Kim Gordon

Singer

Birthday April 28, 1953

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Rochester, New York, U.S.

Age 70 years old

Nationality United States

#6561 Most Popular

1949

Gordon has one older brother, Keller (1949–2023), whom she described as "brilliant, manipulative, sadistic, arrogant, almost unbearably articulate," and "the person who more than anyone else in the world shaped who I was, and who I turned out to be."

At the age of five, Gordon and her family relocated to Los Angeles, California when her father was offered a professorship in the sociology department at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he later became the Dean of Faculty.

As a child, Gordon attended University Elementary School, a progressive elementary school affiliated with UCLA, which she described as "learn[ing] by doing. So we were always making African spears and going down to the river and making mud huts, or skinning a cowhide and drying it and throwing it off the cliff at Dana Point."

In her memoir, Gordon recounts spending summers with her family in Klamath, California, near the Oregon border.

The family also lived in British Hong Kong for one year during her childhood.

Gordon attended University High School in Los Angeles, and dated classmate Danny Elfman while a student there.

After graduating high school, she attended Santa Monica College for two years before transferring to York University in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Gordon soon grew homesick and chose to drop out of York at the end of the school year and return to Los Angeles.

"I was less and less happy as the bleak Toronto winter moved in," she recalled.

"Without the benefit of California sunshine, my hair grew darker and darker, and I had no idea how to dress for the cold."

She decided to enroll at the Otis College of Art and Design, which she said "changed my life."

Gordon lived in Culver City and Venice, Los Angeles, and worked at an Indian restaurant to pay her tuition.

She also briefly worked for art dealer Larry Gagosian as a side-job.

1953

Kim Althea Gordon (born April 28, 1953) is an American musician, singer and songwriter, best known as the bassist, guitarist, and vocalist of alternative rock band Sonic Youth.

Born in Rochester, New York, she was raised in Los Angeles, California, where her father was a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles.

After graduating from Los Angeles's Otis College of Art and Design, she moved to New York City to begin an art career.

Kim Althea Gordon was born April 28, 1953 in Rochester, New York, the second child of Althea (d. 2002) and Calvin Wayne Gordon (1915–1998).

At the time of her birth, Gordon's father, a native of Kansas, was a professor in the sociology department at the University of Rochester.

Her mother, a descendant of American pioneers of the West Coast, learned to sew during her upbringing in the Great Depression, and worked as a seamstress throughout Gordon's childhood.

She was described by Gordon as "reserved and usually anxious" and "an unfulfilled artist."

1977

She graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1977.

While she was a student at Otis, Gordon's older brother Keller suffered a psychotic episode on the day of his graduation from the University of California, Berkeley, where he had earned a Master's degree in classics.

He was subsequently diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and for a time lived in halfway houses before becoming a ward of the state of California.

1980

After graduating from the Otis Art Institute, Gordon moved to New York City in 1980, hoping to pursue a career in art.

There, she took art-related jobs to earn an income, such as working as a writer for Artforum, and launched a "D.I.Y. project called Design Office, doing low-fi artistic interventions" in friends' apartments.

1981

There, she formed Sonic Youth with Thurston Moore in 1981.

In 1981, she curated an exhibition at White Columns Gallery that involved contributions from Mike Kelley and Tony Oursler, among others.

1984

She and Moore married in 1984, and the band released a total of six albums on independent labels before the end of the 1980s.

1987

The song "Schizophrenia," which appeared on Sonic Youth's fourth studio album, Sister (1987), was partly inspired by her brother.

1990

They would subsequently release nine studio albums on the major label DGC Records, beginning with Goo in 1990.

1991

She debuted as a producer on Hole's debut album Pretty on the Inside (1991), and founded the Los Angeles–based clothing line X-Girl in 1993.

1993

Gordon was also a founding member of the musical project Free Kitten, which she formed with Julia Cafritz in 1993.

2000

Beginning in the mid-2000s, Gordon began acting, making minor appearances in such films as Last Days (2005) and I'm Not There (2007), followed by guest-starring appearances on several television series.

2009

Sonic Youth released their sixteenth and final studio album, The Eternal (2009), on Matador Records before disbanding in 2011 after Gordon and Moore separated.

2013

Following the dissolution of Sonic Youth and her divorce from Moore, Gordon formed the experimental duo Body/Head with Bill Nace, releasing their debut album Coming Apart in 2013.

2015

In February 2015, she published a memoir, Girl in a Band, by HarperCollins imprint Dey Street Books.

2016

She subsequently formed Glitterbust with Alex Knost, releasing a self-titled debut album in 2016.

2018

Body/Head released their second studio album, The Switch, in 2018.

2019

She released her first solo album, No Home Record, in 2019.

In addition to her work as a musician, Gordon has had ventures in record producing, fashion, and acting, and has worked consistently as a visual artist throughout her musical career.