Patti Smith on Lou Reed and rock and roll | American Masters | PBS

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
  • Official website: www.pbs.org/americanmasters | #AmericanMastersPBS
    On July 31, 1997, Patti Smith shared her thoughts on the 70s rock and roll scene and how Lou Reed of the Velvet Underground inspired her as a young girl in South Jersey. Interview conducted by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, director of "American Masters-Lou Reed: Rock And Roll Heart" (1998).
    Chapters:
    00:00 How jazz gave rock and roll new structure
    01:35 Shaking up the music scene in the 1970s
    05:07 Patti Smith's introduction to the Velvet Underground
    07:58 How Smith related to Lou Reed's "cerebrally sensual music"
    09:22 Smith breaks down the song "Heroin"
    12:19 Smith's rejection of labeling artists
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    The American Masters Digital Archive includes over 1,000 hours of footage from more than 1,000 original, never-before-seen, full, raw interviews: a treasure trove of the movers and shakers of American culture, including Maya Angelou, Patti Smith, Mel Brooks, Carol Burnett, Matthew Broderick, Carl Reiner, Joan Rivers, Audra McDonald, Lee Grant, Patricia Bosworth, Sidney Lumet, William Buckley and many others.
    ___________________________________
    Now in its 36th season on PBS, American Masters was recently nominated for an IDA Award, two Primetime Emmy® Awards and was awarded two News & Documentary Emmys. The series illuminates the lives and creative journeys of our nation’s most enduring artistic giants-those who have left an indelible impression on our cultural landscape-through compelling, unvarnished stories. Setting the standard for documentary film profiles, the series has earned widespread critical acclaim and 28 Emmy Awards-including 10 for Outstanding Non-Fiction Series and five for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special-14 Peabodys, three Grammys, two Producers Guild Awards, an Oscar, and many other honors. To further explore the lives and works of more than 250 masters past and present, the American Masters website offers full episodes, film outtakes, filmmaker interviews, the podcast American Masters: Creative Spark, educational resources, digital original series and more. The series is a production of The WNET Group.
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Комментарии • 146

  • @taraxacum
    @taraxacum Год назад +80

    She is great to listen to. Fame and accomplishment did not make her arrogant. Her ability to remain humble was part of what makes her beautiful. When I was a teenager and saw The Patti Smith Group perform at the Bottom Line in the Village, it woke me up to something new and clear and brilliant. I think she was doing something far more than just holding a place for something new to come along.

    • @marcofalzone6469
      @marcofalzone6469 7 месяцев назад

      I saw her cuss out a cameraman onstage!

    • @tomallen5837
      @tomallen5837 7 месяцев назад

      I don't know, I think it's kind of arrogant to make an assumption that you were able to contribute something on behalf of your own band, but 99% of the rest of what she says is spot on. It's good to hear her share what influenced her. I would agree That Jazz and Blues absolutely needs to be credited, although she didn't mention blues per say - that's pretty much what Coltrane was. I'm 10 years younger and I do recall what a huge change it was, once Punk hit the stage. Before then, radios were the only form of contact. You always had your jazz station you would listen to as a kid as well as your Blues stations ....all of these independent stations around the tri-state area, not just the rock stations. It all came together at some point and then of course the cycle depleted itself, as they all do, replaced by gadgets and robots and automation.

    • @AGregBergThing
      @AGregBergThing 7 месяцев назад

      Ha Patti is so arrogant

    • @barbarahankinson5133
      @barbarahankinson5133 3 месяца назад

      😮😮😮😮

  • @dbob3405
    @dbob3405 11 месяцев назад +31

    Whether it is creating art or critiquing art, she is one of the best. She is one of those humans that God anointed an “artist”. I cannot imagine she could have been anything else if she tried. It would be like taking a brook trout out of a mountain stream and telling it, “you will be an accountant”. As you return that living jewel back to the clear flowing water, you know it is where and what it had to be. We as her audience have had the good fortune to enjoy her genius-thank you PS

  • @billmay7364
    @billmay7364 8 месяцев назад +21

    I love how Pattie Descripes
    The VU and Lou Reed's Muse.
    The Song Heroin has Beauty
    Underneath the Struggle in Darkness of Addiction.
    One of the greatest songs ever written .
    Lou Reed is one of the greatest American Artist.
    People are still trying to catch up to Lou.
    David Bowie knew this.
    Patty was a Visonary from Coltrane to Miles and ties it into Lou Reed.

  • @lauramiller7827
    @lauramiller7827 Год назад +26

    I could listen to her speak about any subject all day long 💕

  • @ediedisorder7144
    @ediedisorder7144 9 месяцев назад +13

    Patti, I just admire and appreciate her so much. Loved this interview. Just watched her on the 15th Aug great show as always. Live Portland, Or.
    103 degree heat, lots of misters water spraying everywhere. But Patti brought it. She just rocks. And such a humble and thankful human being.

  • @auralepiphanies4055
    @auralepiphanies4055 9 месяцев назад +11

    Yeah Heroin is the most honest, intriguing, satisfying, terrifying, street level lyrics maybe of all time ...Put it up there with the lyrics of Blowin in the Wind. I still tell people Lou Reed is my Bob Dylan!

  • @kasondaleigh
    @kasondaleigh 7 месяцев назад +5

    I’ve only known her by name and she is so lovely to listen to!! Very articulate and genuine. Thanks for sharing!

  • @flyingo
    @flyingo 7 месяцев назад +5

    My musical, political and social tastes for the “out of the ordinary” developed from life in the late 60s and early to late 70s, and Patti’s albums were a huge part of that development. Radio Ethiopia changed me deeply. I was fortunate to have attended a few of her concerts over the years, and seeing her perform live was other worldly, to say the least. Her book “Just Kids” is an amazing and entertaining read. She is just brilliant in every way.

  • @geinikan1kan
    @geinikan1kan 7 месяцев назад +2

    I came back from abroad and Gone Again had just come out, after a hiatus of a few years for Smith. Man that album made me cry it was pure rock poetry about grieving and life.

  • @peacetrain3320
    @peacetrain3320 7 месяцев назад +3

    Patti Smith came to Chapel Hill after Horses was released. She played on campus at a small auditorium. It was like, New York City came to the country. It was epic!

  • @katebarker1983
    @katebarker1983 5 месяцев назад +1

    Her vision of a future without a need for labels is succinctly spoken. I love her. She is wise.

  • @j.kevvideoproductions.6463
    @j.kevvideoproductions.6463 7 месяцев назад +3

    She's very articulate & described Lou Reed's writing skill pretty well.

  • @markdarnell614
    @markdarnell614 Год назад +9

    I think Patti Smith has earned the Title - VISIONARY! Honestly, I am not particularly drawn to her music, as much as I am her Thinking, and BEING! She is both Beautiful, and Astonishing ...like an ancient Fortress Wall!

  • @1971bdott
    @1971bdott Год назад +13

    Great artist ❤

  • @gohomo2384
    @gohomo2384 2 года назад +9

    Thank you! always glad to see Patti :) would love to see more!

  • @peteroverbaugh6650
    @peteroverbaugh6650 Год назад +5

    I saw her open for the Grateful Dead at the UMass Amherst Spring Fest in May of 1979. It seemed an odd Tandem, but it worked and was wonderful. Jesus Died for Somebody's Sinz but not Mine....Happy Easter.

  • @cosmicdrifter287
    @cosmicdrifter287 Год назад +23

    Very smart and beautiful woman in more than one way.

  • @DrNancyLivingCoCreatively
    @DrNancyLivingCoCreatively 7 месяцев назад +2

    Patti is brilliant on many levels. 💙

  • @sunnypedaal
    @sunnypedaal 9 месяцев назад +3

    Beautiful interview , thanks ❤️🌞

  • @josephcopeland2343
    @josephcopeland2343 7 месяцев назад +2

    Patti Smith it's not just a singer she's a poet in our own right

  • @dylanharkin8198
    @dylanharkin8198 2 года назад +90

    I have never seen a more beautiful woman in my life, and I doubt I ever will

    • @enricovankeeken1624
      @enricovankeeken1624 2 года назад +1

      *I get "punished" for feeling?thinking the sAme way YOU do, almost dAily..its a good thing my name is nOt R!CkY :-)*

    • @hopeislandful
      @hopeislandful Год назад

      I've never seen an uglier woman in my life.

    • @michaelworse6034
      @michaelworse6034 Год назад +4

      Always keep a little Patti in your heart ❤️!

    • @Jojoseahorse
      @Jojoseahorse Год назад +3

      Me too, absolutely

    • @peterwilliams6052
      @peterwilliams6052 Год назад +2

      I agree

  • @minorracket2854
    @minorracket2854 7 месяцев назад +2

    Intelligent artists are rare thee days. So articulate

    • @SusanDoran
      @SusanDoran 7 месяцев назад

      They're always rare

  • @leonwaltemate6152
    @leonwaltemate6152 7 месяцев назад +4

    To me, Heroin and Waiting for the Man are part of the the same experience. Masterpiece of describing the life of a junkie. 😢.

    • @johneeeemarry34
      @johneeeemarry34 7 месяцев назад +1

      He used junkies to make the band seem less suburban and more pseudo ‘street’, very proto Indy hipster..

  • @ToddRock16
    @ToddRock16 Год назад +4

    ❤Must Hear video for those of you who don't know or desire to know the Why's? and the How's Rock music is and was a formidable force.
    🌹Patti Smith is emblematic of Art .
    Live! In Concert?
    Life -changing.
    At least it was for this Rock Drummer. 💙

  • @JamesLamm-jt7vg
    @JamesLamm-jt7vg Год назад +9

    Horses and Easter were excellent

  • @SusanDoran
    @SusanDoran 7 месяцев назад +1

    Outstanding interview, but surprised by the audio issues, the interviewer wasn't micced properly, and even interference on the lavalier mic on Patti. Wonder what Lou thought of Patti when he first met her...? She's come into herself so beautifully over the years - whrn she was first on the scene in New York she was, not surprisingly, a little hard to take for many people, but she hung in there, did her thing, stayed constant, and outlived and outlasted so many, with such a good brain and a restless spirit propelling her ever forward while also reflecting on and integrating the past into her at once Romantic and pragmatic, clear-sighted world view and quest to understand humanity.

  • @drychaf
    @drychaf 7 месяцев назад +4

    Speaking my language. So lovely to hear how we used to speak. This is already about a quarter of a century ago, and I haven't heard such a heart-felt evaluation of the effects of music on us for a very long time. Music in the 20th century was discussed as seriously and deeply as was painting in the 19th century to the First World War. I miss the accepted significance of music.
    As for the labelling. Jeez, wishful thinking? It's got worse and worse. If you're creative, if you're trying to achieve anything, in fact, you've just got to ignore it and carry on.

    • @stealthsadhu306
      @stealthsadhu306 5 месяцев назад

      "Music in the 20th century was discussed as seriously and deeply as was painting in the 19th century to the First World War."
      Wow! A thought worthy of Patti herself!

  • @user-bl7oe2md4p
    @user-bl7oe2md4p 7 месяцев назад

    Even though I find the opinions of most celebrities or rock stars pretentious or boring there are some who are really interesting on a deep philosophical, spiritual, passion for honesty and beauty, human soul expression and meaning level. Patti Smith is definitely one of those people.

  • @petejones879
    @petejones879 2 месяца назад

    I could listen to her all day long.. I was lucky enough to have seen her live in my home town (city) of Wolverhampton.. She had walked around the town and was amazed by our St Peters Church which is around 800 yrs and and she remarked 'we have nothing that old in the states... Except for maybe Ronald Reagan' lol 😅

  • @harbourdogNL
    @harbourdogNL 7 месяцев назад

    I first heard Gloria in a tent city youth hostel in London in the summer of 1976. Some guy was playing the Horses album and I asked "Who is that?!" Still one of my top 10 albums. (That same trip I was down King's Road in Chelsea and went into Vivienne Westwood and McLaren's Sex shop...didn't realise until later years where I'd been!

  • @johnjones3714
    @johnjones3714 6 месяцев назад

    Back in the seventies I kept reading about the Velvet underground it was probably five or six years before I actually heard any of their music. Owning a few Lou Reed and John Cale solo albums yes but no Velvets

  • @kevinjoseph517
    @kevinjoseph517 Год назад +5

    i knew her room mate, over in france....and at chelsea patti knew janis.

  • @alazymonkey5716
    @alazymonkey5716 16 дней назад

    Patti Smith reminds me so much of Jordan Jensen.
    JJ is the Patti Smith of comedy!

  • @UGLY-MONEY17
    @UGLY-MONEY17 Год назад +1

    I love patti

  • @JSnygg
    @JSnygg Год назад +3

    I love her text analysis’

  • @humanbeing5300
    @humanbeing5300 6 месяцев назад

    This is spot on, Jerry Garcia and Bob weir have both cited Trane as a huge influence. Bob Weir modeled his guitar style similar to McCoy Tyners piano. The modal jazz development started by Miles was a direct influence on the development of rock music

  • @dominicarblaster4042
    @dominicarblaster4042 2 года назад +6

    I tend to agree after visiting the tea clipper 'Cutty Sark' when at school near London

  • @hughdismuke4703
    @hughdismuke4703 7 месяцев назад

    The end of the interview is what's most interesting. The parts about labeling, something some people have a problem with. Overall an artist is someone who 'moves' the masses. They move people away from the everyday stagnate schedule and conditioned thinking we are all snuck up on with. That is the purpose of a creative person. To give people a different vision. Names are just names.
    When Smith was talking about the music wasn't meant to be handled by marketing people, she got very cautious about how to describe it because she realized that she was stepping on the thing that helps these artists have recognition and compensation for their work. We all understand that part already. But here's my point. As long as music and other forms of art moves a person, makes a person think in a different way? If it serves its purpose in progressing society? Then it doesn't really matter what path it has to go thru in order to be what it was meant to be. And that's easier said than done.
    I believe there is too much emphasis placed on what is considered pure art vs. corporate interference, although corporate can have a daunting affect on a musicians work a lot of times, or so it seems. But then again it is important for someone like Patti to say it just as a reminder. Whatever music has to go through, people often are able to recognize its worth, what it's saying and how it's capturing our senses. The hip hop world is a perfect example of this. A great struggle, a lot of hard work, lots of red tape to get past, contract talk, before the artists work is presented to the public and the rewards after. The PR is probably the most annoying I would guess.

  • @MarvinMonroe
    @MarvinMonroe 7 месяцев назад +1

    I wonder if she ever saw Humble Pie back in the day

  • @blondeboywilson9221
    @blondeboywilson9221 3 месяца назад

    The Cult of Patty Smith never ceases to amaze and disgust me.

  • @chrisames2795
    @chrisames2795 6 месяцев назад

    She is remarkable

  • @HollyBluePlanet
    @HollyBluePlanet Год назад +17

    Patti nails it, but does not see why it happened. I lived on Bleecker in the 70's, was in high school in the 60's, and heard the music evolve. It went from real rock and roll and Eddie Cochran in the 50's, to the death of Buddy Holly and several years of horrible schlock like Bobby Daren. Then the next wave hit and we had the Beatles and the Stones and the Yardbirds and Seeds...bringing back the rough garage sound to rock and roll, with a new level of musicianship and chord progressions. Then they started to sing about things that mattered because my entire generation was growing up to be thrown into a meat grinder of human sacrifice called the Vietnam War. The anit war and civil rights movements were happening and the music was reflecting it. Then the music died again with the death of Hendrix and the silencing of any anti war sentiment. The military industrial complex won. Then we had another wave when people got access to creating their own music and selling it on the internet. They smashed that movement with streaming services that pay nothing to musicians. Do you see the pattern? Do you know who keeps suppressing good music and promoting the schlock? I admired the sentiment of the punk music, but I missed the complex chord changes and harmonies that had been the signature of the music of the 60's. Patti is great. She told her truth and did not back down. I was playing Grateful Dead covers on the street when she was doing something truly artistic and original down the block at CBGB's.

    • @hom0s4cer
      @hom0s4cer 9 месяцев назад +1

      Who's they?

    • @zebrazagadore4827
      @zebrazagadore4827 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@hom0s4cerStreaming services. Much like writers and actors have been striking against.

    • @stuartwray6175
      @stuartwray6175 7 месяцев назад

      Nothing of value happened for around 25 years? - you go from the death of Hendrix to the internet.
      Who is suppressing good music? The military industrial complex?

    • @HollyBluePlanet
      @HollyBluePlanet 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@stuartwray6175 Los Lobos happened. There were a few bright lights in the mediocrity.

    • @thePrisoner1000
      @thePrisoner1000 7 месяцев назад

      Spotify for example, 88% of the revenue goes to Spotify and the publisher, 6% to the writer of the song and 6% to the performer.@@hom0s4cer

  • @richierugs6544
    @richierugs6544 4 месяца назад +1

    i bet a lot of you people got the t-shirt of her signature that i made back in the cbgb days--or maybe not----she was so cool after about 6 months i told her i was the guy making the shirts and gave her 20 bucks, she thanked me for making them---the next time i gave her money she took it but told me not to give her any more money---all in all i probably only made a few hundred of them

  • @HeIsNakedLunch
    @HeIsNakedLunch 7 месяцев назад

    15:35 me, too.

  • @GetReal521
    @GetReal521 Год назад +4

    Lou Reed: the man with yellow teeth and dirty fingernails. Patti Smith is a delight to listen to. She is very good at painting a full picture. I really enjoy listening to her.

  • @pommelhorsepommelhorse8731
    @pommelhorsepommelhorse8731 7 месяцев назад +1

    I was just going to say that

  • @kevinjoseph517
    @kevinjoseph517 Год назад +3

    the image wasnt corporate.

    • @crimsonwolf9099
      @crimsonwolf9099 8 месяцев назад

      She has ALWAYS been a corporate product! Major corporate label "alternative" fodder. Sucking up to corporate "stars". Never EVER played the small punk dive circuits but was corporate catapulted to big venues with other corporate acts. She is a "punk" poser and corporate "alt" astro-turf. So she wore a leather jacket? So what.

  • @richardm239
    @richardm239 10 месяцев назад +2

    WE NEED PATTI TO TO MAKE NEW MUSIC AND PERFORM AGAIN . SEEING THE DIRECTION THAT OUR WORLD IS GOING IN WE TRULY NEED ARTIST TO HELP WAKE THE YOUTH UP AND REMIND SOME OF US OLDER ONES THAT WE CAN CHANGE THINGS ,PEOPLE DO HAVE THE POWER !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @ediedisorder7144
      @ediedisorder7144 9 месяцев назад +2

      She is performing live. I just watched her in Portland Oregon on August 15th.

    • @richardm239
      @richardm239 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@ediedisorder7144 DAMN LUCKY YOU ,SHE IS SOMEONE I WOULD LOVE TO SEE LIVE ,I WONDER IF SHE EVERS WOULD COME TO CANADA ,NOW THAT WE ARE A COM
      MUNIST COUNTRY WHO KNOWS !!!!!!!

  • @AGregBergThing
    @AGregBergThing 7 месяцев назад

    The album Horses is a masterpiece, its pretty much musicly downhill from there give or take a song

  • @sato-lh5zf
    @sato-lh5zf 8 месяцев назад

    👍🏻

  • @beandipcartography
    @beandipcartography 7 месяцев назад

    R.I.P. Allen Lanier.

  • @berniekellman405
    @berniekellman405 11 месяцев назад +6

    If people were more like Patti Smith and less like themselves the world might be an A- instead of C- kind of place these days.

  • @lindasutton4014
    @lindasutton4014 7 месяцев назад

    I bought a copy of The Petting Zoo, by Jim Carroll, that was sold as a Copy “signed “by Patti Smith. The signature in the book was “signed “ with Autopen, which adds no value to the book.

  • @stardust1083
    @stardust1083 Год назад +4

    The same thing she is saying stands today

  • @jonjon6192
    @jonjon6192 7 месяцев назад +1

    I have no idea what Patti Smith is talking about - She says 1970's lacked direction, that we needed something new... Maybe New York needed direction, but in California we had a thriving music scene, an all consuming teenage revolt against the undeclared war in Vietnam and the Draft... not to mention racial discrimination... In August 1969 (in Bethel New York) 500,000 kids from all over the US- Stood up and Told the US Government to St, ufufuf it... California bands were Unique and kicking it... Little Feat, Spirit, Love, Jefferson Airplane, Santana, The Doors, Mothers of Invention, Grateful Dead. Talk about the end of Folk Rock...Ever heard of the Eagles......... I assume Pattie has heard of West Coast Jazz... lol and on and on and on..

  • @indy26211
    @indy26211 Год назад

    Godness

  • @cejannuzi
    @cejannuzi 6 месяцев назад

    A lot of glam rock was actually stripped down rock n roll. It was presented very theatrically.

  • @phantompanther648
    @phantompanther648 Год назад +8

    I saw her on the street more than once , west village.....l'd always dreamed meeting her.
    Our eyes met as if we were any man and women....and she flirted.....

    • @Jojoseahorse
      @Jojoseahorse Год назад +1

      She's the only woman I have ever "liked", so that says something for her magnetism

    • @phantompanther648
      @phantompanther648 Год назад

      @@Jojoseahorse thank U 4 Elephant Records... ...🦑🦐🦞

    • @Jojoseahorse
      @Jojoseahorse Год назад

      @@phantompanther648 Elephant Records? Y r u thanking me 4 that?!

  • @petejones879
    @petejones879 2 месяца назад

    Being a performer of the arts with her poetry and her music I'm surprised she was never part of the warhol factory set.. Maybe she was a little bit too young

  • @tkshots
    @tkshots Год назад

    that was a struggle

  • @tuveuxlademocratieoutuveux4692
    @tuveuxlademocratieoutuveux4692 7 месяцев назад +2

    *Amazing how she deliberately avoids mentionning the importance of the Beatles throughout... Jazz had no bloody relevance in the music world in the sixties and seventies !! What is she talking about ???...*

    • @foggynotion
      @foggynotion 7 месяцев назад +1

      She's saying that the Beatles would have adamantly disagreed with you.

  • @xxcelr8rs
    @xxcelr8rs 7 месяцев назад

    Marketing crews.... red alert cut.

  • @john_atco
    @john_atco Год назад +3

    Patti Smith has always talked a lot..

    • @crimsonwolf9099
      @crimsonwolf9099 8 месяцев назад

      That's cuz she thinks everything she says is important and heavy. She babbles pseudo intellectual rubbish peppered liberally with name dropping to boost her cred. Always has!

    • @markboyd9275
      @markboyd9275 7 месяцев назад +2

      What else are you supposed to do at an interview, stand on your head?🙄

    • @michellewatson5954
      @michellewatson5954 7 месяцев назад +1

      😂

  • @daveyvane9431
    @daveyvane9431 7 месяцев назад

    So I suppose “Slow Ride” is not her favorite song?😂

  • @waynedurning8717
    @waynedurning8717 7 месяцев назад

    The wish she expresses at the end. I bet she never imagined it would get this much worse.

  • @mccauleyprop
    @mccauleyprop 10 месяцев назад +1

    Her last few comments in regards to "identidy"...the left wing media has failed her!

  • @nikolic-sq5rx
    @nikolic-sq5rx Год назад +1

    she has fight with words, hard to listen

    • @Screenwriting
      @Screenwriting Год назад +9

      She's deliberate and intelligent. She's not fighting words at all. She's summoning them.

    • @swesttttt
      @swesttttt 11 месяцев назад +9

      Good lord. She’s a poet. She’s not fighting with words, dude, she’s constantly considering the best way to phrase something to give the full image.

    • @govchal
      @govchal 8 месяцев назад

      @@swesttttt I liked what he said: "she has fight with words, hard to listen". it's important. so drop kick yer knee jerks through the goal posts of life. baby.

    • @crimsonwolf9099
      @crimsonwolf9099 8 месяцев назад +1

      Junky rambling. That's why. Sure she thinks the world of the song "Heroin". Duh! I used to as well.

    • @stuartwray6175
      @stuartwray6175 7 месяцев назад

      Has fight?

  • @pascaljeanne8002
    @pascaljeanne8002 7 месяцев назад

    oh man patti smith ...what is her ? lol , what is it ? i never understood what she does ! please patti ...stop it !

  • @Methilde
    @Methilde Год назад

    Anyway they didn't musically existed without brithish invasion and they were closer to Rock&roll than jazz.

  • @Canyon2023
    @Canyon2023 7 месяцев назад

    She over romanticizes the lyrics of Heroin. It's a typical junkie's experience.

    • @cactaceous
      @cactaceous 7 месяцев назад +1

      Yes but who was writing lyrics like that for mass consumption?! At that time or any time before. Nobody. A typical junkie’s experience brought to the ears of people that had never thought of it, heard of it or knew about it. It’s the bravery that is romantic. The fact he did not give a fuck.

  • @themistero
    @themistero 7 месяцев назад

    She reminds me of my aunt. Why can't boomer hippies wear any make up or color their hair when they get old? I mean whatever, but it just creeps me out, you know? Kind of like a wicked witch or something.

  • @MarkDarnell-cq2wy
    @MarkDarnell-cq2wy Год назад +1

    Deep as the top layer of an Onion.

  • @johnmcclung7536
    @johnmcclung7536 Год назад +3

    Not to Hot looking

    • @ToddKuehnau
      @ToddKuehnau 9 месяцев назад

      I'm sure you ain't a looker yourself. Guess what?? Women are not here for your satifaction.

    • @govchal
      @govchal 8 месяцев назад

      she is very proud of her breasts. I have the documentation. thank you.

    • @daddo2413
      @daddo2413 7 месяцев назад

      Not for me. Not my fave.

  • @mysto
    @mysto 7 месяцев назад

    She is basically Flying on other people talent. Not interesting .

  • @ttacking_you
    @ttacking_you 7 месяцев назад +1

    Boy, she really liked her some Hendrix. Hendrix is like some mythological God to people in my generation. It's hard to believe he existed