He would play at Largo where he would do comedy shows

“”He would play at Largo where he would do comedy shows, so there was crossover when me and Mary Lynn did Girls Guitar Club and he came and was our guest on the show, just because he was in town and Flanagan got him to do it or whatever, and I think we had eighteen people in the crowd, it was not a sellout show in any way. My friend David still thanks me for it, like ‘I can’t believe I was there and I got to see that intimate show and he played his own songs!’ Afterwards we were standing in the back because our act that I did with my friend Mary Lynn, it was all just like ‘play the guitar even if you don’t know how to’, and then we’d go into a cover where we’re barely doing the open chords and stuff, and it got a little better as it went on.
I got to have a conversation with him after. He was complimenting what we did and I was like, ‘please don’t do this, I’ll have a nervous breakdown!’ and then he started talking to me about how much his voice bothered him.This is what artists do to themselves. Nothing is good enough, it’s always bad. That person, who was the least disappointing performer and musician I’d ever experienced every time I watched him perform, like when he was on the Oscars and he was so vulnerable, and it was perfection, and to hear him just being like, I’m sorry, I wish my voice was better’, and I was like, ‘No, no, no, please don’t do it’ – it inspired me later, because I love to pull myself apart and that’s why you don’t do anything, and it made me later just go ‘don’t shut the door on yourself cause you’ve decided it isn’t good, when people love it.'”

Karen Kilgariff

We were walking down the red carpet right behind Madonna

“We were walking down the red carpet right behind Madonna, and it was like a strobe light of flashbulbs. Then when we went by, the flashbulbs went off in this very mild, condescending way. I finally saw a tape of the show but I wish I hadn’t. It was so bizarre that I was there. It was the strangest thing I’ve ever seen on the Academy Awards, and it was me.”

Elliott Smith

I had heard his second record

“I had heard his second record, which is like the “Needle In The Hay” record, and that sounded extremely familiar to me. It sounded like things that I was doing at the time, but more articulated. Like he was a better player, he was tied to more of a folk and Beatles tradition. But that record, “The Needle In The Hay” record is a home-recorded record, and it’s really great! And the songs are incredible, so when I heard that (that was when Sebadoh was kind of starting to peak, early 90’s… ’93, ’94. And when we always chose bands we wanted to hear open for us. And I was like “I want Elliott Smith to open for Sebadoh, I wanna see this guy”, and he did! And that’s when I got to know him, and then it turned out that he spent a few years (this is kind of crazy), he spent a few years living in Northampton- the Northampton/Amherst area (which is where Dinosaur are from) and he actually went to Hampshire college at the same time that Sebadoh was playing our very first shows at Hampshire college, and Dinosaur Jr was also playing our very first shows at Hampshire college, and Elliott worked at my favorite supermarket at the time. I didn’t even know that, I had no idea, I didn’t find that out until like two years after when we were just talking. Continue reading

Le Cabaret affichait complet

Le Cabaret affichait complet, en ce mercredi soir, pour saluer l’arrivée d’Elliott Smith, l’un des «meilleurs songwriters américains d’aujourd’hui», si l’on en croit le magazine Les Inrockuptibles. On aurait pu s’attendre à ce que l’homme de Portland arrive discrètement, guitare acoustique en bandoulière; mais c’est en tant que membre d’un trio électrifié que Smith s’est pointé sur scène. Du coup, les pièces de XO, son magnifique dernier album, étaient toutes plus rapides, plus agressives; en bref, plus rock que ce que l’on aurait pu imaginer. Ce qui ne veut pas dire que Smith ne jouait pas de finesse, bien au contraire. Sa jolie voix, si éloignée de son physique de rocker, a distillé son charme, et, par moments, le jeu des harmonies vocales avec son bassiste faisait presque oublier l’absence des violons sur “Bottle Up and Explode!” ou du piano sur “Waltz # 2” et “Bled White”.

Fidèle à l’image que l’on pouvait se faire de lui, Smith ne souffla mot de tout le spectacle, murmurant à contrecoeur quelques remerciements étouffés qui contrastaient avec la clarté de son chant. Ce ne fut que lors du premier rappel, qu’il effectua seul à la guitare, que l’on sentit un relâchement chez le chanteur. Souriant, le distant Elliott enjoignit alors son public, qui l’avait jusque-là suivi avec une certaine déférence, de lui soumettre quelques demandes spéciales. À entendre la pluie de titres, dont certains remontaient jusqu’à ses premiers enregistrements, on a pu constater la dévotion d’une bonne partie de l’auditoire. Les néophytes, quant à eux, s’empressèrent de rejoindre les rangs des fidèles en vidant de son contenu le comptoir à disques installé à l’entrée. Lorsqu’il reviendra (le plus tôt possible, espère-t-on), tout le monde pourra chanter avec lui.”

Nicolas Tittley