Gung Ho

AlbumJan 01 / 200013 songs, 1h 4m 38s
Singer-Songwriter Rock
Popular

Patti Smith reemerged in 1996 with *Gone Again*, reconnecting with her audience after years of domesticity, artistically dealing with the death of her husband, Fred “Sonic “Smith, and preparing herself for her next immersion in her often personal and political muse. *Gung Ho* is her third album since returning. Produced by Gil Norton, who handled the extreme dynamics of the Pixies, the album presents a very strong Patti Smith Group, guitarists Lenny Kaye and Oliver Ray combining for a weaving one-two punch that takes the music to new plateaus. The punk energy that fueled Smith’s earliest work finds its way into her vocal intonations and drummer Jay Dee Daugherty bonds with bassist Tony Shanahan to keep things tight and explosive. “Lo and Beholden” has a smooth lure to its chorus, but there’s a fierce tension simmering below the surface. Smith’s rock roots are brought out with Television’s Tom Verlaine’s punchy guitar on the anti-materialistic garage rock anthem “Glitter in Their Eyes,” and with the burbling upbeat bounce of “Persuasion.” Smith feeds off punk’s energy, yet never believed in its nihilistic worldview, making her music far more embracing in the process.

4.6 / 10

Ever since witchy punk diva Patti Smith came out of retirement in 1988, her music has been mired in a ...

Check out our album review of Artist's Gung Ho on Rolling Stone.com.

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.

Gung Ho is Smith’s flawed yet admirable attempt to keep it spinning in the age of change.