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Re: Patti's guitar/gun imagery
- To: babel-list
- Subject: Re: Patti's guitar/gun imagery
- From: Oligodendroglia
- Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2007 20:23:15 EDT
- Sender: owner-babel-list
my favorite from babel field:
"... my guitar ... it weights less than a machine gun and never runs out of
ammunition."
-------------------------------------------------
The idea of guitars as rock's weapons, or guitars as bayonets, is an old
theme for Patti.
Back in June 1975 (nearly 6 months before Horses was released), the magazine
Crawdaddy published a "Growin' Up!" issue with contributions by a range of
writers, musicians, artists and other celebrities. Patti's contibution was
a long poem/essay called "Flying Saucers Rock 'n Roll." The first part
dealt with her childhood bout of scarlet fever and some of the dreams and
hallucinations it produced, then segued into a second part that has a vision
of rock's future. Here are a couple of excerpts:
"Destiny plagued me. I never slept. I laid, and watched the night unravel
like the future. Music crystallized like snowflakes, gradually the entire
storm. Guitar necks sticking out of the ground like bayonets. The war
between sounds. Alexander coming to conquer with a fender and a saucer. I
knew it was coming and I wanted to be in on it. I know that its coming and
I want to be in on it. I know it came and went and I wasn't in on it."
"...It was 1996, '67, '68. Every place I was it was somebody else. I
could-not-live-today. Too plugged into sanguine rhythms past and the silver
video we call future. Here I come future, coming to get ya. I see it all
moving on an immense yellow highway. They come on like trumpets and violins
-- cars, armies of cars that move off the ground, glowing cigar shapes, and
the radio just pumps like a fist. Brick roads, turnpikes, they drive me
insane cause I can see what's coming. ELP, ELO, nothing real 'cept UFO.
Got to be royal rock warfare cause it's sitting in limbo. Not what was and
not what will be. Rock got to move out of its stagnant moment. Pray for
something bubbling under the sky's canopy to rip open and rush like gas."
On February 15, 1976, Patti performed at the Boarding House in San
Francisco. During that show, she read excerpts from this essay/poem that
morphed into a chilling and detailed description of the death of 50's teen
idol Sal Mineo (co-star of Rebel Without a Cause, among other things), who
had been murdered in a Hollywood alleyway just a couple of nights earlier.
You could have heard a pin drop the audience was so rapt. Patti concluded
her reading by coming back around to the 1975 essay and finished with these
words:
Get
your guitar
moving
fast
for it
is
our
bayonet
and it
is
war.
J
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-babel-list
[mailto:owner-babel-list] On Behalf Of L French
Sent: Monday, October 29, 2007 2:42 AM
To: Babel- List
Subject: Patti Smith joins the anti-war protests with a song from The
Yardbirds
This weekend, tens of thousands of anti-war protesters held rallies across
the United States in major American cities, calling for an immediate end to
the war in Iraq and for Congress to cut off all funding for the war. In New
York, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, Los Angeles and Seattle, huge turnouts
of protesters demanded that the corrupt Bush regime and it's Republican
supporters in congress end their cruel and inhumane war, and bring it an
immediate end.
Patti Smith, performing this weekend in Spain and Portugal, was unable to
attend the protests in person, but was certainly with the protesters in
spirit.
Here is Patti's memorable "Electric Guitar Statement," she phopetically
made some 30 years ago, in Koln, Germany, evoking the horrors of World War
II to her mostly German audience, on the occassion of Arthur Rimbaud's
birthday:
PATTI SMITH - ELECTRIC GUITAR STATEMENT KOLN, GERMANY
OCTOBER 20, 1977
________________
AUDIENCE MEMBER: How are you Patti?
PATTI: Im fine, I feel great now. Im real happy. Where is my guitar?
Cant find it? Wheres the guitar at?
OFF STAGE VOICE: Somebody carried it off about an hour ago.
PATTI: Somebody carried it off the guitar? Well, all right, why we solve
the guitar mystery, Ill read you a little "Prayer." Okay?
OFF STAGE VOICE: Its coming.
PATTI: Youll plug it in for me, right? I dont know how to do any of that
stuff. Technology, you know us girls. Okay, its almost all over. Pretty
soon it will just be like the sweetest nightmare of your life. I dont know,
with my guitar, anything can happen.
(Patti read her poem PRAYER)
To be safe from all bodily harm
To be a Saint in any form
Any form at all
(Patti plays the opening guitar chords of Radio Ethiopia)
PATTI: All right guitar, talk to me
(To stagehand) Is this your guitar?
How can I get the most reverb from it?
I only know one note, you know
Theres more reverb?
PATTI: Now there are a lot of fathers, or potential fathers and mothers
here who shouldnt be afraid of this instrument (holds up her guitar). It
might sound real horrible, especially when I play it, and it might look a
little threatening, but this is what we have traded for your bayonets.
This is our instrument of war.
And for my generation, this is our instrument of battle. This is the only
instrument of battle that we want left.
We want to get rid of all the machine guns, and all the bombs and all that
shit and we just to fight each other out with sound.
I know its real horrible and sounds real bad, and I know its going to
drive you crazy, but you just put yourself back there in World War II,
wherever you want.
All you people, or most of you people, or a lot of you that I can see, Im
sure have experienced a lot of horror.
Well, this is the heaviest horror that I hope my children ever face.
(Patti plays an electric guitar solo)
Thank you everybody. I know it was a little hard. Its hard to come into a
foreign country where you dont know the language and you really desperately
want to communicate with the people. Sometimes I make mistakes but I really
love my work and I really care about what I do and I really care about your
children, and for me rock and roll is the thing that is going to bind our
children together. Its going to be the thing we are going to fight with,
its going to be our expression of freedom and Im real happy to be alive in
1977. Thank you.
___________
Now, nearly 30 years later, Patti continues her theme of the electric
guitar as the only weapon needed by here generation, as exemplified by her
stunning cover version of The Yardbirds classic, Happenings Ten Years Time
Ago.
Patti, naturally changes many of the original lyrics, including her own
free-form rap against the war in Iraq:
HAPPENINGS TEN YEARS TIME AGO THE YARDBIRDS
(Chris Dreja/Jim McCarty/Jeff Beck/Keith Relf/Paul Samwell-Smith)
Meeting people along my way
Seemingly alone one day
But the reality of things
What my dreaming always brings
Happenings ten years time ago
Situations we really know
But the knowing is in the mind
Sinking deep into the world of time
Sinking deep into the world of time
Looking in a room I see
Things that mean a lot to me
Why they do I never know
Memories don't strike me so
Memories don't strike me so
It seems to me I've been here before
The sounds I heard, and the sights I saw
Was it real, or was it in my dreams?
I need to know what it all means
(Patti's improvised rap:
She crawled though the ruble with her babe
She crawled through the ruble we had made
She laid her child before the stone carcass
Entitled the art of war
The horses leapt
And jewels the size of fists dripped from their eyes
She swallowed them
Ribbons silk blood
Ran in streams
A stranger called through the ruble
She crawled thru the ruble with her babe
She crawled thru the ruble with her maid
And she left her child
In front of the carcass entitled the art of war
Ah, the natives gently danced in the great fields
In the fields littered littered
Littered with guitar nets, instead of bayonets
Littered with guitar nets, instead of bayonets
Littered with guitar nets, instead of bayonets
We created a revolution in music
The art of war in rock and roll
We dont need No fucking bayonets
We dont need assault rifles
We have bows and arrows
We have electric guitars
WHY?
WHY?
STOP THE WAR!
STOP THE WAR!
The people, they laughed at them too,
In the sixties they were straggly-assed too
Trying to stop the war in Viet Nam
How people laughed
We have to start again
Dont be afraid Dont be afraid of ridicule
We have to stop the war!
NO MORE WAR!!)
Happenings ten years time ago
Its something we must know
Is it real or all a dream?
I dont know, I dont remember
But I will embrace the New Year clean!
Clean, and fucking aware
Going down into the world of dreams
Arising from the world of dreams
Arising from the world of dreams
Action! Action!
To view The Yardbirds original version, live from 40 years ago during the
Viet Nam War, go to:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlKLKSX-qWE
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