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[personal profile] rozk
Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] mtslucky I got to go to a more or less intimate Patti Smith gig this evening - maybe a couple of hundred people in a Central London church for about an hour and three quarters. She read some poems and did some of her own songs,like 'Soul Kitchen' and covers of various other peoples - 'Perfect Day' and 'Within you. without you'. And she riffed verbally between the poems and the songs about her obsession with Jo March and her private cult of John Paul 1. I have been to Smith gigs where I jumped up and down more, and where she played good ol' standards that I love most of all her work - but you could hardly sing 'Gloria' in church, could you?

The thing is, this gig reminded me of why the current Pope hates rock music so much and regards it as a dangerous rival to traditional spirituality. Like much of the best music, this took me out of myself into oceanic feeling and sheer pleasure and a sense of the rhythm of how things are without faith and without dogma. I felt love for the people around me - I remember how Springsteen once said at a gig that he could not offer us life everlasting, but he could offer us life right now, and proceeded to keep that promise. Music gives us a sense of shared experience - that's true when it is recorded but is even truer when it is live.

There is a Schubert song, setting verses that are mediocre but true, and the song is one of the most beautiful he ever wrote.

'Thou lovely art/In how many grey hours..../have you bathed my heart in warmer air/ taken me into a better world'

I write these words and am listening to Tom Waits at the same time - 'Looking for the heart of Saturday night'sung by Holly Cole. Truely Music is the broadest church there is, one which looks after my soul without trying to own it.

Date: 2007-05-18 10:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] debg.livejournal.com
Music gives us a sense of shared experience - that's true when it is recorded but is even truer when it is live.

Well, you said it to me, yourself, when I was trying to recover whether N had been telling the truth about "Lady Sleeps": music is the best truth and the most beautiful lie you will ever hear.

Since it's where I live, I'm all over that.

Last time I saw Patti was New Years Eve, 1977-1978, CBGBs in Manhattan; I was about to jump a plane for London the next day. I miss that vibe and that energy.

Date: 2007-05-18 10:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pirates-daily.livejournal.com
And she's on Jools Holland now - switch it on.

Glad you came. It was a good one.

Date: 2007-05-18 11:14 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I guess it's a heavy testimony to Patti's authority and strength of identity that "Soul Kitchen" came over as one of her own songs :)

Date: 2007-05-18 11:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rozk.livejournal.com
Oh god, you're right. It totally felt like something she'd written

Date: 2007-05-19 12:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com
We saw her at the Roundhouse in Camden last night. Not an intimate gig but still fab.

Date: 2007-05-19 06:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] athenais.livejournal.com
I love "An die Musik"--but for a minute I thought you were saying Patti Smith sang it, and that blew my mind.

Date: 2007-05-20 03:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pigeonhed.livejournal.com
I saw her do an intimate poetry/acoustic set in kendal last week followed by a full band electric show the night after, both were stunning. 'Peacable Kingdom' is my new favourite song.

Did she read 'Piss Factory'? That alone was worth the ticket price for me when she started that.

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