A vivid and idiosyncratic storyteller in the grand narrative tradition of
Tom Waits and
Randy Newman, indie folk singer/songwriter Sonny Smith emerged from obscurity in 2003 with the cult favorite This Is My Story, This Is My Song. Born in San Francisco in 1972, Smith relocated to the mountain town of Gunnison, Colorado at 17, making a living playing piano in local clubs. Two years later he settled in Denver, playing attention-grabbing four- and five-hour sets at area venues like the Mercury Café and Muddy's Coffeehouse. Smith continued his nomadic existence in the years to follow, living on an organic farm in the jungles of Costa Rica and busking up and down the Pacific coast. The experience yielded not only songs but also screen plays and short stories, and upon returning to the Bay Area in 1996, Smith abandoned the piano in favor of guitar, crafting the jazz-tinged folk melodies and improvised lyrics that would eventually coalesce into his self-released 2000 debut LP, Who's the Monster...You or Me? That same year he wrote and directed the short film Kid Gus Man, and in 2001 began writing a regular column, Steppin' Out, for The New Mission Newspaper.
By the time the San Francisco label Jackpine Social Club released This Is My Story, This Is My Song in mid-2003, Smith was living across the bay in Oakland's Fruitvale neighborhood. As the record began earning critical praise, he began collaborating with
Wilco bassist
Leroy Bach, playing a series of Bay Area gigs and in 2004 traveling to
Bach's native Chicago to record. Around that same time Smith also released the CD-R Sweet Lorraine: Sordid Tales of Love and Woe, a collection of duets with
Jolie Holland, and the literary journal Watchword pressed One Act Plays, a series of story-songs. In early 2005 Smith won a three-month residency at San Francisco's Headlands Center for the Arts, re-recording both Sweet Lorraine and One Act Plays, the latter featuring guest appearances by singers including
Mark Eitzel and
Edith Frost. He spent the summer of 2006 touring in support of
Neko Case, and a year later issued Fruitvale, a song cycle inspired by his stay in Oakland.
In 2007, Smith formed the band
Sonny & the Sunsets, which featured a rotating lineup of members including multi-instrumentalist
Kelley Stoltz,
Tahlia Harbour (
the Dry Spells),
John Dwyer (
Thee Oh Sees), Tim Cohen, and
Shayde Sartin (
Skygreen Leopards). In 2010,
Sonny & the Sunsets released their full-length debut,
Tomorrow Is Alright. That same year,
the Sunsets also participated in Smith's "100 Records" show in San Francisco, where 100 artists created record jackets by fictional bands for a series of 7"s featuring music created by Smith.
The Sunsets went on to release their sophomore effort -- 2011's
Hit After Hit -- via Fat Possum and a further four albums via Polyvinyl, namely
Longtime Companion (2012),
Antenna to the Afterworld (2013),
Talent Night at the Ashram (2015), and the
Merrill Garbus-produced
Moods Baby Moods (2016). The latter incorporated elements of '80s new wave and funk. That same year, Smith returned to releasing material under his own name and put out the
Sees All Knows All record. An original monologue set to music, it featured a number of musicians from the San Francisco Bay area, including
Shayde Sartin (of
the Fresh and Onlys) and
Kelley Stoltz. Produced by
Dan Auerbach of
the Black Keys, Smith's tenth studio effort,
Rod for Your Love, returned the songwriter to melodic, '60s-influenced guitar pop songs, including a duet with
Angel Olsen. ~ Jesse Jarnow & Jason Ankeny