Patti Smith Artist Main
Patti Smith Biography
Patti Smith Music Videos
Patti Smith LAUNCHcast Radio
Patti Smith Albums
Patti Smith Similar Artist
Patti Smith Reviews
Patti Smith Interviews
Patti Smith Fans
Patti Smith Fan Sites


    Patti Smith
    Reviews
Patti Smith
Rating affects your music played in LAUNCHcast and Music Videos.
Your Artist Rating:
Why Rate?

Horses Review

07/13/2005 4:22 AM, AMG


It isn't hard to make the case for Patti Smith as a punk rock progenitor based on her debut album, which anticipated the new wave by a year or so: the simple, crudely played rock & roll, featuring Lenny Kaye's rudimentary guitar work, the anarchic spirit of Smith's vocals, and the emotional and imaginative nature of her lyrics -- all prefigure the coming movement as it evolved on both sides of the Atlantic. Smith is a rock critic's dream, a poet as steeped in '60s garage rock as she is in French Symbolism; "Land" carries on from the Doors' "The End," marking her as a successor to Jim Morrison, while the borrowed choruses of "Gloria" and "Land of a Thousand Dances" are more in tune with the era of sampling than they were in the '70s. Producer John Cale respected Smith's primitivism in a way that later producers did not, and the loose, improvisatory song structures worked with her free verse to create something like a new spoken word/musical art form: Horses was a hybrid, the sound of a post-Beat poet, as she put it, "dancing around to the simple rock & roll song." ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide