Wave (Patti Smith Group album) explained

Wave
Type:studio
Artist:Patti Smith Group
Cover:Wave - Patti Smith Group.jpg
Recorded:1979
Studio:Bearsville (Woodstock, New York)
Genre:
Length:37:45
Label:Arista
Producer:Todd Rundgren
Chronology:Patti Smith
Prev Title:Easter
Prev Year:1978
Next Title:Dream of Life
Next Year:1988

Wave is the fourth studio album by Patti Smith, and the third and final album where the Patti Smith Group is billed. It was released on May 17, 1979, by Arista Records. Produced by Todd Rundgren, the album continued the band's move towards more radio-friendly mainstream pop rock sound. Wave garnered a mixed reception from music critics and was less successful than its predecessor, Easter (1978). However, the songs "Frederick" and "Dancing Barefoot" both received commercial airplay. Following the album's release, the band disbanded, and frontwoman Patti Smith pursued a solo career nine years later with Dream of Life (1988).

Background and release

The title track was a tribute to Pope John Paul I, whose brief papacy coincided with the recording sessions of Wave. The first single of the album was "Frederick", a love song for frontwoman Patti Smith's fiancé Fred "Sonic" Smith with a melody and structure bearing a resemblance to "Because the Night", the group's biggest hit.[1] Smith began writing the lyrics of second single "Dancing Barefoot" in late 1978 and recorded it in 1979.[2] The song was described as "a swirling, seductive love song" that uses "love-as-addiction" metaphors and wordplay with the words "heroine" and "heroin". Smith stated she was told to replace the word "heroine" with a synonym because of issues with radio airplay, but she objected the decision since she actually intended the lyric to reference the female equivalent of hero. Rolling Stone ranked the song number 323 on their 2004 list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[3] Both songs received commercial airplay. A cover of the Byrds' "So You Want to Be (A Rock 'n' Roll Star)" was released as the album's third and final single.

After Wave was released, the band disbanded in fall 1979 when finishing their last concert in Florence, Italy. Patti married Fred on March 1, 1980 and spent many years in semi-retirement from music following the birth of their children, Jesse and Jackson, until her return as a solo singer with Dream of Life (1988). The 1996 remaster of Wave includes Smith's original version of "Fire of Unknown Origin". Blue Öyster Cult's version was released on their album of the same name in 1981. The back cover of the original LP bore a quote from the Jean Genet poem "Le Condamné à mort".

Critical reception

In (1981), Robert Christgau found the album "quirkier than the more generally satisfying Easter and praised "Dancing Barefoot" and the title track. However, he dismissed "Seven Ways of Going" and "Broken Flag" as "unlistenable [and less interesting than]" the band's 1976 album Radio Ethiopia. Tom Carson of Rolling Stone also negatively likenened Wave to Radio Ethiopia, concluding that the record "is too confused and hermetically smug to be much more than an interesting failure."[4] The Globe and Mail determined that "Rundgren handles the production chores with remarkable restraint as he showcases Patti Smith the suicidal torch singer, admirably backed by her resident group of musicians."[5]

AllMusic's William Ruhlmann noted that Smith "achieves a sense of charm and sincerity on Wave that she hadn't even attempted on her earlier albums" but lamented that "the overall mediocre quality of the material makes this the slightest of Smith's efforts." In a 2019 review for PopMatters, Matt McKinzie dubbed the album as the singer's "most unapologetically-pop effort" where she "reject[s] the idea that her genre capabilities begin and end with th[e] four-letter word [punk]."[6] Emma Johnston, a writer from Louder Sound, ranked Wave number 6 on a list of Patti Smith's best albums, writing that it was "Smith at her least filtered and most emotionally open, and remains something of an underrated treasure."[7]

Track listing

Note

Personnel

Patti Smith Group

Additional musicians

Technical

Charts

Chart (1979)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[9] 30
France (SNEP)[10] 2

Year-end charts

Chart (1979)! scope="col"
Position
French Albums (SNEP)[11] 4

Release history

DateLabelFormatCatalog No.
May 17, 1979Arista RecordsLP4221
c. 1986 (original CD release from LP master) Arista RecordsCD251139
1996 (Digital Remaster by Bill Inglot and Ken Perry)Arista RecordsCD18829-2
2007 (20-bit Digital Remaster by Bob Irwin and Vic Anesini)Sony BMGCD37930
2008Sony BMGCD 'Original Album Classics' box set88697313832

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Patti Smith – Biography. "Three chord rock merged with the power of the word". Arista Records. June 1996. April 19, 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080611145837/http://www.aristarec.com/psmith/smithbio.html . June 11, 2008.
  2. Web site: Song of the Week: Dancing Barefoot . August 12, 2022. Smith, Patti. 2002. January 12, 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080112181302/http://www.pattismithland.com/sotw.htm.
  3. 2007-10-16 . The RS 500 Greatest Songs of All Time : Rolling Stone . . https://web.archive.org/web/20071016073600/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/500songs/page/4 . 2007-10-16 . 2022-09-20 .
  4. Carson . Tom . A Real Drip -- Patti Smith: Under the Double Ego . June 28, 1979 . . 2 October 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100926181650/http://oceanstar.com/patti/crit/rswave.htm . 2010-09-26 . live .
  5. News: Davidson . Neil-Michael . Wave Patti Smith Group . The Globe and Mail . 9 June 1979 . F4.
  6. McKinzie . Matt . Patti Smith's 'Wave' Turns 40: Why the Punk Poet's Pop Album Is Also Her Greatest . . November 14, 2019 . August 12, 2022.
  7. Johnston . Emma . Patti Smith: Every album ranked from worst to best . . November 11, 2019 . August 12, 2022.
  8. Web site: Patti Smith Group – Wave . Discogs. April 27, 1979 . 31 January 2021.
  9. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 278.
  10. Web site: French Albums Chart.
  11. Web site: Les Albums (CD) de 1979 par InfoDisc . fr . PHP . infodisc.fr . 24 October 2023 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110917115121/http://www.infodisc.fr/B-CD_1979.php . September 17, 2011 .