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Ask most music lovers to name female singer-songwriters of the classic-rock era and the same trilogy of names will come numbingly to the tongue—Carole King, Joni Mitchell, and Carly Simon. It’s a familiar enough group to have inspired a best-selling biography covering all three, “Girls Like Us,” by Sheila Weller.
It’s too bad more people don’t know that there should be a fourth “girl” in that club one of equal talent and reach who sprang from the same era: Laura Nyro. That’s especially unjust given the fact that, in the late ’60s and early ’70s, Nyro penned many more chart hits than Joni did and at least as many as Carly managed. Admittedly, there’s a significant caveat to Nyro’s success: She could only smuggle her genius into the mainstream via cover versions recorded by more accessible artists. Between 1967 and ’71, songs that Nyro wrote, like “Stoney End” “Eli’s Coming and “Wedding Bell Blues”, flew high on the charts and became embedded in the public’s consciousness. But they only did so cut by other artists like Barbra Streisand, Blood Sweat and Tears, Three Dog Night, and The 5th Dimension, respectively.
This year, however, Nyro’s achievements deserve a fresh view, will mark 50 years since her debut appeared under the apt title More Than A New Discovery (later re-released as ‘The First Songs’). This fall, the star would have turned 70, while April 8th will mark twenty years since her death, exacerbating the silence surrounding her. Even most of the stars who gave Nyro her hits back in the day have fallen from popular, or critical, favor. The exception? Barbra Streisand, who included a herculean version of “Stoney End” on her most recent tour, this past summer.
That song, and others, demonstrate how Nyro brought together elements, and sensibilities, no other writer thought to connect. Her sift of genres put her beyond easy category. Listening to Nyro’s records today, you find yourself thinking: Just what kind of music did she make? Her unconventional keys and startling tempo changes suggest jazz. Her theatrical melodies speak of Broadway, while the introspection of the songs says “singer-songwriter.” Meanwhile, the soulfulness of Nyro’s tunes played straight to the heart of Motown. Everything from art-song to girl group hits had an influence on her sound.
Nyro’s music also boasted a heightened sense of place. Her records spoke the clamorous language of her birth city, New York, in the mid-20th Century. In her recordings, we hear the grandeur of Grand Concourse, the striving of the Lower East Side, the chic of Riverside Drive and the soul of Harlem. It’s a sound of uptown and down, an ideal blend of the sophisticated and the earthy.
The source of this creative nexus was born Laura Nigro on October 18, 1947 in the Bronx. Her parents boasted Russian Jewish and Italian Catholic roots. Her mother, Gilda, toiled as a bookkeeper while her father, Louis, provided her musical genes. Louis earned his living as a piano tuner and jazz trumpeter. Laura taught herself to play piano as a child, absorbing records played by her parents from the worlds of classical music (Debussy) and jazz (Billie Holiday). A clear prodigy, Laura wrote her first composition at the age of 8. In high school, she came to love the best soul songs of the day, from Martha Reeves to Curtis Mayfield to Nina Simone. Reflecting her ambition, she changed her name to Nyro (NEAR-oh) in high school. Her father’s contacts in the music business brought her to Artie Mogull, who became her first manager in 1966, before she turned 19.
It wasn’t long before the newly dubbed Laura Nyro sold her first song: “And When I Die,” a rousing ode to mortality and rebirth, which Peter Paul and Mary snapped up for five thousand dollars. Three years later, the song became a pop smash for the jazz-rock band Blood, Sweat and Tears, augmented by an unusual hoe-down arrangement. Nyro made her own professional debut at the hungry i, the famed boho performance space in San Francisco. Shortly after, Mogull got her a recording contract with Verve Folkways Records, home to Richie Havens, Janis Ian and Tim Hardin. In 1967, Verve issued Nyro’s debut, which barely cracked Billboard’s Top 100 Album chart. Its first single, “Wedding Bell Blues,” never inched above No. 103 on the singles list. Yet, two years later, the song went all the way to No. 1 in a version cut by The 5th Dimension. Nyro’s debut contained a Trojan Horse full of eventual hits, including “And When I Die,” which BS&T finessed to No. 2 in ’69, Blowin’ Away, which The 5th Dimension drove to No. 26 the same year and “Stoney End,” which Barbra Streisand rode to No. 6 in 1970, providing her biggest hit since People in 1964.
The fabled story of Nyro’s audition for Davis underscores the intimacy of her style. In Davis’ first memoir he wrote that, when she played for him, she insisted on turning off every light in the room save one—a beam from a television set positioned next to her piano. Bathed in the cathode ray, Nyro performed songs that would end up on her Columbia debut, Eli and the Thirteenth Confession, in 1968.
Her songs came to full bloom on ‘Eli,’ which appeared in March of 1968, graced by a unusual bit of packaging. Nyro insisted that the lyric sheet be perfumed. The recording found Nyro fully owning her operatic vocals, while the arrangements (co-created with Charlie Callelo) didn’t skimp on eccentric flourishes. Once again, the album yielded hits for others, including “Eli’s Coming,” a Top Ten smash for Three Dog Night, Sweet Blindness, a No. 13 score for the Fifth Dimension and Stone Soul Picnic, which the same group soared to No. 3. While the essential songs had as much pop appeal as compositions of the era by Jimmy Webb or Holland-Dozier-Holland, in the context of Nyro’s album they dove deeper. They coalesced into a full musical, mapping out Nyro’s greatest loves, hopes and fears.
While the album only inched to No. 181 by Billboard’s album tally, it had a profound influence on other artists. A young Todd Rundgren sought Nyro out, impressing her enough for the star to offer him a position as her band leader. He declined, since he had just signed a contract for his band The Nazz, whose first single Hello It’s Me, bears an obvious resemblance to Nyro’s style. Several years later, Elton John introduced a sound that bore its own debt to Nyro’s. Rickie Lee Jones also took influence from her, evident in her unusual approach to pace and her will to let her songs evolve.