Slowly is it time to crawl out of bed...ready and willing to massage and lick these beautiful soles to wake me up? Are you worthy? Can you handle me? Earn your place...
seen from Brazil
seen from Puerto Rico
seen from Russia
seen from Belarus
seen from Lithuania
seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Brazil

seen from Canada
seen from Lithuania

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from T1
seen from Hungary
Slowly is it time to crawl out of bed...ready and willing to massage and lick these beautiful soles to wake me up? Are you worthy? Can you handle me? Earn your place...
“Soulful, haggard and emaciated yet raffish, swaggering and seductive, she is mad saint, ephebe, dandy and troubadour, a complex woman alone and outward bound for culture war.” Camille Paglia on Patti Smith.
Happy 79th birthday to fierce punk poetess, beatnik earth mother, musician, playwright, shamanistic visionary, personification of jolie laide androgyny, role model and the woman Salvador Dali once likened to “a gothic crow” – Patti Smith (née Patricia Lee Smith, 30 December 1946). Seen here photographed by Charles Steiner in 1975. No one asked, but my favourite Patti Smith song is "Pissing in a River” (followed by “Dancing Barefoot”).
Can I be the artist of your eternity?
My feet sway gently across this cold floor,
Letting go of all my worries,
Hiding behind closed doors,
Where no one is watching,
The hypnotic sound blasting,
Sending its beat through my body,
This being the only moment,
That I can be whomever I want,
Freeing my mind from what troubles me deep inside...
©️fallencalliope
Patti Smith - Dancing Barefoot (1979)
1979, 17 may, Patti Smith Group released their fourth studio album, Wave. It features the singles "Frederick," "Dancing Barefoot," and "So You Want to Be (A Rock 'n' Roll Star)."
Jeanne Hébuterne is exactly what gives "Dancing Barefoot" its haunting, tragic depth.
Jeanne Hébuterne (1898–1920) was a painter, model, and one of the most tragic and luminous figures of French modernism—not just “Modigliani’s muse,” but an artist with her own voice, whose short life became myth.
After the raw, gritty punk-rock energy of Easter (1978), Wave took on a more polished, radio-friendly sound. This was largely thanks to producer Todd Rundgren, whose slick production style brought a different kind of gleam to the Patti Smith Group's usual edge.
"Frederick" the album's lead single was a beautiful, melodic love song dedicated to Fred "Sonic" Smith (guitarist for the MC5), who would soon become her husband.
"Dancing Barefoot" arguably one of the best songs of her career. Dedicated to women like Jeanne Hébuterne, it perfectly blends a hypnotic rock groove with Patti's signature poetic, spiritual imagery.
It has since been covered by everyone from U2 to Simple Minds.
Wave was the final album by the original Patti Smith Group. Shortly after its release and subsequent tour, Patti disbanded the group and stepped away from the music industry for nearly a decade.
She moved to Detroit, married Fred Smith, and focused on raising her family, making Wave a poignant curtain call for her legendary 1970s run
Jeanne Hébuterne is exactly what gives "Dancing Barefoot" its haunting, tragic depth.
Jeanne Hébuterne (1898–1920) was a painter, model, and one of the most tragic and luminous figures of French modernism—not just “Modigliani’s muse,” but an artist with her own voice, whose short life became myth.
On the liner notes of the Wave album sleeve, Patti Smith explicitly dedicated the track to her and women like her, writing: "Dedicated to the rites of the heroine."
Jeanne Hébuterne was a talented French artist in her own right, but she is best remembered as the muse, model, and common-law wife of the Italian painter Amedeo Modigliani. Their relationship was intensely passionate, chaotic, and ultimately devastating.
When Modigliani died of tubercular meningitis in January 1920, a grief-stricken Hébuterne—who was 21 years old and eight months pregnant with their second child—committed suicide the very next day by throwing herself out of a fifth-floor window.
How It Connects to the SongPatti Smith was deeply moved by this level of total, consuming, and tragic surrender to love and art.
lyrics of "Dancing Barefoot" through the lens of Hébuterne’s devotion to Modigliani, the song takes on a hypnotic, almost ritualistic meaning "She is benediction / She is addicted to thee"Captures the fine line between spiritual ecstasy and total codependency.
It reflects how Hébuterne viewed her life as entirely intertwined with Modigliani’s. "She is sublimation / She is the essence of thee"
Sublimation is the process of transforming something raw or low into something elevated and artistic.
As Modigliani's muse, Hébuterne was literally sublimated into his famous paintings.
The "Heroine" controversy Patti Smith fought her record label to keep the word "heroine" in the chorus ("Here I go and I don't know why / I spin so ceaselessly…").
The label was terrified radio stations would mistake it for the drug heroin and ban the track (which many stations did anyway).
But to Patti, the word was non-negotiable—it was a literal tribute to the female hero, navigating the overwhelming, spinning vortex of love, creation, and ultimate sacrifice.
Born on April 6, 1898, in Meaux, the daughter of a conservative Catholic family, Jeanne grew up amidst domestic strictness and an early artistic impulse.
She studied at the Académie Colarossi, one of the few places where women could work with nude models, and soon developed her own discreet and intimate style.
Introduced to the artistic circle by her brother André, Jeanne became a model for Tsuguharu Foujita, mingling with the bohemian scene of Montparnasse—but always as a silent, shy figure, with exotic turbans and high boots.
In 1917, she met Amedeo Modigliani—and her life took a turn. He painted her, desired her, and dragged her into his world of alcohol, illness, and intensity. She, at only 18 years old, fell deeply in love. They moved in together, against her family's wishes. But the relationship was turbulent: there are reports of violence, crises, and the worsening of Modigliani's tuberculosis. Jeanne became the most recurring face in Modigliani's later work: long necks, empty eyes, melancholic serenity.
November 29, 1918, the couple's daughter, Jeanne Modigliani, was born.
The young mother suffered from postpartum depression and, in 1919, became pregnant again. Her family disowned her. Modigliani's health deteriorated rapidly.
Modigliani died on January 24, 1920. Two days later, eight months pregnant, Jeanne Hébuterne jumped from the window of her fifth-floor apartment. She was 21 years old. She is buried next to him in Père-Lachaise Cemetery.
Jeanne Hébuterne is recognized as an expressionist painter, part of the erased female genealogy of modernism.
Tragedy and Devotion in U2's "Dancing Barefoot"
In "Dancing Barefoot," U2 pays homage to Jeanne Hébuterne, Modigliani's companion, bringing to light a story marked by tragedy and devotion.
The lyrics highlight the female figure as an almost sacred and transformative presence, evidenced in verses such as "She is benediction" and "She is the root connection."
This woman not only inspires but also dominates the narrator, leading him to total surrender, symbolized by the image of "dancing barefoot," which represents vulnerability and authenticity in the face of an overwhelming passion.
The repetition of phrases like "Here I go and I don't know why, I spin so ceaselessly" reinforces the idea of losing control in the face of an irresistible attraction.
Expressions like “some strange music drags me in” and “makes me come up like some heroine” suggest both the ecstasy of love and a possible reference to addiction, since “heroine” can refer to the drug heroin, broadening the sense of dependence and surrender.
Thus, the song explores the boundaries between inspiration, obsession, and self-destruction, reflecting the emotional intensity of Hébuterne and Modigliani's relationship, which U2 conveys with emotion in their interpretation.
In case you don’t know, Patti Smith has a self-titled substack and posts regularly from her home and while she’s on the road doing tours. Her daughter with her late husband MC5 guitarist Fred “Sonic” Smith, Jesse Paris Smith, is also a musician and has recently started up her own substack.
According to Patti, she met Todd Rundgren when he was making Stage Fright with The Band.
As she tells it in Just Kids, her friend and mentor, the singer-songwriter Bobby Neuwirth, took her to see Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young at the Fillmore East and then they drove up to Woodstock where the album was being made. While Robbie Robertson slaved over “Medicine Man” and everyone else went off to party, she sat talking with Todd until dawn.
Wave, was released in May 1979 on Arista. We have it direct from label head Clive Davis — who devotes a chapter of his autobiography to Patti Smith and Lou Reed — that it “had some standout songs, including ‘Dancing Barefoot,’ which a number of artists, most notably U2 and R.E.M, have covered, and it did fairly well for an album without a big single.” As Todd admits, it had “mixed reviews, which probably didn’t bother her that much since soon after she retired from the biz and became a wife and mother.”
“Dancing Barefoot,” written by Patti and Ivan Král
Patti Smith Group:
Jay Dee Daugherty – drums, consultant
Lenny Kaye – guitar, vocals
Ivan Kral – bass guitar, guitar, keyboards
Richard Sohl – piano
Patti Smith – vocals
Additional musicians:
Andi Ostrowe – percussion
Todd Rundgren – bass guitar
Amedeo Modigliani and Jeanne Hébuterne photographed in 1917 or 1918 by Paul Guillaume in Modigliani’s Paris studio
a happy little girl who marveled at everything. She grew up in a rather strict bourgeois Catholic family and got on wonderfully with her brother André, with whom she shared her taste for art. She showed a taste and a talent for drawing from an early age. We found drawing books she made as a child in which she drew scenes of everyday life, in which we can see the weight of religion and solitude.
In 1917, the two artists met, and it was what we call “love at first sight”. They quickly settled down together and lived a passionate relationship, between love and art. Jeanne was described as an extremely sweet and devoted woman, very much in love with her very macho Amedeo with his shaky personality. Obviously, the idea today is not to talk about their love story, and even less about Modigliani, but to talk about Jeanne Hébuterne’s career as an artist. Because yes, Jeanne was a talented draughtswoman and painter, but unfortunately she was completely invisibilized because of the work — and also the antics — of her partner.