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Wave

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (53 ratings)
Wave album cover
01
Frederick
3:03
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02
Dancing Barefoot
4:16
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03
So You Want To Be
4:20
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04
Hymn
1:12
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05
Revenge
5:05
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06
Citizen Ship
5:12
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07
Seven Ways Of Going
5:18
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08
Broken Flag
4:56
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09
Wave
4:41
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10
Fire Of Unknown Origin
2:08
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11
54321/Wave
2:43
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 42:54

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eMusic Review 0

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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
Getting in her last licks before fleeing the scene
1996 | Label: Arista

Although she kept it from her band during the sessions, Smith knew going in that Wave would be her last album for a while, if not forever. Inspiration was flagging; the band had hardly any complete songs when they turned up to record with producer Todd Rundgren. The offhanded quality enhances the title track, a disarmingly casual monologue addressed to Pope John Paul I, tagged with a sung-spoken coda that briefly evokes Gregorian chant. But too often, the songs are only half there, and Rundgren’s thin, unsympathetic production gives them nowhere to hide. The pounding organ of “Citizen Ship” needlessly underlines an already clunky lyric, made worse by Smith’s uninspired riff on Emma Lazarus in the closing bars.

Wave‘s crests come early. “Frederick” is a tender tribute to former MC5 guitarist Fred “Sonic” Smith, who Smith would shortly marry, and “Dancing Barefoot” revisits the liberation of Horses from a more worldly perspective. Through the verse and into the chorus, the song gradually rises in pitch, moving slowly upwards rather than lunging for the top rung. Smith’s ambivalence about the life of a public artist is neatly expressed by the “strange music” that makes her “come on like some heroin(e).”… read more »

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They Say All Music Guide

The Patti Smith Group’s most conventional album, Wave was given a bright pop/rock sound by producer Todd Rundgren. It was the last album Smith made before marrying and retiring from record-making for nine years, and it can be heard as a farewell to the music business, from “Frederick,” the love song to her husband-to-be, Fred “Sonic” Smith, that leads it off, to the version of “So You Want to Be (A Rock ‘n’ Roll Star),” among the most bitter accounts of fame on record. But Smith also achieves a sense of charm and sincerity on Wave that she hadn’t even attempted on her earlier albums, even to the point of her imagined small-talk encounter with the late Pope John Paul I on the title track. Still, the overall mediocre quality of the material makes this the slightest of Smith’s efforts. – William Ruhlmann

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