Tag Archives: Patti Smith

Rhymes, Rock & Revolution: The Story Of Performance Poetry. Television Review.

Liverpool Sound and Vision Rating 9/10

Poetry is not everyone’s cup of tea. To some, perhaps misguided, possibly even consciously ignorant of the form and its turbulent history, the seismic revolt against strained form and stiff suited underwhelming development that shook the world post World War Two, is nothing more than pretension, a dip into the ocean without a bathing suit or a pair of trunks to hide the soul and yet arguably poetry has never been as popular now in the 21st Century at any time since the days when Allen Ginsberg tore apart convention at the Royal Albert Hall and delivered the 20th Century standard bearer, Howl.

Patti Smith, Banga. Album Review.

  • Originally published by L.S. Media. July 9th 2012.

L.S. Media Rating ****

There is no doubting the sincerity in Patti Smith, a woman of true artistic worth who performs music as if she were a female version of Allan Ginsberg or Jim Morrison. A true poet who happens to produce great music as if it was considered to be a mortal sin to be someone who can produce art in many fields, if it was, do you think someone like Patti Smith would care? She would shrug her shoulders and go out produce something of absolute genius such as her latest album, Banga.