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in 2012 to the surprise of many Laura
Nyro was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. It was her third time up for consideration
and others in contention included much more famous artists who sold millions more records. But a dedicated cadre of supporters,
including many rock and pop icons, had campaigned relentlessly
for the piano playing thrush and songwriter who had been dead for 15
years.
Count
me as one of Nyro’s biggest fans. I already knew her music, but not the
composer, through recordings by The 5th
Dimension and others when I stumbled on her sophomore album, Eli and
the Thirteenth Confession,
surely one of the most flawless LPs of
all time. It was totally original, soulful, powerful, lyrical and by turns bluesy, jazzy, folky, and
unashamedly pop. I played the shit out of that record and
followed her strange and sometimes troubled career ever after.
Born
Laura Nigro on October 18, 1947 in Brooklyn, she was quintessentially a
product of that rich and unique urban
world. Her father Luis Nigro, a trumpeter and piano tuner,
was Italian and Jewish. Her mother Gilda was from a Russian Jewish family. She
was a cultured woman with a wide
collection of recordings ranging in styles from opera and classical composers
like Ravel and Stravinsky to Billy Holiday and
other jazz and blues singers. In the summers the family accompanied Luis to
the Catskills where he gigged with resort jazz bands. Laura was
immersed in music and began to pick out tunes on the piano at an early
age. She was writing songs by age 8.
It
was a secular household. Laura’s mother’s family especially was part
of the Jewish left. As a girl she attended Sunday school classes at the New
York Society for Ethical Culture whose Humanist
and progressive values helped
shape her world view.
Laura and her parents, Gilda and Luis Nigro. |
Laura
crossed the river to Manhattan to
attend the prestigious High School of
Art and Music where she found friendship
and encouragement from both staff and like minded students. She
continued to absorb various musical styles including the lively folk music
scene of Greenwich Village and the
infectious pop of the Brill Building
tradition. She particularly admired the harmonies of the popular girl groups she heard on the radio.
She and her high school friends would join the street corner a
capella singing popular in the city and busk for change on the subway.
The
protest music of the era influenced
her. She explained, “I was always
interested in the social consciousness
of certain songs. My mother and grandfather were progressive thinkers, so I
felt at home in the peace movement
and the women’s movement, and that
has influenced my music.” Nina Simone was a particular
influence. Her songs were already more complex and subtle than the straight forward ballads and broadsides of another favorite, Pete Seeger.
Fresh
out of high school changed her professional name to Nyro, after trying out
several others. She was becoming known
as a song writer and sold And When I Die to Peter, Paul and Mary for a very
respectable $5000. Always struggling
with stage fright, she made her professional performing debut far away
from New York City at the Hungry I
in San Francisco.
In
1966 two of her father’s music business acquaintances, Artie Mogull and Paul Barry
became Laura’s managers. Her father
always denied that he had anything to do with it. They signed Nyro to a record deal on the Verve Folkways label. Record producers unsure of Nyro’s piano
ability used session pianist Stan Free on
most of the cuts. Released in January
1967 More Than A New Discovery was not an immediate hit, but attracted a cult
following. In 1973 after Nyro
was established the album was re-titled First Songs and re-issued with a
different song order by her new label, Columbia.
More important, as her
managers probably expected, it attracted a virtual stampede of artists eager to
record her songs. It has been compared
to a demo. Among the songs on the
album were Wedding Bell Blues, Stoney End, Billy’s Blues as well And When I Die.
The 5th Dimension scored several big hits with tunes from the young Laura Nyro. |
The 5th Dimension struck gold with
Nyro’s music—Blowing Away, Wedding
Bell Blues, Stoned Soul Picnic, Sweet
Blindness, Save The Country and Black Patch.
Other artists recording her songs included Three Dog Night and Maynard
Ferguson with Eli’s Coming; Barbra Streisand with Stoney End, Time and Love, and Hands off the Man retiled as Flim
Flam Man; and Blood, Sweat and
Tears who had a huge hit with And
When I Die.
Later
that year Nyro made her second major public appearance at the fabled Monterey Pop Festival. A legend
has grown up that it was a failure, possibly due to the insecure artist’s
own ambivalence about the
performance. It was not included in the
documentary film made there. Recently re-discovered footage, however, shows
that not only did she perform well,
but the audience was highly receptive.
Shortly
after that show top agent
sought to buy her contract. Mogull and Barry were reluctant to part with
their slice of Nyro’s lucrative
publishing and she had to file a lawsuit maintaining that she was under-age
and taken advantage of. After ridding
herself of her former management, she signed a deal with Greffen that included
the creation of a publishing company, Tuna
Fish Music, under which the proceeds from her future compositions would be
divided equally between them. The
company also soon purchased the publishing rights to her earlier material. A
very sweet deal for Geffen, but high demand also paid off for Nyro.
Nyro
was seriously considering an offer from Blood, Sweat, and Tears to become the
new lead singer following the
departure of Al Kooper. But Geffen had other ideas, bringing her
to legendary Columbia producer Clive
Davis who signed her as a solo
artist. David Clayton-Thomas became the new voice of the band which then
had one of their biggest hits with And
When I Die.
In
some ways, Nyro might have preferred to be in a band. She was uncomfortable in the spotlight. She said her only truly joyful times as a
performer was busking with her friends in high school.
A nearly perfect album, Eli and the Thirteenth Confession from 1968. |
But
Nyro demanded and got creative control of her albums in
her deal with Davis. The result was her
widely acknowledged masterpiece Eli
and the Thirteenth Confession released in 1968, one of rock and pop
music’s most fertile years. Although
only a moderate hit, reaching No. 189 on Billboard’s
Pop Album Chart its underground
following was deep and devoted. Like
its predecessor, it was mined by other artists who made hits. In addition to Eli’s Coming and Stoned Soul Picnic the album included Sweet
Blindness, Poverty Train, Emmie, Woman’s Blues, and Confessions.
In
1969 she followed up with her most commercially successful album, which many of
her fans also consider her best. New York Tendaberry was Nyro’s ode to her hometown, haunting, stark
and beautiful. It took more than a year
to record because of Nyro’s perfectionism
and because her inability to read music
or describe clearly what she wanted from the musicians in musical terms they understood made production tedious. Her close friend Janis Ian was once called to a session with Nyro in tears because
she could not get the musicians to understand what she meant when she asked
them to “play purple.” Ian was able to translate that as legato—slow and smooth.
Notable
tracks included the title number, Save
the Country which became a peace
movement anthem, Time and Love, and Sweet
Lovin’ Baby. The
album ran up to No. 32 on the Pop Album chart.
Nyro’s
next album, Christmas and the Beads of Sweat was a
departure—recorded with the Swampers, a
band from Muscle Shoals and featuring
the driving guitar of Duane Allman on
some tracks and stripped down solo work with her piano and ethereal harp by avante guarde jazz artist Alice
Coltrane on others. Despite the schizophrenic duality
of the album, many of Nyro’s admirers consider it her most ambitious work. It was the first of her albums that did not
produce a hit for other artists.
Ironically, it was also the first to contain a non original cut, Carol
King’s Up On the Roof
which became Nyro’s only hit single. The
album peaked in the charts at No. 51.
In 1971 Nyro took a whole new track with her
collection of R & B, Soul, and girl group favorites Gonna Take
a Miracle recorded in Philadelphia
with veteran soul musicians. Her
friend Patti Labelle and her group Labelle sang back-up, or more
correctly collaborated as if on a group project. The result was a stunning, rich, sometimes
raw collection. Nyro’s renditions of Spanish Harlem, Jimmie Mack, Dancing in the
Streets, and You’ve Really Got
a Hold on Me are now considered classic. Not only did the album make it to No. 46 on
the Pop Chart, but it hit an even higher on No. 41 on the separate Black
Albums chart.
The
record was very nearly Nyro’s swan song. At age 24 she announced her retirement from music after its
release. She resented Columbia’s
attempts to market her as a celebrity—she
refused to do television and was too shy
and tongue tied to do the usual
rounds of press interviews and radio station drop-ins. Touring
and live performances were always excruciating for her, although in her final
tour with the emotional support of Patty Labelle she had done better. But she knew she could not lean on her again.
Laura Nyro and Jackson Browne in 1970. |
After
an affair with Jackson Browne in
1970 and ’71, Nyro met and married Vietnam
veteran and carpenter David Bianchini.
Together they retreated to rural Massachusetts. While the 1973 Columbia re-issue of her
first album kept her memory fresh for her fans, the emotionally fragile Nyro tried to find a new life. She discovered, despite her background as a
confirmed New Yorker, that she liked the relaxed
life of the country. But her marriage was soon troubled.
In
1975 Nyro took twin blows when her
marriage shattered and her beloved
mother died at age 46 of ovarian
cancer. Nyro decided to immerse
herself once again in music. She teamed
up with Charlie Calello on an album
of new material, Smile. Far more laid back than earlier albums, it had a
smooth jazz feel also used and explored Chinese
themes and instrumentation on
some of the tracks. It produced no hits
but was warmly embraced by her fans and climbed to No. 60 on the Pop Album
Chart.
Nyro
even agreed to tour with a band in support of the album. Her performances also included earlier
material and a live album was
released the next year.
In
1978 She after a becoming pregnant during
a brief affair with Indian born Harindra Singh. Nyro once again left New York City for Danbury, Connecticut where she set up a
studio in her home. The result
was Nested,
often described as maternal. More melodic
than her last original albums it also contained some of the more political work with which her late
career would be identified.
Despite
touring in support of the album while heavily pregnant, the record was a commercial bust. Columbia withdrew it from circulation and it
was unavailable domestically until it was re-issued as a CD in 2008. Many of her fans
have never heard it.
Laura and her son Gil, named for Gil Scott-Heron. |
After
completing the tour Nyro’s only son Gil
Bianchini was born. She retreated
once again from music for three years to devote herself to him. Gil is now a rapper/hip hop artist know as Gil T who often samples his mother’s work in his pieces.
In
the early ‘80’s she began a relationship
with painter Maria Desiderio which lasted the rest
of her life.
By
the time she once again returned to music it was deeply informed by feminism,
lesbianism, the ecological movement and a new-found personal peace. Mother’s Spiritual, released
in 1984 represented more than a year of intense work in the studio. It represented her only original material of
the decade. Despite criticism in some
quarters that she had lost her edge and about her overtly political material,
the record found a niche audience not only among devoted long time fans, but in
the early world of women’s music. It was her
last original album to chart, barely breaking in at No. 189.
Laura on tour in 1988. |
Four
years later Nyro undertook her first live tour in years with a full band. Although many of her early hits were played, she wanted to feature
her new music. The concert tour produced
a live album released in 1989, Laura: Live at the Bottom Line. Columbia wanted a new studio album and
refused to release it but allowed her to put it out on the minor label
Cypress which had no money to promote it. Nyro had to spend $18,000 of her own money
for a quarter page ad in The
Rolling Stone.
The
album included six new, previously unreleased songs, many of which had a bright, humorous style which took her
fans by surprise. Having quit smoking her voice was in the best
shape it had been in years. But it was
not a success.
Discouraged,
she returned to Columbia to complete her commitment for two new studio
albums. 1993’s Walk the Dog and
Light the Light, mix of new material, re-visits of older material and covers was made
with a small combo featuring percussionist Nydia “Liberty” Mata, with whom Nyro
had collaborated since the mid-1970s and was produced by Steely
Dan producer Gary Katz. Although highly melodic, it represent
Nyro’s most political work yet including
feminist and animal rights songs as
well as Broken Rainbow which was
written and recorded for an Oscar-nominated
documentary of the same name about
the Navaho in 1985. One again the album was positively reviewed
and Nyro even toured with small harmony
quartet in club venues in
support. But sales disappointed
Columbia. Although Nyro would work on
another album for the company, Angel
in the Dark, the label would
not release it until after her death.
She toured sporadically, playing clubs and often
for women’s audiences. Two more live
albums, one recorded in Japan were
released.
In 1996 Nyro was diagnosed with ovarian
cancer. She worked with Columbia on
preparing a definitive retrospective as she battled the illness. Stoned
Soul Picnic: The Best of Laura Nyro was released early in 1997 as a two
disc CD to glowing reviews and strong sales.
On April 8, 1997 Laura Nyro died with her lover and son
by her side in her Danbury home. She was
46 years old—the same age that the same killer claimed her mother.
Her
death predictably led to a renaissance of interest in her life and work. A tribute album by 14 female artists or acts
was recording and released later that year.
Participants included Phoebe Snow,
Jill Sobule, Suzanne Vega, Rosanne Cash,
Jane Siberry, Lisa Germano, Sweet Honey in
the Rock, and Patty Larkin.
Posthumous
releases of her last studio album and live recordings from the early ‘90’s
followed as well as various compilations. Artists continue to cover her songs.
The
fragile body may be gone, but the spirit and the voice lives on.
Good stuff.
ReplyDeleteLaura, your Tribe Loves you forever - Happy Birthday Beautiful Angel!
ReplyDeleteLoving to reminisce with all of her tunes and happy to read the article of her life and work I didn't know about.New meaning to "when I die".
ReplyDeleteShe actually age 49 when she passed away. Her mom passed away at the same age from ovarian cancer also.
ReplyDelete