It isn't hard to make the case for Patti Smith as a punk
rock progenitor based on her debut album, which anticipated the new wave by a
year or so: the simple, crudely played rock & roll, featuring Lenny Kaye's
rudimentary guitar work, the anarchic spirit of Smith's vocals, and the
emotional and imaginative nature of her lyrics; all prefigure the coming
movement as it evolved on both sides of the Atlantic. Smith is a rock critic's
dream, a poet as steeped in '60s garage rock as she is in French Symbolism; "Land"
carries on from the Doors' "The End," marking her as a successor to
Jim Morrison, while the borrowed choruses of "Gloria" and "Land
of a Thousand Dances" are more in tune with the era of sampling than they
were in the '70s. Producer John Cale respected Smith's primitivism in a way
that later producers did not, and the loose, improvisatory song structures
worked with her free verse to create something like a new spoken word/musical
art form: Horses was a hybrid, the sound of a post-Beat poet, as she put it,
"dancing around to the simple rock & roll song."