Gung Ho

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 65:05

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Sam Adams

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Sam Adams writes for the Los Angeles Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Onion A.V. Club, Time Out New York, Time Out Chicago, Cowbell and the Philadelphia Ci...more »

08.16.11
Taking a turn for the impersonal
Label: Arista

The title and the cover photo of a uniformed soldier are enough to spark fears that Smith’s eighth album takes a turn for the impersonal — only fair after two albums consumed with personal grief. On the page, Gung Ho‘s lyrics are rife with topical clunkers like “Glitter in Their Eyes.” (“Genius stalking in new shoes/ Have you got WTO blues?”) Luckily, that line is yoked to the most irresistible riff since “Because the Night,” which pushes the song forward so smoothly there’s no time to object. Producer Gil Norton gives the album an energetic sheen while still allowing the lengthy “Strange Messengers” and the title track ample space to stretch out. Smith’s singing voice has never been so supple and strong: On “New Party,” she leaps between notes and shifts accents as if staging a radio drama. It’s almost hard to imagine a woman so far into her career coming up with new tricks that work so well, but the evidence is impossible to refute.

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Patti Smith’s late-’90s comeback was devoted to reflective, intensely emotional music that explored her life in seclusion and the losses that forced her to reconnect with the larger world. They were acclaimed, ambitious, successful records, but they steered away from Smith’s angry, activist muse, plus her penchant for visceral music. She rediscovers both on Gung Ho, her most immediate album in years. “Immediate” doesn’t necessarily mean rock & roll, though. At times, she does reconnect with garage punk, notably on the Farifisa-fueled “Persuasion” and “Glitter in Their Eyes,” which is graced by the guitar of Tom Verlaine, but her remarkable band — featuring guitarists Lenny Kaye and Oliver Ray, bassist Tony Shanahan, and drummer Jay Dee Daugherty — sounds direct and forceful even on the mid-tempo cuts that dominate the album. Smith doesn’t shy away from the personal — after all, the cover shot features her father, Grant, and the title track appears to deal with his war experiences — but she works on a broader plane throughout the album, concentrating on larger, social messages even in the more intimate moments. The result may not be as haunting as Gone Again, but it’s superficially nervier, reminiscent of a subdued, mature version of Easter. In other words, it’s another handsome, shaded, and satisfying work from an artist who has reconnected with her muse. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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