 

Decker kept performing and recording as ‘T’Pau’. In recent years, she has been participating in 80’s package shows, playing arenas and festivals with the likes of The Human League and The Bangles.

 

She has occasionally collaborated with former boyfriend, guitarist and co-writer, Ron Rogers, and he will appear at some shows. “He can’t do the whole tour with me, which is a shame, but he’s going to do as many as he can.”

 

Decker is determined to make a new album. “It won’t be in time for this tour, but I’m going to get on with it. I want to see if I can push this forward and maybe start touring every couple of years. It’s a bit of an experiment, to be honest.” 

 

News on T’Pau’s tour can be found on its official website.

 

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All photographs copyright Carol Decker. Used with full permission.

Things to save up for so far…

Two days into 2013, and there are already things you should be getting excited about. Five Grand Dames certainly are, and here’s why…

1. Stevie Nicks is hitting the road with Fleetwood Mac again for a world tour… and they are releasing new songs for the first time in 10 years!
2. Goldfrapp are set to release another album.

3. Sheryl Crow is releasing a new album- a country album, so a departure and something to keep an eye out for.

4. T’Pau’s Carol Decker is going on tour as a solo act for the first time in over 10 years to celebrate 25 years since the release of the quadruple platinum album, ‘Bridge of Spies.’ 

5. Bonnie Raitt is on tour promoting her new album, ‘Slipstream’. 

Happy Birthday, Marianne Faithfull

Marianne Faithfull, 1979 (Image from Facebook)

Marianne Faithfull, 1979 (Image from Facebook)

Marianne Faithfull, the archetypal fallen angel of the 1960’s turns 66 today.

Famed for being the bad girl of the 60’s. 70’s and 80’s, Faithfull’s music career began as virginal and innocent as her convent school education. When she was 18, she scored her first British hit with ‘As Tears Go By’. Equally innocent songs typical of the era followed, such as ‘Come and Stay With Me’ and ‘This Little Bird’.

However, by the end of the decade, Faithfull had been tempted by the devil. Her relationship with Rolling Stone Mick Jagger began during the mid 1960’s. Along with fellow-Stone, Keith Richards, Mick had written ‘As Tears Go By’ for Marianne and had spent every-waking-moment pursuing her.

Therein followed countless allegations of drug and sex scandals; not forgetting the rather, uhm, risque allegation of a badly-placed Mars bar- an allegation denied by Keith Richards: “That was thrown in by some journalist… we were right out of Mars bars.’ She went from the convent girl to Mick Jagger’s permanent arm candy.

When Faithfull’s relationship with Jagger ended she found herself on the streets, addicted to heroin.

Eventually in 1979, after living on the wall of a bombed-out building, Faithfull got back into the studio to record one of the most ground-breaking underground albums of the decade. ‘Broken English’ was a very different album to anything Faithfull, or indeeed, a woman had ever recorded before. Dark and hard-hitting, it reaffirmed that Marianne was nobody’s fool. Her once sultry and posh singing voice was now a nicotine-stained growl, often cutting out on the album because she could not get the words out- it just added to the ambiance. The album’s final track ‘Why D’ya Do It’, was the personification of her new image. Written by Heathcote Williams, only Faithfull could spit the line “Every time I see your d*** I see her c*** in my bed” with such conviction.

She finally kicked her habit in 1985, but Faithfull has consistently kept creating dark albums. ‘Before the Poison’, ‘Blazing Away’ and ‘A Secret Life’ are just a few of Faithfull’s finest work since the iconic ‘Broken English’.

She’s also stuck to her convictions. Commenting on a Rolling Stones documentary in 2004, Marianne commented that the rules about drugs “…were wrong then, and they’re wrong now.”

Last year she released ‘Horses and High Heels‘, much to critical acclaim. 2013 sees a deluxe edition of Broken English being released. Now 66 Marianne Faithfull shows no sign of stopping… she may be 66, but that’s only two third’s of the devil’s number…

 

 

Faceless Female Gems

1. Seasons on Earth by Meg Baird

Espers’ vocalist and guitarist, Meg Baird, has released three solo albums.

Her latest one, 2011’s Seasons on Earth is by far and away her strongest effort.

Baird’s voice is as soft as it is authoritative. Featuring just a guitar and her voice throughout this 10 track acoustic folk album, the highlight is arguably ‘Friends’, a song not penned by Baird herself, but by Marianne Faithfull’s old arranger, Jon Mark, a song that features on Mark-Almond’s second album.

This is the perfect album for winter contemplation. It’s an after-the-after-party album. Poppy overtones of ‘The Finder’, combined with the six-minute long extravaganza, ‘Share’, make for an excellent showcase of Baird’s vocal ability.

2. Girlschool- Demolition

Once one of the biggest names on the British 80’s rock scene, Girlschool have now been sidelined into the annex of history as something as a non-band.

What most seem to forget is that they managed to gain enough respect to tour with the likes of AC/DC, Motorhead, The Damned, and more recently, Alice Cooper. Not to mention headlining Reading Festival in 1981.

Their first album is foot-stomping, collection of electric guitar anthems. Opening with the ear-crashing ‘Demolition Boys’, Kim McAuliffe’s chugging guitar and raunchy vocals, which still provide the band’s lead vocals to this day, set the tone for the rest of the album and the rest of the band’s career.

Drummer Denise Dufort and McAuliffe are the only constants throughout the band’s 35 year career, making them the longest-running all-girl band.

‘Nothing to Lose’, t best defines the band’s bad girl image, beginning with ‘Who cares what anyone says, we’re gonna do it anyway.’

Apart from new releases, Girlschool albums today can be more faceless than the invisible man when it comes to purchasing them. However, 2013 sees a special ‘Bronze Years’ box set release of Girlschool’s first four albums: Demolition, Hit and Run, Screaming Blue Murder and Play Dirty; remastered with bonus tracks, this is the first time the album has been released in nearly 10 years.

3. Sonja Kristina- Sonja Kristina

Curved Air’s front woman, Sonja Kristina, released a solo album in 1980 after the prog super-group disintegrated.

This low-key comeback happened four years after the band’s final studio album.

However, unlike the violin-infused, medieval sound that permeated Curved Air albums like Phantasmagoria and Air Conditioning, the eponymous release in 1980 was a shift towards the more new-wave sound just breaking out at the time.

Sonja Kristina swaps melodic violin parts for funky electric bass guitar riffs and pounding drums.

Despite critical acclaim, the album achieved no more than something of a cult following among the veteran ‘air heads’.

Kristina’s new band, Escape, were soon becoming one of the most renowned groups on the club circuit in Britain. None the less, the marketing men clearly knew that Sonja Kristina’s name was where the success lay, so when the album came out, it credited her as a solo artist.

The treble-heavy sound of electric bass pulses throughout the 10 track album. Kristina penning half of the album, highlights include a blistering cover of Spirit’s ‘Mr Skin’, adding a new funky and raunchy element the original lacked; Kristina’s own ‘Roller-Coaster, the album’s opener, the spacey ‘Street Run’ and the chirpy ‘Breaking Out in Smiles’ is very much like Joe Jackson’s ‘Steppin’ Out’, a hit single in 1982.

A clear, defining sound, Sonja Kristina is much more coherent than Curved Air’s last album, showing Kristina as a true artist, not just a 70’s prog queen.

The album is a defining example of the light-keyboard, heavy bass combination that made new-wave so popular.

It was finally released on CD in 2007 with three bonus tracks, and can be purchased here.

Presently, Kristina is working with Marvin Ayres on her side project, MASK. She is also back with a new line-up of the band that made her a star, and on tour once again with Curved Air, who released a new live album last year.

Sonja Kristina

Sonja Kristina

Most influential albums created by women

5.Joni Mitchell- Blue

Awards this album has not won are not worth winning. Released in 1971 it was one of the defining albums of the early 70’s.

Mostly acoustic and always soulful, Mitchell lets her voice get carried along by the simple guitar riffs. All I Want is a perfect example of this.

Purchase the album here.

4. Kate Bush- Hounds of Love

Released in 1985 the music business were not setting high hopes on Bush’s first recording since The Dreaming, released to lukewarm reviews three years earlier… they were shocked.

From the second that distinctive whirring sound at the beginning of Running Up That Hill plays you are captivated for the rest of the album.

The childlike simplicity of songs like Cloudbursting, The Big Sky and Mother Stands For Comfort compared to the eeriness of Under Ice and Waking the Witch ironically compliment each other. A trait few artists could achieve.

Purchase the album here.

3. Big Brother & the Holding Company- Cheap Thrills

Janis Joplin’s first album featured the iconic songs Ball and Chain, Piece of My Heart and Summertime. This sentence alone should be enough to explain why this album is number 3 in the list.

Who could watch the footage of her performing Ball and Chain at Monterey Pop Festival and not remain captivated as she screamed and warbled her way through this seven minute powder keg of a song?

Purchase the album here.

2. Carole King- Tapestry

Much like Blue, Tapestry is another crucial album in marking the early 70’s transition.

King’s piano bubbles along with the ballads one after the other. I Feel the Earth Move is one of the greatest ever opening tracks to an album. The classic It’s Too Late is also accompanied by the epics You’ve Got a Friend and A Natural Woman.

The highlight of the album is arguably the track Smackwater Jack, a song depicting a small-town massacre and it’s resolution.

Purchase the album here.

1. Patti Smith- Horses

When NME awards you with the best debut album award, you know you’ve done something right.

The prototype for punk as we know it, only Patti Smith could open an album with the line ‘Jesus died for somebody’s sins, but not mine.’

The album is a roller coaster of 9 minute epics like Land of a Thousand Dances and Birdland, mixed in with rockers such as Break it Up and Free Money, along with a few middle of the road easy listeners, Redondo Beach being one of them… perfect.

Purchase the album here.

Top 5 Most Innovative Women…

5. Sheryl Crow

Okay, so she might not be as ground-breaking as Janis, as quirky as Alison Goldfrapp or as tough as Suzi Quatro, but Sheryl Crow is a force to be reckoned with.

‘Sheryl Crow’ and ‘The Globe Sessions’ were two of the defining albums of the 1990’s. Playing guitar, piano, bass, percussion, accordion and God know what else, Crow has become one of the biggest selling artists on the planet.

4. Annie Lennox

What more needs to be said? Moving from the Eurythmics to a solo artist, Lennox has proved that the underdog can take it to the top and stay there.

3. Kate Bush

Weird, wonderful and warbling… everyone is a fan of either Running Up That Hill or Wuthering Heights, and if they say they’re not, they’re lying.

A one-off tour in the 70’s, and her shying away from the public gaze outside of a recording studio adds to Bush’s mysterious reputation.

2. Debbie Harry

Possibly the most striking front woman in music history. Even Madonna, a trashy version of Harry, lacks the ability to be so effortlessly cool.

Know what makes her even cooler? She’s not really blonde! Gasp.

1. Janis Joplin

Every woman that came down after Joplin owes something to this woman. Although not a musician, she really did break the mold.

Singing multiple chords all at once, Joplin released three phenomenal albums before her induction to the 27 Club in 1970.

Suzi Quatro- Unzipped

The original rock chick, Suzi Quatro, completed a six-night run at the London Hippodrome Casino on Saturday night with her one-woman-show, Unzipped.

Named after her 2007 autobiography, Unzipped weaved the story of Quatro’s life, from the very beginning up to the modern day.

The show consisted of rare photographs, video clips, speech and of course, live performances of some of the fan’s favourite hits to round off the night.

Taking the stage at the piano, Quatro, 62, began to play a small piece of Beethoven. Turning to the audience with a cheeky smile, she announced “Didn’t expect that, did you?” That sentence set the tone for the whole night… for the next 75 minutes the show twisted and turned.

Performing Mack the Knife, she told the story of how herself and her little sister tried to cheer up a recently bereaved widow… which resulted in them getting a front door slammed in their face. As Suzi put it, it was her first professional rejection.

Walking over to the set of bongos in the centre, Suzi announced her talent as a bongo player. Performing a medley of three-chord songs ranging from Twist and Shout by The Beatles, she ended with Summer Nights.

True to her tale in the autobiography, Suzi explained that being a Gemini she is two different people: Little Susie from Detroit and Suzi Quatro- they are the same, they are different, and one cannot survive without the other.

Gasps could be heard throughout the room as Quatro told the now famous story of how she declined an invitation to Graceland to meet her hero, Elvis Presley, before launching into a cover of All Shook Up, the song which featured on her 1973 debut album and won her the invitation in the first place. Her band, consisting of drums, guitar, piano and saxophone all took turns to solo during this number before Suzi Q announced “My turn!” and played an electrifying bass solo… who else could make a bass solo so entertaining?

A somewhat reserved crowd was largely reluctant to stand up at the end of the night as Quatro briefly left the stage and returned wearing her trademark leather jumpsuit to perform full-band versions of Can the Can and Devil Gate Drive, before ending with the only encore song, If You Can’t Give Me Love.

Suzi commented: “(This is) a dream come true. At the age of 62, how lucky am I? Little Susie and Suzi Quatro are both very very happy.”

Quatro is still performing worldwide, and released a new studio album, In the Spotlight, last year.

It can be purchased here. 

Suzi and I before the show, photo by Harri Asikainen.

Girlschool…

This week I managed to secure an interview with two members of the longest-running female rock band of all time.

Denise Dufort, the original drummer of pioneering rock band Girlschool, and Jackie (Jax) Chambers, who took over as lead guitarist from the late great Kelly Johnson in 1998 give us an insight into what it is like to still be head-banging 34 years later…

Q: How does it feel to be a member of the longest-running female band?
Jackie Chambers

JAX : “It still makes me smile when people call me the new girl, I’ve now been in the band for 13 years now and have known the girls for a lot longer but it’s been a great experience and one I’m very much enjoying and as long as we all continue to enjoy doing what we’re doing, we’ll continue to record and play live. 34 years and counting bring it on!”

DENISE: “(It) Feels AMAZING, who would have thought that I would still be in this band
After all these years..PHEW!”
Q:Have you got a particular favourite GS song/album?
JAX : “Before I joined the band I was good friends with Kim (McAuliffe) and she gave me the albums to listen to and on first listen my favourite tracks were Play Dirty and Don’t Call it Love, I thought they were well written songs, neither of which we do live..shame! I also loved Race With The Devil which is still one of my favs. Whilst in the band one of my fav albums has to be Believeas that was the first full album I appeared on and had a hand in writing all the songs on there.”
DENISE: “Play Dirty used to be my favourite album but now its’Legacy‘,
My favourite song on that album is I SPY.”
Q: Who inspired you to become a musician?
JAX: “I think music is in the blood, to be a musician you have to love and be passionate about it. Whilst I was at school it was the ‘punk rock’ era, I was about 13 and hating all the prog rock in the charts I heard this new exciting energetic music and I loved it, something to get my teeth into and express myself and because it seemed like anyone could do it, I wanted to too. I didn’t actually pick up the guitar until I was about 17 almost 18 and even then I only got the guitar as I wanted to write songs and needed one to get the songs across… Ironic.”
DENISE: “My brother inspired me to be a drummer, I grew up watching him play in bands and loved it so much that I always knew that that’s what I wanted to do.”
Denise Dufort

Q: What prompted you to re-record your 1981 hit album ‘Hit & Run’?

JAX: “(It was) the record companies idea, it was the albums 30th anniversary and we didnt want to just put the old one out we wanted to mark the occassion like we did the bands actual 30th anniversary. We re-recorded it basically as we wanted to own our own songs again, didn’t quite work out but it was fun to go back in the studio with the old songs and re-do them. We do about eight of them live anyway so it was an easy and quick album to do.”

Q: Are there any plans to go on tour to promote it?

JAX: “Well we’ve been out and about promoting it all this year really. It was supposed to come out in April, we recorded it last Xmas..record co’s tut! We have a couple more gigs this year in the UK and then the gigs start again in Europe in January 2012, so we will keep on going through the summer and do the festivals again too; well that’s the plan.”
Original bassist, Enid Williams, live in Brixton
Q: How did you end up joining the band?
JAX: “My band had just split up in 1995 and I’d put an advert in the Melody Maker to look for a new band. Kim answered my ad as she was also doing a side project in a covers band, we chatted on the phone, got on well, met up for drinks that night and kept in touch. I didnt join her covers band as at that time I didnt play lead guitar. Kelly (Johnson) at that point wanted to do something different and kept trying to persuade me to join so she could leave, so she offered to help me with the lead guitar parts by teaching me them all. I ended up joining a covers band to practise lead guitar and practiced Girlschool songs until my fingers bled, then finally in 1999 I was ready. I was supposed to do Wacken as my first gig but thought that would be a bit much so Kelly did it as her last…the rest is history!”
Kim McAuliffe
DENISE: “Its a Long story..lol…too long!”
Q: Are you still in touch with past members of the band?
JAX: “Yes we pretty much keep in touch with everyone, it’s like a little family. I lived two streets from Cris Bonacci and a half mile from Kelly and Denise when I first joined so we were always hanging out together .Then I shared a flat with Kelly, Now I share with Kim and live on the same street as Enid, can’t get away…lol. We don’t see Jackie Carrera or Gil Weston that often as they don’t live in London but we do keep in touch and Tracey, now lives in Spain but were in touch via skype etc.”
DENISE: “Yeah, we’re still in touch with Tracey Lamb, Jackie Carrera and Gil Weston.”
Q: What has been the highlight of your career?
JAX: “That would have to be supporting Alice Cooper, he was always my musical hero whilst I was growing up so to sit and chat with him was amazing! And of course I got to see him play straight after us, result!”
DENISE: “Touring with my heroes…bands like Deep Purple, Rainbow, Sabbath, and of course Motorhead.”
Q: What music do you listen when you’re not on tour?
JAX: “I like to play Rammstein very loud to get me in the mood, always brings a smile to my face too… Love it!”
DENISE: “I love Rammstein and Muse but I’ll listen to anything that’s good…”
Q: The last album of new material, Legacy, was released in 2008- do you plan to make another album of completely new material?
JAX: “LOL, give us a chance we’re still promoting this one. I guess by the summer of next year we will be at least talking about it, so hopefully so.”
DENISE: “We are still promoting the Hit and Run Revisited album..that’s only just come out..give us a chance ha ha.”
Q:Do you have a favourite song to perform live?
JAX: “I like to do Never say Never and still get a buzz from doingRace with the Devil even after doing it every gig for 13 years, LOL.”
Jax & Kim rockin’ out
DENISE: “Yeah I love playing I SPYlive.”
Q: Girlschool has toured with a lot of different big names- is there anyone you would like to tour with?
JAX: “Yes we’ve been very fortunate over the years, there’s probably a few bands that I’d love to play with but to nail it down I’d say Rammstein or Foo Fighters for me.”
DENISE: “I would love to tour with AC/DC, they have always been my favourite band.”
Many thanks to Denise and Jax for agreeing to the interview; to find out more about Girlschool and see their latest tour dates, see their official website.
Their new CD ‘Hit and Run Revisited‘, can be purchased here.

Patti Has the Power

I have talked to a lot of very interesting people at the Hebden Bridge Trades Club, and seen some fantastic shows there. Last month I had the pleasure of re-interviewing one of the most interesting and influential people on the planet- Patti Smith.

Patti was scheduled to play the Trades that night. She was back in the UK to tour with her band to promote her latest album, Banga. The date in Hebden Bridge would be an acoustic show, with just her and bass player, Tony Shanahan, on piano and guitar duties. Patti would be donating her £3,000 fee to the town’s flood appeal; a campaign close to her heart. As she explained that evening during the show, her own house flooded in the 1980’s, so she could relate to the town’s troubles. “I saw all the sand bags and I just thought ‘ugh, my life in the 80’s”.’ In the end, you just pick up and start again.”

Patti arrived at the venue around 5pm. Taking time out to recover from car sickness, she signed autographs for fans, and even complimented a passing child’s bike! Once again, I found myself walking into another venue with the Godmother of Punk for an interview on another sunny afternoon. Taking me into the soundcheck in the 190 capacity venue, I was greeted with a bottle of water and the opening bars of Smith’s top 5 UK hit, Because the Night, playing in the background as the duo prepared for soundcheck.

Soundcheck over, Patti went for a stroll around the town to search for a book store where, she hoped to purchase a poetry book for the evening, intending to read a Sylvia Plath poem. Plath is buried in Heptonstall, near HebdenBridge. Returning empty handed, I offered to go home and print off the poem from the internet in return for a slot on the guest list for the evening’s show, which had sold-out within minutes. Patti was happy to oblige, but first things first, we launched into the pre-arranged interview… This date was scheduled as a day off between dates at Manchester and LeedsAcademy’s.

With such a tight schedule, Patti still managed to fit in some sightseeing. “We were in Haworth and we visited the Bronte parish and the museum, and that was really wonderful because I share, with my sister, a deep love of the Bronte’s. They had a very old second-hand copy of my favourite Charlotte Bronte book, Villette. That was quite moving.” “I didn’t do extensive sightseeing because I’m saving it for a trip my sister and I are taking in the spring. But the most moving thing, actually, was to go to St Thomas’ church yard and visit the grave of the great Sylvia Plath. I’ve well loved her since I was a teenager. It was very moving to visit her modest little grave, and I had to take a couple of very beautiful shots that I’m very proud of.” “Then we’ve been about this town, which is beautiful. It’s so beautiful here that everything is sightseeing… looking out the window… looking at rolling hills, dotted with sheep is especially wonderful because I have a great affection for sheep. And the biggest cows I’ve ever seen! I’m from South Jersey, where there’s a lot of white Jersey cows, but your cows are much bigger than our cows!”

In November, Patti will be back in America, touring with Neil Young and Crazy Horse. They will be playing the biggest arenas in the country, taking in the likes of MadisonSquareGarden. However, she says that size is not important to her. “Our essential duty is to prepare the stage for Neil, which I’m really happy to do because I greatly admire him. Neil and I are of the same generation, about the same age, so it’s really great to be able to work with him. As a performer the difference between one room or the other is technology, often. I don’t feel anymore affection for a small room than a big room. My job is to communicate whether it’s 20,000 or 20 people. I’m the same person, I just will adjust.” Smith is now 65 years old. The Godmother of Punk, she has been on the road for nearly 40 years… does she still enjoy it as much now as she did then? “Yes, or I wouldn’t tour. I don’t do what I don’t enjoy unless it’s something that has to be done… some kind of responsibility. If a cat throws up on my books I’ll have to clean it up. I love touring because that’s a way to communicate with a lot of people, to meet people out on the streets, to talk to people, to consider what’s going on in our world and share ideas. And it’s fun.” This was the first time Patti ever visited HebdenBridge. A town famous for it’s unusual shops, beautiful walks and views- it is no surprise she plans to come back. “I’m definitely bringing my sister back in the spring. I want my sister to see the town, it’s beautiful. And I want to see how the people are recovering from the flood, and visit Sylvia [Plath] again with my sister… it’s beautiful around here. I hope to play here again too… I’m sure that I will.”

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Live at the Hebden Bridge Trades Club

Smith has released 11 studio albums. The first, Horses in 1975, features in pretty much any ‘Greatest Albums of All Time’ lists worth reading. Radio Ethiopia followed a year, under the name ‘The Patti Smith Group’ and her two most commercially successful albums, Easter was releImageased in 1978 and Wave a year later. However, there would be a nine year wait before Patti was ready to make another album, Dream of Life, in 1988. Smith states that she does not have a favourite album from the early days. “It’s like asking which child you like the best. They all have qualities that I like. The first four are a long, long time ago, and they reflect when I was just beginning. I was just learning the technology of doing a record. Really, they’re very fledgling. I’m proud of how the band has evolved, and how I’ve evolved as a songwriter and a singer. I like all the records, somewhat. They’re not perfect, but there’s something on all of them that I like.”

Reflecting back on something Patti told me in Wolverhampton, that an album is supposed to take you on a trip, I was keen to ask whether sequencing is an important part of the trip. “Sequencing is very important. That’s probably the thing that sometimes one spends the most time dealing with.” The same goes, Patti says, for the album covers… famous for her simple yet powerful shots, Patti often takes the photographs for the CD booklets herself. “In these times it’s sort of painful because you go through so much to sequence an album, and people just buy one song and then shuffle them on an iPod. So sequencing where it might be important to an artist might be unimportant to the listener, so you have to bow to the listeners desires and needs. I still think it’s important. Each song should stand on it’s own, but I like the idea that you’re building… it’s like in a concert. Sometimes a certain song in itself is not important, but it will help to build the night.”

KT Tunstall famously wrote her hit Suddenly I See about the shot of Smith on the cover of Horses. Easter famously shows smith revealing the hair under her arm- a revolutionary shot for the times. “Album art was very, very important to my generation. We sometimes fretted as much about the album art as the album. It was always exciting, also, when I was younger ‘what’s gonna be on the cover of Blond On Blond, or  what’s gonna be the new Stones album, what’s it gonna look like? The new Led Zeppelin album… Jimi Hendrix… Miles Davis.'” “Covers were really part of the message, or part of the aesthetic experience of buying a record. So for me it’s still important. I spend a lot of time on the packaging. I have worked on the packaging of all our albums, with the design, the font, the liner notes, to make sure it’s a full aesthetic experience.” “Horses… it was Robert [Mapplethorpe] who chose that cover. He shot like 12 pictures and he chose the cover. Robert knew when he shot it that that was the cover.”

Famous for her raunchy, hot and energetic gigs, Smith’s acoustic shows can be few and far between. However, she does enjoy both electric and acoustic performances. So finally, my most-asked question: does she see herself doing this in 10 years?”The only advantage of acoustic is often I can hear myself better. So as a singer, acoustic might be a little more pleasurable, but for excitement, it’s great to have a full band. I love plugging in my electric guitar at the end of the night. It’s more anarchistic maybe with a full band, but, you’d be surprised what you can get out of an acoustic guitar if you have the will.” “I have no idea. I truthfully did not see myself doing this 20 years ago. 20 years ago I was married, I had children. It never occurred to me that I’d be back on the stage playing electric guitar.” “I actually see myself living in a little house by the sea and writing. Doing probably more acoustic things, going from town to town like we’re doing now.I could see myself spending just a few weeks in the UK, going from town to town doing poetry readings or small concerts.” “I’d still like to do another record or two, but what I want to do more than anything is write. I began as a write, I’ll probably end as a writer, so that will probably be the full circle of my life.”

Dashing home to print out a Sylvia Plath poem for Patti to begin the night with, appropriately entitled Sheep In Fog, I returned to find the club filling with eager fans, all keen to get the best view in the house. Once the opening act, Karima Francis, completed her 20 minute set, the room was on it’s feet. Patti took the stage a little before 9pm, and was greeted with wild applause. Beginning with saying how happy she was to be there, Patti read out the poem, much to the crowd’s love, before hitting the wrong chord going into the first song… Attempting to salvage the somber atmosphere, she tried to repeat the final line of the poem. However, she was unsuccessful, bursting into a fit of laughter before she could get the line out. “That was pathetic. It was such a wonderful setup and I hit the wrong chord!”

Smith delighted the audience with a selection of songs from her new album, Banga. Some of the songs performed at The Trades had never been performed acoustic before. A song from Banga, April Fool, was one such song. The room was in hysterics as Patti walked up to, and then retreated from the microphone, explaining “This is where the guitar solo normally is!” As Tony repeated the bridge of the song, on piano, Smith turned to him and asked “How much longer does this thing last?” A particular highlight was the song Ghost Dance from 1978. The audience cheered with empathy at the line “We shall live again… we shall live”. Tony Shanahan playing the song on just an acoustic guitar made it even more poignant. Patti once again said how great it was to be in Hebden Bridge. “I’m sorry you had to have a flood for me to come!”

Another highlight was a passage from Smith’s 2010 award-winning memoir, Just Kids, which tells the story of Patti and Robert Mapplethorpe’s years as struggling artists in New York. She even told the crowd her recipe for lettuce soup. Pissing In A River, the signature song from her 1976 album, Radio Ethiopia, sent the audience wild  from the opening piano sequence, as did Because the Night. My Blakean Year saw the audience clap the bass line for Patti to stay in time- a duty they were pleased to take on. The final song was the anthem Patti co-wrote with her late husband, Fred ‘Sonic’ Smith. People Have the Power had the whole room swaying, repeating the refrain over and over again.

Making my way down the staircase after the show, I heard a woman declare: “Do you know what? She’s right!” Patti’s dressing room for the evening was a dressing room inside the Little Theater Company, which is next door to The Trades. There was a 40-strong crowd surrounding the theater, hoping to get albums and books signed,  or just to shake her hand. Patti emerged at 10:20pm, carrying a bouquet of flowers. The audience burst into a spontaneous round of applause as she made her way to the waiting van. Before she left, she called “Who’s going to see Sylvia tomorrow?” When a hand was raised, they were instructed to leave the bouquet of flowers on the grave. Patti Smith and her band was booked to play Leeds O2 Academy the following day, and she was already behind time. The autograph hunters were left disappointed as she was ushered into the car. However, she did stop to shake my hand and thank me for sourcing the poem for her. Reaching into her pocket and handing me some plectrums, she said “Keep in touch… email me or something, won’t you?” Giving her my assurance I would email the finished piece to her, and also stay in touch, we shook hands one last time before Patti thanked the crowd again, and both she and Tony disappeared behind the black tinted windows.

The duo were driven off in a black luxury Mercedes van. Several fans chased after it to catch a last glimpse of their idol before the van turned around the corner onto the main road. Most were content to applaud them as they drove off into the night, with calls of “come back soon” lingering in the evening’s atmosphere. By James Nuttall All photographs copyright James Nuttall 2012 © Many thanks to Patti Smith for her time and assistance. Tour dates and news can be found on her official website.  Thanks also to the Hebden Bridge Trades Club.   Image