Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Fred Sonic Smith

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Frederick Dewey Smith

Instruments
  
Guitar, vocals, bass

Labels
  
Role
  
Occupation(s)
  
Guitarist, songwriter

Years active
  
1964–1988

Name
  
Fred Smith

Fred
Born
  
September 14, 1949West Virginia, USA (
1949-09-14
)

Genres
  
Died
  
November 4, 1994, Detroit, Michigan, United States

Spouse
  
Patti Smith (m. 1980–1994)

Children
  
Jackson Smith, Jesse Smith

Music groups
  
MC5 (1963 – 1972), Sonic's Rendezvous Band (1975 – 1980)

Similar People
  
Patti Smith, Rob Tyner, Wayne Kramer, Michael Davis, Dennis Thompson

Mc5 live at West Park in Ann Arbor, Michigan 1969.


Frederick Dewey Smith (September 14, 1949 – November 4, 1994), known professionally as Fred "Sonic" Smith, was an American guitarist, best known as a member of the influential and political, Detroit rock band, the MC5. Later in life he married and raised a family with poet and fellow rock musician, Patti Smith. The couple collaborated musically, and raised two children together.

Contents

Fred

Career

Smith was a guitarist with the MC5 and later went on to form Sonic's Rendezvous Band, which released one single, "City Slang", during Smith's lifetime. In 1988 he collaborated with Patti Smith on her album Dream of Life.

Personal life

Smith was born in West Virginia.

Fred

He and his band opened a show for singer and poet Patti Smith. Patti Smith's guitarist, Lenny Kaye, introduced Fred and Patti before the show. The two were married in 1980.

Fred

Together the Smiths had a son, Jackson (born 1982) and a daughter, Jesse (born 1987). Jackson, a guitarist, was married to Meg White (formerly of indie band The White Stripes). Jesse is a pianist. Both have performed on stage with their mother along with other members of the Patti Smith Group.

A resident of St. Clair Shores, Michigan (a Detroit suburb), Fred Smith died in Detroit in 1994. While he had been in poor health for a number of years, the apparent cause was heart failure.

Influence

Fred

In 2003, Rolling Stone magazine ranked Smith #93 in its list of The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.

Patti Smith has spoken of how Fred Smith encouraged her writing, crediting his influence on a number of the songs she released after his death, as well as the prose works she created during their time together in Michigan. He was the inspiration for her song "Frederick", a single from her 1979 album Wave. Her 1996 album Gone Again features several songs inspired by, co-written by, or in tribute to, her late husband.

The band Sonic Youth took its name from Smith's nickname.

Musical equipment

Guitars
  • Rickenbacker 450 with Gibson PAF pickups
  • Epiphone Crestwood
  • Mosrite Guitars
  • Gretsch Country Gentleman
  • Amplification
  • Marshall Amplifer
  • Fender Super Reverb
  • Songs

    Kick Out the Jams
    Shakin' Street
    I Want You Right Now
    Ramblin' Rose
    Looking at You
    The Human Being Lawnmower
    Teenage Lust
    Miss X
    Baby Won't Ya
    Back in the USA
    Motor City Is Burning
    Tonight
    Sister Anne
    Let Me Try
    The American Ruse
    Rocket Reducer No 62
    Skunk
    Borderline
    Gotta Keep Movin'
    Come Together
    Future/Now
    Call Me Animal
    Tutti-Frutti
    Over and Over
    Starship
    Intros / Ramblin' Rose
    Poison
    19th Nervous Breakdown
    Unknowed Rock
    Tall / Rocket Reducer No 62
    High School
    I Just Don't Know

    References

    Fred "Sonic" Smith Wikipedia