| |
| AKA |
born: Laura Nigro |
| Born |
Oct 18, 1947 in Bronx, NY |
| Died |
Apr 8, 1997in Danbury, CT |
by Jason Ankeny
Laura Nyro was one of pop music's true originals: A brilliant and innovative composer, her songs found greater commercial success in the hands of other performers, but her own records — intricate, haunting works highlighting her singularly powerful vocal phrasing, evocative lyrics, and alchemical fusion of gospel, soul, folk, and jazz structures — remain her definitive artistic legacy.The daughter of a jazz trumpeter, she was born Laura Nigro on October 18, 1947, and composed her first songs at the age of eight. After attending Manhattan's famed High School of Music and Art, she began performing in area clubs, drawing on influences as diverse as Bob Dylanand John Coltrane. In 1966, Nyro issued her first LP, More Than a New Discovery; though commercially unsuccessful, the album was a treasure trove of material for other artists — the Fifth Dimensionscored with "Wedding Bell Blues" and "Blowin' Away," Barbra Streisandcovered "Stoney End," and Blood, Sweat & Tearstackled "And When I Die." In 1967, Nyro made just her second major live appearance to date at the Monterey Pop Festival; her idiosyncratic performance baffled the crowd, and she was booed off the stage. Then-music agent David Geffen caught her set, however, and was so impressed that he quit his current position to become her manager. He also won Nyro a contract with Columbia, and in 1968 she returned with the extraordinary Eli and the Thirteenth Confession; while the album earned vast critical acclaim, she again found commercial success not with her own recordings, but with covers of Eli's songs as the Fifth Dimensionreached the charts with renditions of "Stoned Soul Picnic" and "Sweet Blindness," while "Eli's Comin'" became a major hit for Three Dog Night. New York Tendaberry, released in 1969, fared better thanks to the strong word of mouth now trailing her work; the record's "Time and Love" and "Save the Country" soon emerged as two of her most well-regarded and popular songs. With 1970's Christmas and the Beads of Sweat, she continued her exploration of soul music, enlisting Muscle Shoals staples like Barry Beckett, Roger Hawkins, and Eddie Hinton; "Beads of Sweat" also featured guitar work from Duane Allman. Gonna Take a Miracle, recorded with Labelleand the production team of Kenny Gambleand Leon Huff, marked a dramatic left turn in 1971; Nyro's lone album of non-original material, it featured her tributes to Motown ("Jimmy Mack," "Nowhere to Run"), doo wop ("The Bells," "Spanish Harlem"), and the girl group era ("I Met Him on a Sunday"). At the age of 24, Nyro announced her retirement; she married, severed her industry connections, and moved to a small community in New England. However, the marriage ended in divorce, and in 1975 she resurfaced with Smile; a subsequent tour yielded the 1977 live set Season of Lights. However, the long layoff derailed whatever chart momentum her music had accrued, and after the dismal sales of 1978's Nested, she again retreated from the music business. When Nyro finally returned from her self-imposed exile in 1984 with Mother's Spiritual, her music had grown more reserved and introspective; as the title indicated, her own motherhood provided considerable inspiration for her new work, as did her rustic New England lifestyle. While she did not make any overt declarations of retirement, Nyro waited another five years before issuing her next LP, Live at the Bottom Line, recorded at the legendary New York club; Walk the Dog and Light the Light, her first collection of new material in nearly a decade, followed in 1993. Nyro died of ovarian cancer on April 8, 1997. A posthumous collection of unreleased early work, Angel in the Dark, was issued in 2001. |
| Similar Artists: Paul Simon, Randy Newman, Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Rickie Lee Jones, Jimmy Webb, Jolynn Daniel, Lesley Duncan, James Taylor, Jackson Browne, The 5th Dimension, LaBelle, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Barbra Streisand |
| Roots and Influences: Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, Joan Baez, R&B, Leonard Cohen |
| Followers: Joan Armatrading, Heart, Indigo Girls, Rickie Lee Jones, Todd Rundgren, Three Dog Night, Margie Adam, Carol Lipnik, Jolynn Daniel, Charlotte Martin |
| Performed Songs By: Pierre Delanoé, Phil Spector, Gilbert Bécaud, Marvin Gaye, Elgie Stover, Iris Gordy, Anna Gordy Gaye, Gerry Goffin, Carole King, Mann Curtis, Hank Hunter, Lou Stallman, Bob Weinstein, Lowman Pauling, Lamont Dozier, Ralph Bass, Teddy Randazzo, Nolan Strong, Curtis Mayfield |
| Worked With: Will Lee, Charles Calello, John Tropea, Milton Okun, Liberty Nydia Mata, Arif Mardin, Tim Geelan, Joe Farrell, Randy Brecker, Michael Brecker, Patti LaBelle, Seth Foster, Lou Mauro, Freddie Washington, Larry Washington, Roy Segal, Roger Rosenberg, Chris Parker, Lenny Pakula |
| year |
Albums |
label |
| 1967 |
More Than a New Discovery |
Verve/Forecast |
| 1968 |
Eli and the Thirteenth Confession |
Columbia |
| 1969 |
New York Tendaberry |
Columbia |
| 1970 |
Christmas and the Beads of Sweat |
Columbia |
| 1971 |
Gonna Take a Miracle |
CBS |
| 1976 |
Smile |
Columbia |
| 1977 |
Season of Lights...Laura Nyro in Concert [live] |
Sony |
| 1978 |
Nested |
Columbia |
| 1984 |
Mother's Spiritual |
Line |
| 1990 |
Laura: Laura Nyro Live at the Bottom Line |
A&M |
| 1993 |
Walk the Dog & Light the Light (Run the Dog... |
Columbia |
| 1995 |
Season of Lights -- Complete Version [Japan] |
no label listed |
| 2000 |
Live from Mountain Stage |
Blue Plate |
| 2001 |
Angel in the Dark |
Rounder |
| 2002 |
Live! The Loom's Desire |
Rounder |
| 2002 |
Eli and the Thirteenth Confession [Expanded] |
Sony |
| 2002 |
New York Tendaberry [Expanded] |
Columbia/Legac |
| 2002 |
Gonna Take a Miracle [Expanded] |
Columbia/Legac |
| 2003 |
Live in Japan 1994 |
Universal |
| 2004 |
Spread Your Wings and Fly: Live at the... |
Columbia/Legac |
| year |
Compilation Albums |
label |
| 1973 |
The First Songs |
Columbia |
| 1980 |
Impressions |
Embassy |
| 1997 |
Stoned Soul Picnic: The Best of Laura Nyro |
Columbia/Legac |
| 1999 |
Premium Best |
SME |
| 2000 |
Time and Love: The Essential Masters |
Columbia/Legac |
| 2003 |
Live in Japan |
EMI-Capitol |
|