| Robert Smith |

|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Robert James Smith |
| Born |
April 21, 1959 (1959-04-21) (age 48) |
| Origin |
Blackpool, England |
| Genre(s) |
Punk rock
Post-punk
Gothic
rock
Alternative rock
New Wave |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician, songwriter, producer |
| Instrument(s) |
Vocals, Guitar, Keyboard |
| Years active |
1976- |
Associated
acts |
The Cure
Siouxsie & The
Banshees
The
Glove |
| Website |
http://www.thecure.com/ |
For other persons named
Robert Smith, see Robert Smith
(disambiguation).
Robert James Smith (born April 21, 1959 in Blackpool, England is a
guitarist, vocalist and songwriter, and has been the lead singer of
British post-punk
band The
Cure since its founding in 1976. NY Rock calls him "pop
culture’s unkempt poster child of doom and gloom", and describes his
songs as "somber introspection over lush, brooding guitars".
Smith is a multi-instrumentalist and can play 6- and 12-string guitars; 4- and
6-string bass
guitars; double
bass; keyboards;
and violins.
|
Contents
- 1 Musical
career
- 1.1 Early
years
- 1.2 Role
in The Cure
- 1.3 Stage
persona and image
- 1.4 Vocal
styles
- 1.5 Songwriting
styles
- 1.6 Collaborations
- 2 Discography
- 2.1 Band
discography
- 2.2 Solo
discography
- 3 Curiosa
festival
- 4 Robert's
Guitars
- 5 Trivia
- 6 See
also
- 7 References
- 8 External
links
|
Musical career
Early years
- See also the history of The
Cure
Robert Smith is the third of four children born to Alex and
Rita Smith. His siblings are Richard, Margaret and Janet. Janet is
married to Porl Thompson, the "second" guitarist
of The Cure: he and Smith switch between playing lead and rhythm
guitars.
Smith was raised as a Catholic
and went to Notre Dame Middle School and St. Wilfrid's Comprehensive
School in Crawley.
He was an accomplished student who maintained high marks, but after he
began playing guitar at the age of 11 his primary focus quickly became
his music. He was influenced by The Beatles, Nick
Drake, Jimi Hendrix, The
Ink Spots and David Bowie.
Smith met Mary Poole in school when he was 14 years old, and
they married in 1988. Smith wrote one of the Cure's signature
compositions, "Lovesong",
as a wedding present to his wife. As a teenager, he once wore a black
velvet dress to school - just to shock everyone, and once held a
benefit concert for a gay teacher Natalie who had been fired.
Role in The Cure
Smith has written or co-written the bulk of The Cure's music
and lyrics in a career spanning 30 years. When the Cure was first
formed, Smith did not intend to become the lead vocalist; he only began
singing because, after the original singer left, the group could not
find a suitable vocalist. During the late 1970s and into the 80s, Smith
composed some of The Cure's songs on a Hammond
organ, and recorded a complete demo of the song "10:15 Saturday Night".
Smith is the only member of the band who has stayed on from
the beginning. With Lol Tolhurst, he wrote songs such as singles
"Lovecats" "Let's Go to Bed", and "The Walk". He also wrote the album The
Top between stints as Siouxsie and the Banshees
guitarist. Smith has co-produced most of the band's material.
Stage persona and image
Robert Smith on the cover of NME
Smith helped popularize the "goth"
style of dress with his trademark smeared red lipstick and messy black
hair, a look that he began sporting in the early 1980s. According to Siouxsie and the Banshees
bassist Steven Severin, Smith first used Siouxsie
Sioux's lipstick after using opium. However, Smith claims that he has worn
make-up since he was young.
His songwriting for the band's early albums — particularly Faith,
Pornography,
and the later album Disintegration
— centered around themes of depression, loneliness, and
isolation. The somber mood of these early albums, along with Smith's
onstage persona, cemented the band's "gothic" image.
Following the temporary dissolution of the band in 1986,
however, Smith developed a new stage appearance - a shaved head (this
can be seen in In Orange , a concert in the south
of France released on video 1987). The band's aesthetic went from
gloomy to psychedelic
beginning with the album The
Head on the Door.
Although Smith's public persona emphasizes a depressed image,
he has said that his songs do not convey how he feels all, or even
most, of the time.
- "At the time we wrote Disintegration...it's
just about what I was doing really, how I felt. But I'm not like that
all the time. That's the difficulty of writing songs that are a bit
depressing. People think you're like that all the time, but I don't
think that. I just usually write when I'm depressed."
Vocal styles
In the band's earliest period, Smith used a soft vocal style
on the demos of "10:15 Saturday Night" and "Boys Don't Cry" and the
frenetic punk
style of "I Just Need Myself". Both of those styles were left behind as
a third emerged during the production of the band's debut album, Three
Imaginary Boys. This new sound, which can be
heard on most of the final versions of songs from that period, became
the signature Smith sound, which he generally employed until the album Bloodflowers.
Around that time, Smith said he wanted to improve his singing, the
opposite of his goal in 1984; he remarked in the documentary Ten
Imaginary Years that he tried to sing badly for the album The
Top.
Songwriting styles
Robert Smith in San Francisco, California, October 1985 - Photo by
Nancy J Price
Smith's songwriting has shown a range of styles and themes
over the years. Early songs incorporated literary paraphrase (the
reference to Camus' novel L'Etranger
in "Killing an Arab"), punk metafiction
("So What") surrealism
("Accuracy"), straight-forward rock/pop ("Boys Don't Cry," "I'm Cold"),
and poetic mood pieces ("Another Day" and "Fire in Cairo"). In
subsequent decades, Smith explored more poetic moods.
Smith's songwriting took a more pop-oriented
turn following Pornography. Even Smith's seemingly
upbeat tracks often contain dark themes, however; the single "In
Between Days," for example, contrasts a bouncy pop-rock beat with
lyrics about sadness and heartbreak.
In an interview in 2000, Smith said that "...there is one
particular kind of music, an atmospheric type of music, that I enjoy
making with the Cure. I enjoy it a lot more than any other kind of
sound.
When Smith was asked about the 'sound' of his songwriting, Smith said
that he did not "...think there is such a thing as a typical Cure
sound. I think there are various Cure sounds from different periods and
different line-ups."
Collaborations
Smith has also been involved in other musical projects,
including a stint with Siouxsie & the Banshees and a side
project with Steven Severin called The Glove. He has also contributed to a
number of independent projects and performances, among them the B-side
of the Faith cassette, a 30-minute instrumental
track from a movie project, Carnage
Visors. He was responsible for the release of
two singles by Crawley based artists in the early 80's: "Cult Hero" a
local postman and the "Obtainers" who were two local school kids.
In 2000, Smith collaborated on the track 'Yesterday's Gone'
with David Bowie side man Reeves Gabrel's on his solo albumn "Ulysses
(Della Notte)".
In 2003, Smith collaborated with the pop-punk band Blink-182 on
the track "All
of This" off their self-titled album. In 2004, Blank
& Jones remixed "A Forest" featuring Smith on vocals. That
year, he also provided vocals for Junior Jack for the club hit "Da Hype".
In 2004, he stood in as one of three guest presenters for John Peel on
BBC Radio 1,
a week before Peel's death.
In November, he joined Placebo
onstage at their Wembley arena gig to sing that band's hit song
"Without You I'm Nothing", as well as the Cure staple "Boys Don't Cry."
He also co-wrote and supplied vocals for the Tweaker
song "Truth Is." That same year, Smith collaborated again with Junior
Jack on a remix of "Da Hype", featured on the album Trust It.
He was also featured as a vocalist and co-writer on JunkieXL's
"Perfect Blue Sky."
In 2005, Smith teamed up with Billy
Corgan, the former lead singer and lead guitarist of both The
Smashing Pumpkins and Zwan,
to do a cover of the Bee Gees' "To Love Somebody" on
Corgan's first solo release, TheFutureEmbrace.
In 2006, Smith worked with Faithless
on a remix of the Cure's "Lullaby" for the album To
All New Arrivals.
In December 2006, Smith appeared on stage with Korn for their MTV
Unplugged recording session for the song "Make Me Bad / In Between Days"
In 2007 Robert Smith was featured on a single called "Please"
from Paul
Hartnoll's album, The Ideal Condition.
The single is available as a 7", a 12" and as a CD single through the
Kids label.
Discography
Band discography
→ See The Cure discography from 1976
(start) to present
→ See The Glove discography in 1983 (only album)
→ See Siouxsie
& the Banshees discography: 1983-1984
Solo discography
For over two decades, Smith has suggested that he may do a
solo album. Smith has been widely credited with writing the songs
"Homesick" and "Untitled" as solo tracks; Smith denied this, crediting
those songs to other members:
- "I didn't write "Homesick" and I didn't write the
music too. It's another misconception. […] Out of the 12 songs on the
CD, I think I only wrote six musically... "Untitled"... (to Simon
[Gallup]) You wrote that one ? ...It was Roger [O'Donnell]. So
it [(Disintegration)] couldn't have been a solo
album and if I'd done on my own it wouldn't have sounded anything like
The Cure anyway apart from my own voice. The Top album
could have been a solo album but it's not true the way we worked in
studio […]"
In 2001, Smith was going to disband The Cure and work on his
solo album, but was convinced otherwise by producer Ross
Robinson. Robinson urged Smith to make another Cure album, and Smith
obliged, titled the band's 2004 release The
Cure.
Curiosa festival
For the 2004 "Curiosa" festival, Smith personally selected 11
bands to open for The Cure. It began with a concert in West Palm Beach, Florida on
July 24 and ended in Sacramento, California on
August 29. Those bands included Interpol, The
Rapture, and Mogwai. The concert had two
stages, with the headlining bands on the main stage and the less
well-known bands on the second stage. Bands and artists on the second
stage changed throughout the tour, and included Muse,
Cursive,
Head
Automatica, Thursday, Scarling., The Cooper Temple Clause,
and Melissa Auf Der Maur.
Robert's Guitars
Robert has an extensive range of guitars with a variety of
different sounds for different songs and eras of The Cure. His
collection includes a Gretsch Silver Falcon 6136SL,
a Gibson Chet
Atkins semi-acoustic, a '60s Fender Jazzmaster, a Fender
Telecaster, a '60s Fender Bass VI, a '60s Mosrite
Ventures, a '60s Coral Sitar, a Takamine EN28C
acoustic, a Takamine 12-string acoustic, an Aria Sandpiper acoustic, an Ovation L756
12-string acoustic, a Gretsch Black Falcon, a Gretsch
Red Tennessee Rose, a Guild 12-string acoustic, a Gibson Reverse Firebird, and
a very rare 1963 National Newport 88 (as seen on
the cover of the trilogy DVDs).
Trivia
- Smith voiced himself in an episode of South Park
in which he defeats Barbra Streisand in a battle.
Series co-creator Trey Parker is a fan of The Cure (see Mecha-Streisand).
- In The
Mighty Boosh episode "Nanageddon",
Smith's tears are mentioned as an ingredient for the most powerful
hairspray known to man (Gothjuice)
- Smith has expressed his distaste for Morrissey
(lead singer of The Smiths), stating that "if
Morrissey says don't eat meat, then I'll eat meat because I hate
Morrissey."
The feeling was mutual. The rivalry remained strong throughout the late
80s and 90s and as recently as 2004, when both artists released albums.
It has faded in recent times.
- Smith enjoys playing football
and he supports west London team Queens
Park Rangers.
- Smith is the only artist to appear twice on
'Top Of The Pops' in the same showing playing in two different bands.
The Cure performed "Lovecats" and The Banshees performed "Dear
Prudence" for the Christmas edition in 1983. Damon
Albarn appeared in the same edition of the show in 1995
playing in both Blur and Elastica,
although his keyboard performance in Elastica was mimed.
- Smith provides backing vocals to Billy
Corgan's cover of To Love Somebody by the Bee Gees from his solo album
TheFutureEmbrace (2005). Corgan, and his band The Smashing Pumpkins,
are fans of The Cure and a cover of 'A Night Like This' appears as a
B-side to the single 'Bullet With Butterfly Wings'.
- He has also done a voice cameo appearance as a
character on the Cartoon Network show "Courage The Cowardly Dog".
See also
- List
of number-one dance hits (United States)
- List
of artists who reached number one on the US Dance chart
References
External links
| v • d • e The Cure |
| Robert Smith | Porl
Thompson | Simon Gallup | Jason
Cooper |
| The
Cure personnel |
| Discography |
| Studio albums:
Three Imaginary Boys
| Seventeen Seconds
| Faith | Pornography
| The Top | The
Head on the Door | Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me
| Disintegration
| Wish | Wild
Mood Swings | Bloodflowers
| The Cure | Untitled thirteenth album |
| Live albums:
Concert | Entreat
| Paris
| Show | Trilogy
| Festival 2005 |
| Compilations:
Boys Don't Cry
| Japanese Whispers
| Standing on a Beach / Staring at
the Sea | Mixed Up
| Galore
| Greatest Hits
| Join the Dots |
| EPs: Half an Octopuss
& Quadpus | Lost
Wishes | Five
Swing Live |
| Related bands:
Malice | Easy
Cure | Cult Hero | The Glove | Fools
Dance | Presence | Babacar | Levinhurst |