Sonny Smith (born 1972) is an American musician, playwright and multimedia artist from San Francisco. [1] He has released fourteen albums since 2000, largely with group Sonny & The Sunsets.. His work has variously encompassed blues, folk, pop and rock elements. AllMusic noted that his 2002 album, This Is My Story, This Is My Song, lifted him from obscurity to cult status. [1]
Smith is a songwriter in the tradition of Ray Davies whose songs are often populated by characters with an emphasis on outcasts, weirdos, freaks, death, love and atypical transformation. They sometimes recall the 1950s era doo wop of The Falcons combined with the direct sincerity and positive spirit of Modern Lovers’ Jonathan Richman, the kitchen sink wisdom of Michael Hurley and the absurdity of The Hairy Who? art collective, as well as the dark confessional humor of cartoonists like Robert Crumb.
Smith began playing blues piano in bars when he was seventeen years old. [1] Skipping between the Rocky Mountains of Denver, San Francisco, and Central America, he began to write original songs, short stories and plays. Smith's travels in Central America inspired his narrative approach and original style of folk music. AllMusic noted that his 2002 album, This Is My Story, This Is My Song, lifted him from obscurity to cult status. [1]
In 2003, Smith was commissioned by Watchword literary magazine to make a CD of one-act plays delivered as songs. [1] This project led Smith in a new direction, incorporating theatre and dialogue into his evolving approach to music. [1] At the Headlands Center for the Arts, he was awarded a residency in May 2005 to create a feature-length musical, The Dangerous Stranger, which included guest performers such as the folk singer Jolie Holland, local singer Peggy Honeywell (artist Clare Rojas), Miranda July, and set designer Daniel Tierney.
With the Release of Tomorrow Is Alright on Fat Possum, Sonny & the Sunsets began to tour more extensively through US, Europe, Australia and Japan. That record received critical acclaim and a cult status. The songs were small noir like comic book episodes, Robert Crumb meets Randy Newman, set to garage rock inspired doo-wop music reminiscent of The Kinks.
In a 2010 interview with Songwriters on Process, [2] Smith described his songwriting process as follows:
"I’ll write lyrics down, or what I think is a songwriter’s version of poetry, then tinker with it musically. If you were to look at my notebook, it’s all brainstorming: little sentences and fractured words. Nothing too cohesive. At the same time, I’ll strum chords around the house or just try to copy some great song. I might ape it a little and find some direction rhythmically. Once I get that direction, I look at my notes and see if any of those words leap out."
Smith founded Rocks in Your Head Records [3] in 2018, where he has produced and released music for Sonny & The Sunsets and other artists.
To date, Sonny and the Sunsets has released 12 albums and three singles and EP. Most work was released on Polyvinyl Records, with newer work released on Smith's label, Rocks in Your Head.
Smith's 2010 release Hit After Hit pulls influence from 50's and 60's rock. The album goes back to basics short songs, simple harmonization, and surfy guitar sounds.
In an interview with Consequence of Sound, Smith said the album's title was originally a “cool boxing reference.” It was written and recorded at the same time as the 100 Records Project. The album was released on Fat Possum Records.
Longtime Companion is Sonny & The Sunset's first country-inspired album. According to Smith, it is a breakup album written during his breakup with his girlfriend of 10 years. [4]
The album was recorded to tape and takes influence from Gene Clark, The Flying Burrito Brothers, Townes Van Zandt, Johnny Cash and The Kinks.
Songs on the album include hits like Pretend You Love Me and I See The Void, which were rereleased on later albums. [4]
Sonny and The Sunset's 2013 album, Antenna to the Afterworld, was written about paranormal experiences Smith had after experiencing the loss of a friend. [5]
Talent Night at the Ashram was originally envisioned by Smith as a film project, [6] with each song being a short film that formed a feature-length movie.
Recording mostly took place at Smith's home on a tape machine. He collaborated on the album with artists like Shayde Sartin of The Fresh & Onlys, Garret Goddard of King Tuff, Kelley Stoltz, Rusty Miller and Ian McBrayer.
Moods Baby Moods was Sonny & The Sunset's 2016 release that took on a post- disco funk and new wave aesthetic.
The album focuses on finding “purpose in the cruel realities of the modern age” and making sense of modern-day issues. The song “Modern Age” highlights computer created confusion and “White Cop on Trial” discusses the civil rights abuse.
The album was produced by Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs. [7]
Hairdressers From Heaven is Sonny & The Sunset's 2019 release, and the first record released by Smith's Rocks in Your Head record label. Smith has said this album was to be more like a mixtape, filled with “different sounds, different musicians". [8]
Sonny & The Sunset's 2021 release embodied country and western influence. In an interview with New Noise, Smith notes that he did not originally set out to write an album during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, but that the songs came to him as the crisis went on.
Smith's Bandcamp says the following on the album: [9]
“It was before Covid, I had this big free empty studio in the hills, I was supposed to be painting, that was my initial plan, and I just began making songs on an old guitar, songs about being alone, songs about failed men, some dark tales of longing. I was reading some old western paperbacks, and I would go on these walks in the hills, come inside and write these kind of lonesome country songs. Then the pandemic began, and everyone was alone now, and it felt like it had been strangely prescient to write about being alone”
The album title and cover art takes inspiration from a painting by artist Chris Johanson. [10] Much of the album was written and recorded alone during the pandemic, though Smith later collaborated with steel guitar player Joe Goldmark, Rusty Miller and Dylan Edrich. [9]
Sees Knows All is Smith's 2016 solo release. [11] The album is a monologue was self-described as a “bohemian quarter-life crisis” and a tale of “love, sex, drugs, spaceships, romance, hallucinations, bitter tears, and champagne.”
Smith premiered the album at The Lost Church in San Francisco. [12] The premier lasted three nights, featuring a different guest musician each night. The lineup included Kelley Stoltz, Tim Cohen (The Fresh & Onlys and Magic Trick), Kyle Field (Little Wings), Alexi Glickman (Sandy's), and Sun Foot (Chris Johanson)
Smith's tenth studio release, Rod For Your Love, was released in 2018. [13] The album embraced 60's guitar pop which was a departure from his last two releases, which were largely folk-influenced. The lyrics largely focus on romance and the struggle of daily life. The album was recorded with Dan Auerbach of The Black Keys [14] at Auerbach's studio in Nashville, Tennessee.
For a 2010 project called 100 Records, first exhibited at Gallery 16 in San Francisco [15] and later at Cinders in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, Smith invited 100 artists to produce artwork for the record covers of fictional bands. [1]
Smith concocted the personas of all 100 fictitious bands, then wrote and recorded two hundred songs (the A-side and B-side) for each. Smith displayed all the original album artwork as well as a jukebox, that played all two hundred songs recorded by Sonny Smith and other musicians. Artists who participated in the project include Reed Anderson, Alika Cooper, Chris Duncan, Harrell Fletcher, Jo Jackson, Chris Johanson, Tucker Nichols, Ed Ruscha, Paul Wackers and William T. Wiley. [16]
100 Records was later released in two volumes. Volume One was released on Gallery 16 Records and Volume Two on Turn It Up Records.
Earth Girl Helen Brown is an offshoot of the 100 Records project, featuring fictional character Helen Brown. The character was originally created by Smith for the project, but was later embodied by Heidi Alexander, previously of The Sandwitches.
“Helen Brown was born in Vancouver, Canada, but raised in an Athens, Georgia-based religious cult, and was blinded in one eye from a childhood baseball injury. As an adult, she dropped out of Evergreen and traveled the country for a while as a nomadic psychedelic folksinger, before forming her first band One Eyed Tramps. For years, she lived alone in a mountaintop in southern Alaska, where she befriended a Cherokee Shaman (later revealed as a fake) who encouraged her to pursue a frustrating academic career. Rampant drug use, frequent fainting on stage, and occasional self-inflicted knife wounds on stage led to more interest in her stage antics than her music. However, a few sides did emerge in the late ’90s (recording dates unknown), which feature a unique mix of country, girl group, R&B, and ghoulishness. Crude and amateurish at best, these recordings are appreciated for their sincerity and intensity of feeling.” - Sonny Smith [17]
Alexander continues to release music under the Earth Girl Helen Brown name on Empty Cellar Records. [18]
Smith has produced albums for Sonny & The Sunsets, related acts and other artists through his label, Rocks in Your Head, and others.
He holds production credits for the following albums: [19]
Smith founded Rocks in Your Head records in 2018, where he has produced and released music for Sonny & The Sunsets and other bands such as Galore, Fake Fruit, the Gonks, poet Tongo Eisen-Martin and more.
Sonny & Cher were an American pop and entertainment duo in the 1960s and 1970s, made up of spouses Sonny Bono and Cher. The couple started their career in the mid-1960s as R&B backing singers for record producer Phil Spector.
Of Montreal is an American indie pop band from Athens, Georgia. It was founded by frontperson Kevin Barnes in 1996, named after a failed romance between Barnes and a woman "of Montreal". The band is identified as part of the Elephant 6 collective. Throughout its existence, of Montreal's musical style has evolved considerably and drawn inspiration from 1960s psychedelic pop acts.
The Big Come Up is the debut studio album by the American rock duo the Black Keys, released on May 14, 2002, on Alive Records.
Fat Possum Records is an American independent record label based in Water Valley and Oxford, Mississippi. At first Fat Possum focused almost entirely on recording previously unknown Mississippi blues artists. Recently, Fat Possum has signed younger rock acts to its roster. The label has been featured in The New York Times, New Yorker, The Observer, a Sundance Channel production, features on NPR, and a 2004 documentary, You See Me Laughin. Fat Possum also distributes the Hi Records catalog.
Asie Reed Payton was an American blues musician, who lived most of his life in Holly Ridge, Mississippi, in the Mississippi Delta. Born in Washington County, Mississippi, he sang and played the guitar, but made his living as a farmer.
David "Junior" Kimbrough was an American blues musician. His best-known works are "Keep Your Hands off Her" and "All Night Long". In 2023, he was inducted in the Blues Hall of Fame.
Nathaniel Mayer was an American rhythm and blues singer, who started his career in the early 1960s at Fortune Records in his birthplace of Detroit, Michigan. "Nay Dog" or "Nate," as he was also known, had a raw, highly energetic vocal style and wild stage show. After a 35-year absence from music, in 2002 Mayer began recording and touring again, releasing albums with Fat Possum, Alive Records and Norton Records.
Kelley Stoltz is an American singer, songwriter and musician. He currently resides in San Francisco. His music has been compared to that of Brian Wilson, Velvet Underground, Nick Drake and Leonard Cohen.
"Fat Bottomed Girls" is a song by the British rock band Queen. Written by guitarist Brian May, the song appears on the band's seventh studio album Jazz (1978) and later on their compilation album Greatest Hits. When released as a single with "Bicycle Race", the song reached number 11 in the UK Singles Chart and number 24 in the Billboard Hot 100 in the US.
Milestones is a compilation album by The Rolling Stones, released in 1972 by Decca Records. It reached number 14 on the UK Albums Chart. Less popular and well known than the contemporaneous compilation album Hot Rocks 1964–1971, it was released by Decca without the consent or input from the band. Due to the nature of their contract prior to 1971, the band lost all rights to releases of their own music prior to 1971; those rights instead are held jointly by ABKCO Records and Decca Records. Both ABKCO and Decca would continue to release compilation albums, without input from the band, over the next several decades. The front cover is a closeup of Mick Jagger live, while the back cover shows the faces of the rest of the band's original lineup: Brian Jones, Keith Richards, Bill Wyman and Charlie Watts, in four boxes much like The Beatles Let It Be front cover.
"The Bells of Rhymney" is a song by folk singer Pete Seeger, which consists of Seeger's own music accompanying words written by Welsh poet Idris Davies. Seeger first released a recording of the song on a live album in 1958, but it is the American folk rock band the Byrds' 1965 recording that is the best known version of the song.
Bass Drum of Death is an American garage punk band from Oxford, Mississippi, United States, currently signed to Fat Possum Records.
Wheels On Fire are an American garage-pop band formed by John Garris, Susan Musser (organ), and brothers Michael and Matthew Chaney (drums) in Athens, Ohio, United States. They have toured the U.S. and Europe extensively and have released records on Chicago's Trouble in Mind, Mississippi's Fat Possum Records, and Germany's Alien Snatch. Currently the band has released three full-lengths and four singles.
Trevor Powers is an American musician from Boise, Idaho. Powers was initially active as Youth Lagoon from 2010 to 2016, after which he announced that he was retiring from the project. He returned to music with a self-titled project in May 2018. In 2022, he took Youth Lagoon out of retirement with the announcement of a new album Heaven Is a Junkyard. Powers' music has been described as electronic and experimental with elements of pop.
Fat White Family are an English rock band, formed in 2011 in Peckham, South London.
Sunflower Bean is an American rock band from Glen Head, New York and Brooklyn founded in 2013. The band consists of Julia Cumming, Nick Kivlen, and Olive Faber (drums). Their most recent album Headful of Sugar was released in May 2022.
Christopher Richard Farren is an American musician originally from Naples, Florida. He was born in Michigan, where he lived until the age of 7, before relocating to Florida with his family. He is known for his work in the bands Fake Problems and Antarctigo Vespucci and as a solo artist.
Blues Got Soul was the final album for blues and soul singer King Ernest Baker. He never got to see its release as he was killed in an automobile accident 4 days after finishing it. It was released on the Fat Possum label in 2000. It contains the single "I Must Have Lost My Mind".
The following is a list of releases by Polyvinyl Record Co. Polyvinyl Record Co. was established in 1995 and has since put out more than 350 records.
The Cry of the Heart is the thirty-sixth solo studio album by American country music singer Connie Smith. It was released on August 20, 2021, via Fat Possum Records. It is Smith's third album to be produced by her husband, Marty Stuart. The album is also Smith's first studio album in a decade. It comprises a total of 11 tracks, three of which were penned by Smith and Stuart. the album features recordings penned by Merle Haggard, Melba Montgomery and Carl Jackson. Three tracks are covers of songs previously released as singles by country artists. The album received positive reception from critics and journalists following its release.