Mojo
Presents
“I Think We Accomplished Our Mission”
From the trenches of Horses’ 40th Anniversary tour, Patti Smith reaches out: to Lord Byron, Robert Mapplethorpe, Nick Cave’s tragic son Arthur, and beyond, to the whirlwind woman who changed rock’n’roll in 1975. “I’m a nice person,” she tells Martin Aston, “but when I pick up my electric guitar, I’m not so nice!”
The tour manager says to ask for Patricia Smith’s room at Portovenere’s Grand Hotel, the singer’s latest port of call on Horses’ ongoing 40th Anniversary tour. “But please call her Patti.” Further instructions: “A quick hello greeting and directly to questions, no chit-chat.”
“I never thought I’d be doing a second record. I fully expected to go back to the bookstore.”
How has Horses’ 40th anniversary tour been panning out?
Beyond my expectations. Audiences have been so receptive everywhere. There have been many people under 25, who seem to know all the words, who give us lot of energy.
You celebrated the album’s 30th anniversary too; has your relationship with it changed in the interim?
We didn’t tour Horses at 30; we only did a handful of shows. It was really by accident. I was walking in New York, and a kid of about 20 said hello, and told me next year will be Horses’ 40th anniversary, were we planning something special? I hadn’t even contemplated it until then. But Lenny and I are pressing 70. We’ve reached many milestones together, alongside the band, so it seemed a perfect time to celebrate our lives together and the many friends and colleagues who are no longer here. By maintaining a sense of balance and the grace of God, some of us are, we’re strong. It’s like that Jimi Hendrix line I love: “Hurray, I wake from yesterday.” We awoke, we’re still working. So it’s a celebration of life and vitality as well as the album.
Let’s play Word Association. I say Horses…
For me, it begins long before the record, with the inception of a poem I wrote called Oath when I was around 20, that began, “Jesus died for somebody’s sins but not mine.” It was my statement of independence from being fettered by any particular religious institution, not any statement against Jesus Christ. That’s the start of my evolution as a young person that got me to *Horses.
Was it daunting, the prospect of laying down these songs for posterity?
We had two challenges. I wasn’t trained to be a musician. I had no desire to be one. So I had to wrap my head around the idea that we were freezing a performance, because I like the spontaneity of the moment. But also we’d evolved without a drummer – we’d only had Jay Dee [Daugherty] for a couple of weeks – so we had to work out the songs with drums in the studio, and in less than six weeks. We were young, so there was no fear, only to produce something mediocre and unworthy to put out into the world. It helped being shepherded by John Cale, who comprehended the situation. He’s an artist and I was a young artist, so we locked horns, but he understood me better, and I comprehended that he was a good shepherd. I think we accomplished our mission, by doing the absolute best we could at that point. I didn’t know how to do better, having had no studio experience, and being keen on presenting an album that was authentic and sounded like us. I don’t have any regrets. I understand its flaws, technical or otherwise, its hubris… If you see flaws, then do something new, try to evolve.
Horses’ finale, Elegie, must be hard to sing, given who you’ve lost over time.
It’s increasingly harder. It was originally for Hendrix, and also Brian Jones, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, these people we felt such a loss for. It was written with [one-time Patti boyfriend and Blue Öyster Cult member] Allen Lanier, who was a beautiful person – he passed away recently. We also lost my husband Fred, my brother Todd, who was head of my road crew, all four Ramones, Joe Strummer, Jim Carroll. We keep adding names. Ornette Coleman just died and he was a good friend, John Nash the mathematician, Nick Cave’s son Arthur. I didn’t know him but I’m a mother, that’s been one of the most painful. I’ve added his name to the list I call out just to hear it resonate in different places. People respond with such love, and some get loud cheers, like Lou Reed, and some people don’t know, which doesn’t matter, they’re just symbols of many, many different people. But the field keeps growing, and specifically within our burgeoning camp. But we’re celebrating these people, it’s not all sad. It keeps their energy and life force around. So performing Elegie is difficult, but also liberating.
“Arista didn’t like the Horses cover at all. They thought it was too masculine, that my hair was a bit messy.”
“I was walking in New York, and a kid of about 20 said hello, and told me next year will be Horses’ 40th anniversary, were we planning something special?”
Images: Getty
