Sylvie Simmons

Sylvie Simmons is a London-born, California-based music journalist, named as a "principal player" in Paul Gorman's book on the history of the rock music press In Their Own Write (Sanctuary Publishing, 2001). A widely regarded writer and rock historian since the late 1970s, she is one of very few women to be included among the predominantly male rock elite. Simmons is the author of a number of books, including biography and cult fiction. Simmons is also a singer-songwriter, ukulele player and recording artist.[1]

Sylvie Simmons
Born
London, England
Occupation
  • Music journalist
  • author
  • singer
  • songwriter
Years active1977–present
Musical career
InstrumentsUkulele
LabelsLight in the Attic; Compass Records
Websitesylviesimmons.com

Biography

1977–1984

In 1977 Simmons decamped to Los Angeles and became US correspondent for Sounds, one of the four major UK rock music weeklies of the period. She wrote interviews, reviews and a weekly column, 'Hollywood Highs'. One of her earliest assignments was being sent on the road with Black Sabbath. During her first years in L.A, among the hundreds of artists she interviewed were AC/DC, Rod Stewart, The Clash, Sex Pistols, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Nicks, Muddy Waters, Steely Dan, Blondie, Frank Zappa, Tom Petty, Beach Boys, Van Halen, Kiss, and Michael Jackson.

During the '80s, when Los Angeles witnessed an upsurge in heavy metal, hair metal and glam rock, Simmons wrote what are regarded as the definitive features on the movement, being the first journalist to bring then-unknown acts like Mötley Crüe and Guns N' Roses to international attention. (She would go on to co-author the first book on Mötley Crüe with rock writer Malcolm Dome, Lüde, Crüde and Rüde, 1994, out of print).

In 1981 when Sounds editor Geoff Barton founded the UK heavy metal magazine Kerrang!, he asked Simmons to be its L.A correspondent. She did so, under the pseudonym (and blonde wig) of Laura Canyon, while continuing to write under her own name for Sounds.

During her LA period Simmons wrote a weekly music column for the Knight-Ridder newspaper syndicate; a monthly column for the Japanese magazine Music Life; and interviews/articles for a number of European publications. She was a regular contributor to the US rock magazine Creem and co-hosted the syndicated US rock radio show "London Wavelength".

1984–1993

In 1984 Simmons moved back to North London continuing to write write for Sounds and Kerrang! along with other UK magazines and newspapers - Q, The Times, the Radio Times and The Guardian. She wrote for US, European and Japanese magazines, this time as a UK correspondent, including Creem, Creem Metal, Rockin F; Metal Hammer. Among the artists she interviewed during this period were Joni Mitchell; Cyndi Lauper; Kate Bush; Warren Zevon; Little Richard; Boy George; Mick Jagger; Sting; George Michael; Jimmy Page; Robert Plant; Elton John.

In 1990 Simmons moved to France. She continued to write about music, making frequent trips to London and L.A. to do interviews.

Simmons started writing rock-related short fiction. These would later be published as Too Weird For Ziggy, (Black Cat, ISBN 0-8021-4156-0) a collection of interlinked short stories about the weirdness of celebrity. Grove/Atlantic resurrected its Black Cat imprint (previously home to William S. Burroughs and Henry Miller) to publish Simmons' first collection of fiction. The book bore testimonials from Sharon Osbourne, Marianne Faithfull, Slash of Guns N' Roses, Lemmy of Motörhead and Tori Amos, and was widely praised.[2]

During her years in France, Simmons started investigating French pop music and was particularly taken with Serge Gainsbourg. This too would result in a book - the highly-lauded Serge Gainsbourg: A Fistful of Gitanes[3] (Helter Skelter Publishing, 2001 ISBN 1-900924-28-5). J. G. Ballard chose it as his book of the year. It was published in the UK in 2001 and translated from the English original into ten languages. In 2015 an expanded digital edition of Serge Gainsbourg: A Fistful of Gitanes[4] was released, in English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Japanese.

In the Summer of 1993, Simmons was contacted by the editors of Q about a new magazine they were designing, with the focus on classic rock artists.[5] MOJO magazine was launched in October 1993. Simmons wrote for the first issue and has written for MOJO, as Contributing Editor, ever since.

1994–2004

Simmons moved back to London and continued to write. Her Interviews during this period included Tom Waits; Neil Young; Johnny Cash; Leonard Cohen; Brian Wilson; Peter Gabriel; David Byrne; PJ Harvey; Keith Richards; Kate Bush; and Bo Diddley.

In 1997 Simmons inaugurated MOJO's influential "Americana" column to give more exposure to the new wave of independent roots music by artists. She has written the Americana column ever since.

Subsequently she compiled and wrote liner notes for the compilation album The Rough Guide to Americana,[6] on the World Music Network, in 2001 and the follow-up album released in 2016.[7]

Simmons' essay, "States of Mind", on Country music, Americana and America's myth of itself, was published in the book 1000 Songs To Change Your Life (Random House, 2008, ISBN 978-1-84670-082-8), an anthology that also featured essays by Bjork, David Byrne, Ennio Morricone, Linda Thompson and Tom Waits.

During this period she made a number of appearances on radio, TV and DVDs. talking about music, including Beautiful Dreamer: Brian Wilson and the Story of Smile (director David Leaf, 2004).

Simmons contributed essays and writings to a number of books during this period, including The Virgin Story of Rock ’N Roll (1995), Girls Will Be Boys: Women Report on Rock (1997), Kiss: Modern Icons (1997), The MOJO Collection: Ultimate Music Companion (2000), and Let Fury Have the Hour: the Punk Rock Politics of Joe Strummer (2004).

In 2001 Simmons's biography of Neil Young was published: Neil Young- Reflections in Broken Glass (MOJO Books/Canongate, ISBN 1 84195 084X). [8]

Simmons compiled and/or curated a number of liner notes for artists ranging from David Bowie to Leonard Cohen to the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Perhaps the best known is "Unearthed"[9], the widely regarded hardback book she wrote, at the request of Johnny Cash and Rick Rubin, Cash's producer. It was to be released in conjunction with a CD box set to celebrate Cash and Rubin's decade of working together. (American Recordings, 2003). "Unearthed" turned out to be Cash's first posthumous release, and their interviews – conducted over a one-week period at Cash's home less than six weeks before he died – the last major interviews he would give.

2004–present

In 2004 Simmons moved to San Francisco, California. She continued to write and publish interviews, articles, reviews, for MOJO, The Guardian, various European publications, and during her early years in Frisco, her local newspaper, the San Francisco Chronicle.

Her interviews during this period included Joan Baez; the Eagles; Marianne Faithfull; Jackson Browne; Kris Kristofferson; Willie Nelson; Crosby Stills & Nash; Neil Diamond; Rosanne Cash; Glen Campbell.

Her liner notes now included Americana and country artists, including Linda Ronstadt, Kris Kristofferson, Emmylou Harris, Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson.

Her liner notes for the CD/DVD Leonard Cohen: Live at the Isle of Wight (Sony)[10] won her an ASCAP Deems-Taylor Award.[11]

She appeared on a number of radio shows and music-related TV shows including The Seven Ages of Rock (BBC Two, 2007; VH1 2008).

In 2010 Simmons was featured in the movie The Mighty Uke: The Amazing Comeback of a Musical Underdog, talking about the upsurge of interest in the ukulele. Simmons had played piano, recorder, clarinet, and guitar at various times in her life, but when she moved to San Francisco she left her instruments in storage in England. So she acquired a ukulele. It was given its first public airing at the end of a documentary that the BBC made on Simmons in 2011, called The Rock Chick [12]

Leonard Cohen

From 2009 to 2012, Simmons was writing a major biography of Leonard Cohen. With Cohen's blessing, Simmons interviewed more than a hundred people for the book, including Cohen himself. I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen[13] was published in September 2012 by Ecco/Harper Collins in the US, McClelland & Stewart in Canada and Jonathan Cape/Random House in the UK.

A New York Times best-seller,[14] the book received extremely favourable reviews.[15][16][17]. The New York Times' reviewer Janet Maslin described it as "The definitive Cohen portrait, fearless and smart. The major, soul-searching biography that Cohen deserves." The LA Times called it "A new gold standard of biographies." NPR critic Michael Scaub named it the best biography of the year. [18]

I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen was also an international best-seller, and No 1 on the Canadian national book charts.

In September 2012, Simmons began an unconventional book tour.[19] Traveling across America and then the world with her book and a ukulele, she talked about Leonard Cohen, read from the book and performed his songs[20] – often accompanied by different guest musicians in each town.[21] Her performances were not only in bookstores, libraries and literary festivals, but in rock music nightclubs, record stores, churches, synagogues, and at museums and music festivals.

The tour continued for more than a year, with shows performed in the US, UK, Germany, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.[22] Although the tour officially ended with the release of the paperback edition of the book in September 2013, she continues to play Leonard Cohen shows at special events. She has made numerous appearances as a keynote speaker at universities, museums and other institutions, talking about Cohen and writing his biography.[23][24]

The book itself has been published in more than 20 languages: Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, French-Canadian, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Turkish, Taiwanese, with more translations underway.

In March 2014 the audiobook[25] edition won an Audiofile Earphones Award[26]. In 2017 a French-language version of the audiobook was released.[27]

In 2017, a year after Cohen passed away, Simmons wrote another chapter for her book, picking up where the original book stopped - a conversation with Leonard on the balcony of his L.A home - and telling the story of his life and work from 2012 up to his end. The new updated edition was published in the UK and Canada and Spain and in the more recent translated editions.

In 2017, Simmons was invited to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Montreal be keynote speaker and a panelist at a major exhibition dedicated to Leonard Cohen Une Breche en Toute Chose/A Crack in Everything.[28] She was interviewed onstage by Eleanor Wachtel for the prestigious CBC cultural radio program Writers & Company.[29] Simmons wrote an essay on Cohen for the exhibition's catalog, the hardback book Leonard Cohen: A Crack In Everything ISBN 978-2-551-26176-5

In 2018 the Leonard Cohen exhibition went on tour, making its first stop at the Jewish Museum of New York, and Simmons did an event there. Later the same year, when the exhibition moved to Copenhagen, Denmark, Simmons was the keynote speaker and hosted a Masterclass in writing biography.

Music

When she was in her fifties, Simmons came out as a singer-songwriter. In interviews she said that performing Leonard Cohen songs on her book tour cured her of the stage fright that put a stop to her being a singer in her youth, and had led to her decision to write about music instead.[30] She started featuring her own songs in concerts, continuing to accompany herself on a ukulele.

She recorded her debut album, Sylvie, at Wavelab Studio in Tucson, AZ, produced by Howe Gelb of Giant Sand. Gelb had been an early supporter of her songs and encouraged her to make a record. The record label Light In The Attic Records asked to release it, making Simmons the first artist to release their debut on the label.

The album Sylvie was released in November 2014 and earned universally good reviews. The Guardian called it "one of the most beautiful low-key albums of the year" and the Times called it "Poetic, Guileless, reminiscent of a female Leonard Cohen."[31]

In 2015, following a concert in Santiago, Chile, Simmons and two Chilean musicians Matias Cena and Diego Alorda recorded Algo En Algo, a pop-up record of six songs they played at the show and released it for free.[32]

In 2018 Simmons' songs, "Hard Act To Follow", appeared in the Hollywood movie based on the Nick Hornby book "Juliet, Naked."[33]

Simmons completed her second album Blue on Blue in 2019, once again with Howe Gelb producing and featuring musicians from Giant Sand. She signed with Compass Records who will release the album in 2020.

Books and journalism

In 2015, Simmons began a collaboration with Debbie Harry, co-writing Harry's memoir Face It. The book was published in 2019 and was a New York Times bestseller.[34]

Simmons was a featured essayist in the anthology Faith: Essays from Believers, Agnostics, and Essayists (Simon and Schuster, 2015).[35]

Her articles on rock and interviews were featured in anthologies on Joni Mitchell; Lou Reed; Leonard Cohen; Steely Dan; Fleetwood Mac; and Tom Waits.

Bibliography

Books by Sylvie Simmons

2012 I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen. (Ecco, US; Jonathan Cape, UK; McClelland & Stewart, Canada) 2018 Updated edition (Vinage, UK; McClelland, Canada)[36] Translations: Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, French-Canadian, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Turkish, Taiwanese.

2004 Too Weird for Ziggy. (Black Cat/Grove, US; Grove Atlantic, UK).[2] Translations: Russian.

2003 Johnny Cash: Unearthed (American Recordings)

2001 Serge Gainsbourg: A Fistful of Gitanes.. (Helter Skelter UK; 2002 Da Capo, US. Updated digital edition 2015)[4] Translations: English, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese, Dutch, Italian, French, German, Dutch.

2001 Neil Young: Reflections in Broken Glass. Biography (UK and US (MOJO/Canongate)[37]

Books co-written by Sylvie Simmons

2019 Face It by Debbie Harry and Sylvie Simmons (Dey St, US)[38]

1994 Lüde Crüde and Rüde:- The Story of Mötley Crüe - by Sylvie Simmons and Malcolm Dome (Castle Communications) ISBN 9781898141952

Anthologies: featuring essays or articles by Sylvie Simmons

Joni on Joni: Interviews with Joni Mitchell (2019)[39] - essay/interview

My Week Beats Your Year: Encounters with Lou Reed (2019)[40]

Leonard Cohen: A Crack in Everything (2018)[41]

Major Dudes: A Steely Dan Companion (2018)[42]

Visions from the Tower of Song: Essays (2017)[43]

Fleetwood Mac on Fleetwood Mac (2016)[44]

Faith: Essays from Believers, Agnostics and Atheists (2015)[45]

Tom Waits on Tom Waits: Interviews and Encounters (2011)[46]

1000 Songs to Change Your Life (2008)[47]

Creem: America’s Only Rock 'N Roll Magazine (2007)[48]

London Noir (2006)[49]

Let Fury Have the Hour: the Punk Rock Politics of Joe Strummer (2004)[50]

The MOJO Collection: Ultimate Music Companion (2000)[51]

Kiss: Modern Icons (1997)[52]

Girls Will Be Boys: Women Report on Rock (1997)[53]

The Virgin Story of Rock n Roll (1995)[54]

Notes

  1. "Sylvie". Light in the Attic Records. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  2. "Too Weird for Ziggy by Sylvie Simmons". Fantasticfiction.com.
  3. "Serge Gainsbourg". Goodreads.com.
  4. Staff, Ultimate Classic Rock. "Top 100 Classic Rock Artists". Ultimate Classic Rock.
  5. Network, World Music. "The Rough Guide To Americana". World Music Network.
  6. Network, World Music. "New Release: The Rough Guide To Americana". World Music Network.
  7. "Neil Young Reflections Broken Glass by Sylvie Simmons - AbeBooks". Abebooks.com.
  8. Betts, Stephen L.; Betts, Stephen L. (5 October 2017). "Johnny Cash's 'Unearthed' Box Set to Make Vinyl Debut".
  9. "Leonard Cohen Live at The Isle of Wight (1970) - released in 2009". Leonardcohenfiles.com.
  10. "42nd Annual ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards Announced". Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  11. "BBC Radio 4 Extra - Sylvie Simmons: The Rock Chick". BBC.
  12. Clark, Leilani. "Sylvie Simmons Says". Bohemian. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  13. "Searching the Soul of a Soulful Singer 'I'm Your Man,' Leonard Cohen Biography by Sylvie Simmons". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  14. Simmons, Sylvie (18 September 2012). I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen: Sylvie Simmons: 9780061994982: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 978-0061994982.
  15. "Janet Maslin, NY Times: "Ms. Simmons's 'I'm Your Man' is the major, soul-searching biography that Leonard Cohen deserves." | Heck Of A Guy – The Other Leonard Cohen Site". 1heckofaguy.com. 14 September 2012. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  16. "True Originals: Biographies That Defy Expectations". NPR.org.
  17. Burcz, Chelsea Anna (12 April 2013). "Sylvie Simmons Has Stories". The Wild. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  18. "The Tumblr of Words without Borders – WWB contributor Liel Leibovitz and Sylvie Simmons". Wwborders.tumblr.com. 14 May 2013. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  19. Sweetman, Simon (21 May 2013). "I'm Your Man: Gig Preview". Off The Tracks. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  20. "First we take Manhattan, then we take Berlin – and London, and Sydney and New Zealand!". Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  21. Shepard, Kendall (2 April 2018). "Music Journalist Sylvie Simmons Comes to Savannah".
  22. "I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen". YouTube. Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  23. "I'M YOUR MAN By Sylvie Simmons, Read By Joshua Pollock by AudioFile Magazine on SoundCloud – Hear the world's sounds". Soundcloud.com. 27 February 2014. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  24. "I'M YOUR MAN | Reviews". AudioFile Magazine. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  25. "Leonard Cohen". MAC Montréal.
  26. "Rock journalist Sylvie Simmons on her new album -- "a lovelorn expanse of tumbleweeds and warm reverb"". Salon.com. 25 January 2015.
  27. Petridis, Alexis (18 December 2014). "2014 albums we missed: Sylvie Simmons – Sylvie review". Theguardian.com.
  28. "Algo en Algo - Sylvie Simmons junto a Matias Cena y Diego Alorda, by Sylvie Simmons , Matias cena , Diego Alorda". ALGORECORDS.
  29. Brown, Jake (10 September 2018). "New Sylvie Simmons video: Hard Act to Follow".
  30. "Debbie Harry Takes Readers Behind the "Character" of Blondie in Her New Memoir | Washingtonian (DC)". 2 December 2019.
  31. "Faith - Book by Victoria Zacheim". Simon and Schuster.
  32. "I'm Your Man by Sylvie Simmons". Penguin Random House Canada.
  33. Simmons, Sylvie (2001). Neil Young : reflections in broken glass. Edinburgh: Mojo. ISBN 978-1-84195-084-6. OCLC 48844799.
  34. "Face It - Debbie Harry - Hardcover". HarperCollins Publishers: World-Leading Book Publisher.
  35. Castanier, Bill. "'Joni on Joni' compiles rare tell-all interviews with Joni Mitchell". City Pulse.
  36. "My Week Beats Your Year: Encounters with Lou Reed - Antenne Books". Antennebooks.com.
  37. "Major Dudes A Steely Dan Companion". Abramsbooks.com.
  38. Billingham, Peter, ed. (15 February 2017). Spirituality and desire in Leonard Cohen's songs and poems: visions from the tower of song. OCLC 969962906.
  39. "Time Out 1000 Songs to Change Your Life (Time Out Guides) - Harvard Book Store". Harvard.com.
  40. Unsworth, Cathi (2006). London Noir. ISBN 188845198X.
  41. d'Ambrosio, Antonino (3 November 2004). Let Fury Have the Hour: The Punk Rock Politics of Joe Strummer. ISBN 1560256257.
  42. Irvin, Jim; McLear, Colin (15 February 2003). The Mojo collection: the ultimate music companion. Canongate. OCLC 53254459.
  43. "9780312179410: Kiss (Virgin Modern Icons) - AbeBooks: 0312179413". Abebooks.com.
  44. "9780044409502: Girls Will Be Boys: Women Report on Rock - AbeBooks: 0044409508". Abebooks.com.
  45. Noyer, Paul Du (1995). The Virgin Story of Rock 'n' Roll: Telling it the Way Things Really Were - the Heart and Soul of Rock 'n' Roll. ISBN 1852275413.
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References

  • Paul Gorman, In Their Own Write: Adventures in the Rock Press, Sanctuary Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-86074-341-2
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