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Piss Factory

PISS FACTORY
 
 
“Piss Factory”  is a protopunk song written by Patti Smith and Richard Sohl, and released as a B-side on Smith’s debut single “Hey Joe” in 1974.  Tom Verlaine of Television contributes guitar playing on “Hey Joe”.  In 1989, Dave Marsh placed the song on the list of The 1001 Greatest Singles Ever Made.  The song originated as a poem written by Smith about the time she spent working in a baby buggy factory, expressing her assurance that she would not let the experience kill her ambitions.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

Patti Smith is renowned for reworking well-known rock standards to fit her vision and also of adding shock value to her music that surely made Alice Cooper smile; and that was true of the band’s first single from 1974, “Hey Joe” b/w “Piss Factory”.  Patti Smith included a monologue about Patty Hearst (who had been kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army earlier that year) in the middle of her rendition of the 1960’s standard; while the latter song relates the salvation she received from the helplessness of her job on an assembly line after discovering a book by French poet Arthur Rimbaud (Jim Morrison of the Doors was similarly enthralled with Rimbaud). 

 

(February 2014)