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Lotti Golden

Lotti Golden is an American singer-songwriter, record producer, poet and artist. Golden is best known for her 1969 debut album Motor-Cycle, on Atlantic Records as well as her long career as a songwriter for other artists in collaboration with Tommy Faragher.

Early life
Childhood Lotti Golden was born in Manhattan to Sy (Seymour) Golden and Anita Golden (née Cohn), the elder of two daughters. Golden's parents, a strikingly handsome and fashionable pair, were avid jazz aficionados and foreign film buffs. Golden soaked up the sounds of Billie Holiday and John Coltrane from an early age developing a lifelong passion for music and the arts. Golden grew up in Brooklyn, New York where she attended Canarsie High School, serving as the school's Poet Laureate. Voted Most Likely to Succeed, Golden graduated with honors in 1967, winning the Creative Writing medal, the Lincoln Center Student Award for Academic Excellence, the Scholastic Magazine Award for National Achievement in Art, and a New York State Regents Scholarship. and went on to attend Brooklyn College. 1964–1968: Early music career A birthday gift (a guitar) from Golden's parents at age eleven would chart her future course. By the time Golden completed high school, she had the beginnings of a musical autobiography about her adventures in New York's East Village and Lower East Side, where she was a resident member of the Henry Street Settlement Playhouse, honing her skills as an actress and playwright. This would become the basis of her Atlantic Records debut LP, Motor-Cycle. ==Recording artist==
Recording artist
1969: Debut LP: Motor-Cycle Released on Atlantic Records in 1969, Motor-Cycle is a chronicle of Golden's life informed by New York City's counterculture. "It was a strange, way out scene for pretty, 19-year-old Golden," Golden was part of a new wave of female singers who began to shake up the status quo in the late Sixties. Breaking from the confines of pop they defined themselves by their confessional lyrics, taking on new controversial subject matter. In July 1969, Newsweek ran a feature story, "The Girls: Letting Go": "There has surfaced a new school of talented female troubadours, who not only sing, but write their own songs. What is common to them – to Joni Mitchell and Lotti Golden, to Laura Nyro, Melanie, and to Elyse Weinberg, are the personalized songs they write, like voyages of self-discovery, brimming with keen observation, and startling in the impact of their poetry" Listed among the most influential albums of the era in The New York Times, "The Best of Rock: A Personal Discography," by music critic Nat Hentoff, Motor-Cycle is a synthesis of stream of consciousness confessional poetry, R&B infused vocals and a "sometimes satiric mélange of rock, jazz, blues and soul" On an album of "restlessly epic roadhouse suites" Golden uses the story-based format, featuring a cast of archetypal characters while playing the part of "emcee" of her own "aberrant cabaret." Music critic Path, of Tiny Mix Tapes, explains how Motor-Cycle plays like a musical, transporting the listener to the late 1960s underground: "Golden gets help on Motor-Cycle from an impeccably arranged Atlantic Records session band... with a flawless, swinging rhythm team. Then, at key moments, the curtain goes up and they've got rows of saxes, trumpets, vibes...and you begin to realize that this is not the same song and dance... it's as if The Velvet Underground recorded for Motown." bought the [demo] tapes after one hearing, with Wexler "modestly telling his staff Golden would be the greatest single pop artist since Aretha Franklin." Though Golden made no TV appearances, her impact on the contemporary music scene was such that she is referenced in the cultural commentary on television, The Glass Teat. Still, Golden had concerns about the business side of her career, which she voiced in her Look magazine interview: "The easy part is to sit down and create. The hard part is trying to make yourself heard, the promotion." In the years since its release, Motor-Cycle continues to gain popularity via the Internet, and social media "thanks to the unusual persistence of her [Golden's] art, and the power of listeners' preferences." The LP remains a rich source of samples, with Mark Oliver Everett using Golden's spoken voice from "Gonna Fay's" on his MC Honky project, to the original track from the LP, "Get Together (With Yourself)” appearing on the 2022 Hulu TV miniseries and soundtrack, Pam & Tommy. Motor-Cycle 2025 Reissue Motor-Cycle was reissued In March 2025 by boutique label High Moon Records under the auspices of Warner Music Group/Atlantic Records. Rolling Stone rated Motor-Cycle the #5 Top Reissue of 2025. The lush reissue package consists of updated mastering, bonus tracks on both the LP and CD, booklets with Golden's story including 30 newly released photos by rock photographer Baron Wolman, and liner notes/essays by renowned music critic David Toop and punk legend Richard Hell, offering fresh perspective and critical analysis of the record's relevance and impact; Hell writes, "Golden's all in, the psychedelic daughter of the Beat generation." The reissue continues to garner a new round of reviews and critical commentary. Journalist Michael Azerrad in his Substack piece sums up Motor-Cycle as Golden's musical memoir, an "18-month sojourn in the East Village, then the darkling epicenter of the New York underground," while his title, "The Sgt. Pepper of the East Village," suggests the late 1960s was a time when the record industry supported experimentation in rock music: "The record's streetwise poetry and Spectorian rock and r&b reflects the same sensibility that gave rise to the original New York punk community and beyond — hello, Patti Smith and Bruce Springsteen." But because Motor-Cycle went out of print soon after its release and because Azerrad suggests that history is most often written by the winners, our view of that time and place is shaped by the bands we know, like the Velvet Underground, but he argues, "there were other ways of looking at it, other musicians who documented that community,"—like Golden, case in point is the Velvet's iconic "Heroin," a dark, lonely, depiction of alienation and the solitary aspect of drug use during that era. Compare that with Golden's "Gonna Fay's" an equally explicit depiction of drug use using a debauched, substance fueled party gone wrong to articulate the social aspects of drug use during that time. Music journalist Jeff Gage writes in Rolling Stone: "Motor-Cycle is at its most audacious when it leans into Golden's episodic storytelling.” Golden makes use of the album format to feature her cinematic narrative. (She even told Cosmopolitan magazine in an interview after its release that she wrote "in music & lyrics because a book is too flat."). On Motor-Cycle, Golden chronicles her excursions with a coterie of Lower East Side hippie outcasts living from party to party, casting herself as a kind of Alice in Wonderland character who falls into a bizarro rabbit hole, and spoiler alert, she manages to climb out within an inch of her life. Gage, who interviewed Golden for the reissue piece, states: "As for how caught up [in it] she got, Golden just laughs. "It's gradual. Like watching your hair and nails grow,” she says..." When Golden presented her songs to producer Bob Crewe, he was taken aback, exclaiming "Good God, who are your friends?" Gage continues, "Golden's friends, it turned out, were a motley band of misfits, underground outcasts who slummed around the East Village and Lower East Side. Drag queens, drug dealers, wannabe artists, and soon-to-be burnouts, all slouching toward Bethlehem," referencing Joan Didion's iconic depictions of the West Coast Sixties Counterculture as a kind of parallel to Golden's story. While working on the article, Gage checked in with Lenny Kaye founding member of the Patti Smith band who describes Motor-Cycle as so outré that it only could have been produced in the Sixties on major label like Atlantic, when recoding companies would invest artistic experimentation and innovation supporting artists like Golden, echoing Azerrad's thoughts about how a record as out of the mainstream as Motor-Cycle could have been supported by a record company. Additional press on Golden's Motor-Cycle includes articles in The Second Disk,Uncut, That Eric Alper, US Rocker, Bay Area Reporter, Psychedelic Baby, Ugly Things Magazine and more, including an in-depth piece by Charles Donovan of Record Collector interviewing Golden for a six-page feature story titled "Lotti Golden; One in a Bullion," with photographs from the Warner/Atlantic archives. ==Track listings==
Track listings
Motor-Cycle samples 2003: Golden's spoken voice on "Gonna Fay's" (Motor-Cycle) is the centerpiece for "What a Bringdown" on I Am the Messiah (Spin-ART) by MC Honky, "widely considered to be Mark Oliver Everett (or "E") of the rock band Eels." 2006: Golden's African (Olatunji) -inspired drumbeat on "Motor-Cycle Michael" (Motor-Cycle) appears on Beat Konducta Vol 1–2 Movie Scenes (Stones Throw Records) on the track "Gold Jungle (Tribe)" by hip-hop artist Madlib. 1970s Lotti Golden's eponymous sophomore offering was released on GRT Records (U.S. Label) in 1971. In a live performance for industry executives at NYC's Playboy Club, Golden was described by Cashbox as "GRT's Lotti: Incredible." Although elements of Golden's confessional approach remained (Billboard labeled one song "biographical") for the most part, Golden's self-titled LP moved away from the innovative format of Motor-Cycle. Writer Mitchell Shannon characterizes the shift: "Second time around, her music was more conventional and approachable, but lacked that initial compelling insistence of the previous release." thought the GRT record could take off with the proper promotion: "He [Christgau] wrote: 'Golden's egregious overstatement registers as a strength.' If you know about Christgau, you'll take that as an honest compliment." ==Music journalism==
Music journalism
In the 1970s, Lotti Golden wrote rock journalism, primarily covering her musician friends. In a Crawdaddy! feature story Golden provides unique perspective on the genius of Mike (Michael) Bloomfield chronicling her 1972 San Francisco visit with the legendary guitar player and in Rolling Stone, Golden explores the making of keyboardist (and co-founder with Bloomfied of Electric Flag) Barry Goldberg's first solo LP. Golden's articles have appeared in Creem, Circus and other publications. ==Writer/producer==
Writer/producer
1980–85: Electro/hip hop In the early 1980s, Golden transitioned from artist to writer/producer. Golden's 1982 international dance hit "I Specialize in Love" co-written with musician Richard Scher, enabled her to move into record production: "The success gave [Golden] the freedom to demand production rights to her songs." In an interview for the anthology, Signed, Sealed and Delivered-True Life Stories of Women in Pop, Golden stated that performing live was OK, but she preferred the recording studio, "that wonderful world of sound [where] anything was possible." Golden, with co-writer/producer Scher, wrote and recorded under the moniker Warp 9, a studio production project at the forefront of the electro movement, to which they eventually added live personnel. Warp 9's electro classics “Nunk” (1982) and “Light Years Away” (1983), a tale of ancient astronaut visitation, characterize the sci-fi, afrofuturist aspect of electro. Described as "the perfect instance of hip hop's contemporary ramifications," Their records are ranked among the most iconic of the electro hip hop era. Among the early production teams using the Roland TR-808 drum machine, Golden and Scher created a brand of "electo hip hop records with gorgeous textures and multiple layers." The Guardian (May 2014) characterized Light Years Away as " a cornerstone of early 1980s beatbox afrofuturism, inspired by Grandmaster's Flash's The Message, a brilliantly spare and sparse piece of electro hip-hop traversing inner and outer space." Warp 9's hits brought Golden to the attention of Island Record's chief Chris Blackwell, resulting in a worldwide publishing deal with Island Music. Golden (with Scher) went on to write for, produce and/or remix artists including Diana Ross' hit single "Dirty Looks" from her Red Hot Rhythm & Blues album and TV Special, Patti Austin, Jennifer Holliday (Say You Love Me), The Manhattans, Brenda K. Starr (I Want Your Love featuring guest rapper Adam Yauch of the Beastie Boys), Nina Hagen and Jimmy Cliff. During the early 1980s Golden began a longstanding collaborative relationship with producer Arthur Baker, co-writing the Latin Freestyle music classic "Pickin' Up Pieces" by Brenda K Starr and co-producing Jennifer Holliday's Billboard Hot 100 hit, "Hard Times For Lovers" (Geffen). Golden contributed background vocals/arrangements for many of Baker's projects including the Goon Squad's "Eight Arms to Hold You," featured on The Goonies: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. Golden worked with Baker on Artists United Against Apartheid, Sun City, and is among the sixty-one artists (including Lou Reed, Bono, Grandmaster Melle Mel, Keith Richards, Bob Dylan, and Gil Scott Heron) who participated in what rock critic Dave Marsh describes as "the most diverse line up of popular musicians ever assembled for a single session." Golden appears in the video. 1985–89 Lotti Golden relocated to Los Angeles in 1985 establishing herself in LA's burgeoning songwriting scene, signing a worldwide publishing deal with MCA Music telling Cashbox: "We have a gold record [The Jets] our first year working together." followed by Brenda K. Starr, certified RIAA Gold, yielding the single "You Should Be Loving Me," which appeared on the soundtrack and film ''She's Out of Control''. In 1988, Golden and Faragher were enlisted by A&M to write and produce EG Daily's sophomore effort Lace Around the Wound (1989), featuring the single "Some People." Although the album never got the promotional push it deserved, several songs were later covered by Celine Dion and appeared on the hit TV show California Dreams. The real breakthrough for Golden in her partnership with Faragher came in 1989, when producer Arthur Baker phoned, announcing that Clive Davis was looking for a hit single to launch Taylor Dayne's sophomore LP. By the time Baker arrived, Golden had a working chord progression and title. The three completed the song in one session and Baker left with the demo in his pocket, vocals by Golden, resulting in the Top-5 Billboard Hot 100 hit "With Every Beat of My Heart," the lead single from Dayne's Certified RIAA 3× Platinum ''Can't Fight Fate (Arista) album. and featured in the 1991 action film, Run''. Golden and Faragher's work with the O'Jays, fused urban R&B with their classic soul sound, coming "closest to accomplishing that fusion with the smoking, politically charged "Something For Nothing." The album won the O'Jays their first American Music Award in 1991. Dubbed "luminous tunesmiths and veteran popsters" in Billboard, the team's 1993 international hit for Jeremy Jordan, The Right Kind of Love (Giant Records) co-produced with Robbie Nevil (Billboard Top 15) featured on Fox's hit TV series Beverly Hills, 90210 (listed by Entertainment Weekly at No. 20 of the top TV shows of the past 25 years) also appeared on the Beverly Hills 90210: The Soundtrack. Golden and Faragher made music history in 1993, producing the British R&B girl band Eternal, the first female group to reach one million units (album sales) in the UK. Eternal's debut LP, Always & Forever (EMI), certified 4× Platinum by BPI paved the way for other female UK groups like All Saints and the Spice Girls. Golden's experience as a vocalist helped shape Eternal's vocal sound on the four songs she co-produced and wrote with Faragher, including the international hit single "Oh Baby I...", which topped the UK Singles Chart at No. 4. The first UK girl group with six singles to reach the Top 15 on the UK charts from their debut LP, Eternal went on to become one of Britain's most successful girl groups achieving both international and domestic success. In 1994, Golden co-wrote Keep on Pushing Love for veteran soul singer Al Green. The four way collaboration (Golden, Green, Baker & Faragher) resulted in "one of [Green's] finest recent releases." The single appears on Green's 1995 LP, Your Heart's in Good Hands, "a solid project that approaches the Rev. Green's classic work with Hi Records." In 1993 and 1994, Golden and Faragher reached No. 1 on Billboard's Jazz Charts, with Soul Embrace by Richard Elliot and Diane Schuur's Heart To Heart album, (GRP) featuring "Freedom" performed by B.B. King. Throughout the 1990s Golden and Faragher continued to write and produce international hits that appeared on the UK Singles Chart and UK Albums Chart for artists including Dana Dawson the group Montage and Arthur Baker. In 1998, Golden & Faragher introduced UK R&B artist Hinda Hicks with the Top 25 hit, "If You Want Me" propelling her debut album, Hinda (Island Records) to No. 20 on the UK Albums Chart, winning two 1999 Brit Awards nominations. Golden's partnership with Faragher continued for over a decade. An interview in the "Music Connection" provides insight into the collaborative methodology that made the pair a successful team: "I get involved in a lot of technical things, working out the arrangement and stuff like that," Faragher states, "[and] Lotti works on the complete feeling." Describing how songwriters can sometimes get too close to their work, becoming unwilling to modify or delete sections, Faragher pointed out, it was Golden, the iconoclast, who was willing to scrap work she felt wasn't up to par: "I might be attached to a certain section we worked so hard getting, and Lotti would say, 'Maybe we should throw this part out.' I go, 'Oh, no, you're kidding. I'm shocked-[but] she's right. She's absolutely right."' By the close of the decade, Golden's professional partnership with Faragher ended in divorce; they have one child. In 2000, Golden's "I Should've Never Let You Go" co-written with Faragher, was the second hit single from the Australian girl group Bardot's No. 1 debut album, Bardot, certified 2× Platinum by ARIA, from the Popstars reality TV show. Golden continued working into the early 2000s, but because her recording studio was lost in the divorce process, she could no longer artistically justify writing songs without creative control. The "Music Connection" interview, appearing over ten years before the partnership break-up, reveals just how important the production aspect of songwriting had become for Golden: "Golden & Faragher's pursuit of songwriting and production seems eons beyond the days of a cluttered Brill Building office with an upright piano. What environment does a songwriter need today? Golden: 'This one.' (She gestures towards the conglomeration of keyboards, computers and recording equipment)." == Discography ==
Literacy advocacy
In collaboration with the 92nd Street Y's Educational Outreach Program, Golden designed a songwriting workshop for the advancement of literacy, engaging New York City public school children in the art and craft of songwriting. The classroom based program, "Lyrics & Literacy/Words are Power" was created by Golden in accordance with the New York State Learning Standards for the Arts and implemented in East Harlem by Golden and the 92nd St. Y. 2010-2015 The Rolling Stone Years, a 2011 memoir by rock photographer Baron Wolman featured a previously unreleased portrait of Golden. In the book, Wolman recalls first hearing about Golden from Ahmet Ertegun and Jann Wenner; the trio routinely hit the New York clubs, scouting new talent, (see photo "The Making of Motor-Cycle, 1968-9"). A review of Wolman's book in The Wire, references Golden's previously unpublished portrait: "You'll have your own personal favorites...but [Wolman's] portrait of Lotti Golden, an artist who is unknown to me, appears interesting, intriguing, and important because of Wolman's great photograph." On Record Store Day, April 16, 2016, High Moon Records reissued the original Atlantic 7" single that followed Motor-Cycle (with the participation of Warner Bros. Records and Rhino Records). The reissue is a remastered version of a medley of the Isley Brothers song It's Your Thing and "Sock It to Me Baby". The Atlantic release of Golden performing a cover in 1969 was certainly an unusual way to introduce an artist who writes all her own material, with no single release ahead of the LP. On the B-side, is a girl-group inspired song written by Golden, "Annabelle With Bells (Home Made Girl)," a "gem that sounds like the Ronettes for the hippie generation." The reissue contains a picture sleeve with new cover art, a previously unreleased photo of Golden, and remastered audio. "Annabelle With Bells (Home Made Girl)," was not included in the 1969 album, due to time constraints in pre-digital recording == Motor-Cycle Reissue 2025==
Motor-Cycle Reissue 2025
Motor-Cycle was reissued In March 2025 by boutique label High Moon Records under the auspices of Warner Music Group/Atlantic Records. Rolling Stone rated Motor-Cycle the #5 Top Reissue of 2025. The lush reissue package consists of updated mastering, bonus tracks on both the LP and CD, booklets with Golden's story including 30 newly released photos by rock photographer Baron Wolman and liner notes/essays by renowned music critic David Toop and punk legend Richard Hell, offering fresh perspective and critical analysis of the record's relevance and impact. Hell writes, "Golden's all in, the psychedelic daughter of the Beat generation." The reissue of Motor-Cycle continues to garner a new round of reviews and critical commentary. A detailed interview with Golden in Rolling Stone: "A Counterculture Oddity is Finally Getting its Due," reveals previously undisclosed details about Golden's deep dive into the seedier side of New York City's counterculture in the late Sixties, describing Motor-Cycle 's bizarro cast of characters: wannabe artists, ersatz gurus, hangers-on, druggies and ne'er-do-wells, "all slouching toward Bethlehem " referencing Joan Didion's iconic West Coast counterculture commentary as a kind of parallel to Golden's East Coast story. Journalist Michael Azerrad's Substack piece sums up Motor-Cycle as Golden's "18-month sojourn in the East Village, then the darkling epicenter of the New York underground, with the record's urban poetry "and Spectorian rock and r&b" reflecting the same zeitgeist "that gave rise to the original New York punk community and beyond — hello, Patti Smith and Bruce Springsteen." [For a more detailed see the 2025 reissue see section under Recording Artist heading.] ==References==
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