Michael Peter Smith
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Michael Peter Smith (born 7 September 1941) is a Chicago, U.S.-based singer/songwriter. Rolling Stone Magazine once called him "The greatest songwriter in the English language". He has been singing and composing since the 1960s, and his rich and challenging songs have been recorded by more than 30 performers.
He is best known for writing "The Dutchman," which was popularized by Steve Goodman and also recorded by Tom Russell, John McDermott, Gamble Rogers, Jerry Jeff Walker, Josh White Jr., the New Kingston Trio, Liam Clancy, Anne Hills, Suzy Boggus, Norm Hacking, and Robert James Waller.
Smith was born on September 7, 1941 in South Orange, New Jersey.[1] South Orange was a rough-edged factory town and shades of it linger throughout his writing. He attended Catholic school as a child (Our Lady of the Valley and Our Lady of Sorrows in the Oranges), which would go on to shape much of his writing. A notable example is his song "Sister Clarissa."
He had three younger sisters and they were the basis for his autobiographical play Michael Margaret Pat and Kate, originally presented at the Victory Gardens in Chicago. The play is Smith's story of his upbringing and family relationships surrounding his father's early death.
While in high school in South Orange, Smith discovered the guitar and rock-and-roll. His earliest musical influence was Elvis Presley, although Roy Rogers was a close second. According to Smith, the music "ruined my grades," however, his other love of English never suffered. An avid reader, Smith's command of the language has always shown in the literacy of his songs, and contributed to much of his acclaim. A Song Talk Magazine review commented "Hearing the songs of Michael Smith in this day and age is like reading an anthology of short stories by Hemingway after decades of only comic books."
After high school, Smith's family moved to Florida. Two years later he started college and his interest in folk music blossomed. He cites The Kingston Trio and Harry Belafonte as his earliest folk influences. He spent three years of the 60's working at a Miami venue called The Flick, playing six nights a week. He was in a Peter, Paul and Mary style trio for a couple of years which included his wife Barbara Barrow. They expanded into a rock band called Juarez and recorded one album for Decca before disbanding. Smith and his wife then played as an acoustic duo for most of the early 70's.
Steve Goodman's recording of "The Dutchman" in 1973 on his album Somebody Else's Troubles, formally introduced Smith's songs to a large audience, and propelled "The Dutchman" into Smith's most popular song. Because Goodman was Chicago-based and had been playing several of Smith's songs in his act, it opened a lot of opportunities for Smith in Chicago. So, in 1976 Smith and Barrow moved from Detroit to Chicago, where he became a regular in the city's folk clubs for a couple of years, which allowed him to stop touring. Eventually though, the work began to dwindle and he took a day job as a clerk for Time magazine to pay the bills. He played a few festivals and a show at the Old Town School of Folk Music now and then, but aside from that, became inactive for about six years. Fortunately, he continued writing and his songs continued to get played and recorded by others all through that time.
Besides "The Dutchman," which Suzy Bogguss covered on her #1 selling Aces album, Smith classics and their interpreters include "Spoon River," a song inspired by the poems of Edgar Lee Masters, which was also recorded by Goodman. Jimmy Buffett recorded "Elvis Imitators", Michael's tongue in cheek ode to the King's legions. "Dead Egyptian Blues," a song about ex-pharaohs and their riches was recorded by Trout Fishing in America. A couple of other Smith classics include "Crazy Mary," a song about the 'crazy lady next door' in everyone's life that Bonnie Koloc and alsoDavid Allan Coe recorded, and "Last Day of Pompeii" - a smooth jazz number about the cities impending disaster, which appears on recordings by Trout Fishing in America, Anne Hills, Cathy Miller, and the swing recordings of Harmonious Wail.
In 1986, Smith found himself regularly taking the stage again. He had started to work with Anne Hills, and Hills got Smith to record two albums for Flying Fish Records, while becoming his producer and touring partner. Smith recorded Michael Smith (1986) and Love Stories (1987.) Both albums have been reissued as a single CD, which is among Acoustic Guitar's list of essential singer-songwriter albums. Hills recorded her own album of Smith songs called October Child (1993).
In the winter of 1987, Claudia Schmidt introduced Smith to theatrical director Frank Galati. It was Galati who asked Smith to write the music for Steppenwolf Theatre Company's production of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath. The Steppenwolf Theatre, founded by Gary Sinise and John Malkovich, has a glowing reputation in Chicago and nationally, and The Grapes of Wrath became a huge success, playing in Chicago, London, San Diego, and on Broadway where it received Tony Awards for Best Play and Best Director. The success of The Grapes of Wrath allowed Smith to quit his job as a clerk at Time, and his work in theater brought both new dimensions to his writing and his performances.
Since then, Smith has been performing regularly, both as a solo act and in a duet with Hills. He recorded his third album for Flying Fish, Time (1994), and recorded a duet album with Hills called Paradise Lost and Found (1999). He has also continued to write music for theatre, including for a Colorado Children's Theatre production of The Snow Queen. Most notably though, in 1993 Chicago's Victory Gardens Theatre premiered his autobiographical play Michael, Margaret, Pat and Kate. The play won four Jeff Awards (the Chicago Theater Union's equivalent of the Tony), for Best Original Music, Best Production, Best Actor In A Revue, and Best New Work. February 2000 saw the official release of the music from Michael, Margaret, Pat and Kate by Wind River Records.
Smith has performed at dozens of major folk festivals including the Kerrville Folk Festival, Black Mountain Festival, and Philadelphia, Owen Sound, Gamble Rogers Folk Festival, and Winnipeg Folk Festivals. He has also appeared on a number of radio programs including WUMB's Circle in the Stream, interviews with Studs Terkel on WFMT, a series of interviews on "All Things Considered" and "Good Evening" on NPR as well as interviews for the BBC in London for "All Things Considered." Michael continues to write songs, tour regularly, do songwriting workshops as well as perform frequently with Hills. Though sometimes elusive to the spotlight, Smith has had a long, eclectic career as a musician. His songs are played and known throughout the world. Considered by his peers to be one of today's most intelligent, literate songwriters it is a wonder he managed to stay hidden to so many others for so long.
Smith is also known for his whimsical songs like "Zippy," "Famous In France," and "Move Over Mister Gauguin."
[edit] Discography
- Juárez 1970 (With Barbara Barrow & Ron Kickasola)
- Mickey & Babs Get Hot (With Barbara Barrow) 1972
- Zen (With Barbara Barrow) 1974
- Michael Smith 1986
- Love Stories 1988
- Time 1993
- Michael, Margaret, Pat & Kate 1994
- Pasiones: "Songs of the Spanish Civil War" (With Katrina & Jamie O'Reilly) 1997
- Paradise Lost & Found (With Anne Hills) 2000
- Two Man Band Two (With James Lee Stanley) 2000
- Weavermania!(With Barbara Barrow, Tom Dundee & Mark Dvorak) 2000
- There 2002
- Fourtold (With Anne Hills, Steve Gillette & Cindy Mangsen) 2003
- Such Things Are Finely Done 2003
- Michael Peter Smith Live at Dark Thirty 2003
- The Gift of the Magi (With Jamie O'Reilly) 2003
[edit] Notes
- ^ Smith's entry in the All Music Guide lists his birthdate as December 6, 1943, and his place of birth as Edmonton, in London, England. This is due to confusion with Mike Smith, the former member of the Dave Clark Five, who was from Edmonton.