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Radio Ethiopia

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (43 ratings)
Radio Ethiopia album cover
01
Ask the Angels
3:09
$0.99
02
Ain't It Strange
6:36
$0.99
03
Poppies
7:06
$0.99
04
Pissing In A River
4:52
$0.99
05
Pumping
3:21
$0.99
06
Distant Fingers
4:19
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07
Radio Ethiopia
10:03
08
Abyssinia
2:01
$0.99
09
Chiklets
6:23
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 47:50

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Sam Adams

eMusic Contributor

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
Pushing her closer to mainstream success
1996 | Label: Arista

By the time of Patti Smith’s second album — the first credited to her eponymous group rather than her alone — the tension between poetry and rock that animated Horses had been definitively resolved in the latter’s favor. Trading the Velvet Underground’s John Cale for veteran rock producer Jack Douglas (Aerosmith, the Who), the album has a dense, guitar-heavy sound and more traditional song structures, pushing Smith closer to mainstream success while jettisoning many of the characteristics that got her noticed in the first place.

The opening “Ask the Angels” successfully presents Smith as a nascent rock goddess, but the slicked-up, dumbed-down “Pumping (My Heart)” reveals the price of the tradeoff. Stretching out over 12 minutes of droning organ and haunted-house guitar, the climactic duo of “Radio Ethiopia” and “Abyssinia” reach back to the first album’s form, but Smith’s growled vocals render the lyrics almost unintelligible. “Pissing in a River” successfully reverses Horses‘ course, pushing rock towards poetry rather than the other way around; its primal stomp pulls you in, while lyrics like “My bowels are empty, excreting your soul” warn you to approach with caution.

Over time, Radio Ethiopia‘s veneer wears thin, allowing the natural beauty of… read more »

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In which Patti OWNS the history of rock'n'roll

gtmeek

Everyone is entitled to their opinions, & you can think what you want, but on tracks 1 thru 6, The PSG utterly master & own hard rock passion circa 1976. This is the music of a band with a vision of rock as high art that succeeds beyond all wildest chances & in the face of all the rules. The Stones, Who, Doors, never surpassed Patti & band at their inimitable best.

user avatar

1970's New York Punk

Mandolino

Maybe not her most cohesive album, but there are some real '70's NY punk gems here. I suggest you download the whole album, and listen to it the way it was meant to be heard-- but only after you spent some time assimilating Horses. By the way, if after listening to all 10 minutes of Radio Ethiopia once you never want to here it again, Patti understands.

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Spectacular

DrBitchface

This is classic Patti Smith. If you cannot bring yourself to download the whole thing (admittedly a bad deal) just get "Ask the Angels", "Pissing in a River" and "Ain't it strange". Solid poetry.

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New Arithmetic

jugaluck

9 tunes for 12 credits and also double the price of a credit!! It's the new arithmetic.

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9 tunes for 12 "credits"

DJRon

Change this to 9 "credits" and I'll get it.

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They Say All Music Guide

After the success of Horses, Patti Smith had something to prove to reviewers and to the industry, and Radio Ethiopia aimed at both. Producer Jack Douglas gave “the Patti Smith Group,” as it was now billed, a hard rock sound, notably on the side-opening “Ask the Angels” and “Pumping (My Heart),” songs that seemed aimed at album-oriented rock radio. But the title track was a ten-minute guitar extravaganza that pushed the group’s deliberate primitivism closer to amateurish thrashing. Elsewhere, Smith repeated the reggae excursions and vocal overlaying that had paced Horses on “Ain’t It Strange” and “Poppies,” but these efforts were less effective than they had been the first time around, perhaps because they were less inspired, perhaps because they were more familiar. A schizophrenic album in which the many elements that had worked so well together on Horses now seemed jarringly incompatible, with Radio Ethiopia Smith and her band encountered the same development problem the punks would — as they learned their craft and competence set in, they lost some of the unself-consciousness that had made their music so appealing. – William Ruhlmann

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