Series Editor Foreword
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
Eric Wendell is a New York–based musician, writer, and historian. He has written for Jazz.com and is a contributor to a forthcoming encyclopedia on popular music.
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.
*Booklist*
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