Playing via Spotify Playing via YouTube
Skip to YouTube video

Loading player…

Scrobble from Spotify?

Connect your Spotify account to your Last.fm account and scrobble everything you listen to, from any Spotify app on any device or platform.

Connect to Spotify

Dismiss

Biography

In 1974, Shira Small recorded under the auspices of a senior project at a small Quaker boarding school in Newtown, Pennsylvania, “Eternal Life” is the product of her four years away from the Wagner Projects in East Harlem.

“Eternal Life” came together from a scribbling on a bathroom wall (“Change is life’s only constant factor”), a troubling remedial math class (“The line of time and the plane of now”), and inspiration from turbulent feelings rocking her friend group during the Vietnam era. Interviewed in 2006 by LA Weekly, Small herself noticed a difference between her lyrics and other songs of the day: “There’s lots of talk about how short life is. And is how life never stops, how big it is. I have a strong spiritual core, but not that really religious thing.” Her voice is brassy and confident, less delicate and lofty than many of her contemporaries. “That light, airy tone … you think they’re just hovering in La-La Land, but some of that stuff is kind of dark,” she mused.

Recognizing talent, her music teacher Lars Clutterham convinced her to record an album of original material as her senior project. The money to press the album was drummed up by pre-sales and a few generous parents, with all 500 copies distributed to students and faculty of Newton’s George School. The album’s other highlight, “Gimme Magic,” also made it to The Journey Of Persephone, a bizarre student musical performed by the school’s theater department.

It was her final performance, but that suited Small. “I was such a flotation device, going with every single flow. I would’ve self-destructed,” she said of any potential stardom.

–Ken Shipley, 2006

Edit this wiki

Don't want to see ads? Upgrade Now

Similar Artists

API Calls