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Patti Smith - Land (1975-2002)
CD DetailsArtist: Patti Smith Edition: Music CD Audio: English (Original Language) CD Release Date: 2002-03-19 Music Label: Arista Soundtracks: Music CD 1- Dancing Barefoot - Patti Smith
- Babelogue - Patti Smith
- Rock N Roll Nigger - Patti Smith
- Gloria - Patti Smith
- Pissing In A River - Patti Smith
- Free Money - Patti Smith
- People Have The Power - Patti Smith
- Because The Night - Patti Smith
- Frederick
- Summer Cannibals
- Ghost Dance
- Ain't It Strange
- 1959
- Beneath The Southern Cross
- Glitter In Their Eyes
- Paths That Cross
- When Doves Cry - Patti Smith
Music CD 2- Piss Factory - Patti Smith
- Redondo Beach (Demo) - Patti Smith
- Distant Fingers (Demo) - Patti Smith
- 25th Floor (Live - Eugene, OR, 1978) - Patti Smith
- Come Back Little Sheba (Studio Outtake, 1996)
- Wander I Go (Track, 1996)
- Dead City (Live - Denmark, 2001) - Patti Smith
- Spell (Live - Portland, OR, 2001) - Patti Smith
- Wing (Live - Paris, 2001) - Patti Smith
- Boy Cried Wolf (Live - Paris, 2001) - Patti Smith
- Birdland (Live - Los Angeles, CA, 2001) - Patti Smith
- Higher Learning - Patti Smith
- Notes To The Future (Live - St. Mark's Poetry Project, St. Mark's Church, NYC, Jan. 1st, 2002) - Patti Smith
- Tomorrow (Live: Philadelphia 1978)
Music reviews of Land (1975-2002)Music Review: WasteLand Rating: 2 Stars
This collection purports to be a Patti Smith career retrospective spanning years 1975 through 2002; however 'Piss Factory,' rare and finally officially available here, oddly dates from 1974. Sadly, the weaknesses of Land are many and obvious. It's difficult to believe that Land was an official Patti Smith project, something she oversaw and would desire to leave behind as a record of her ground-breaking and difficult career. The much-publicized 'collaboration' between Smith and Susan Sontag turns out not to be liner notes or even commentary as announced, but a one paragraph prose poem by Sontag which hilariously apes the short poems Smith wrote and included on her four classic albums of the Seventies. With a reference to Genet, two references to armpits and others to cigarettes, saliva and 'the crotch,' the piece is an awkward embarrassment and caricature. Smith should have realized this and had the piece omitted. (Somewhere, Sontag antagonist Camille Paglia, who has written about Smith at length with verve and genuine understanding, is having a good laugh.) Patti Smith and the Patti Smith Group are and were great rock and roll artists, but the selection included here does not support this fact. Smith let fans choose favorite tracks via the internet; the winning selections compose the first disc. Democracy this may be, but a rightful career retrospective it does not make. While essential Smith tracks like 'Pissing In The River,' 'Dancing Barefoot,' 'Gloria,' and 'Ain't It Strange' are included, many others, such as 'Til Victory,' 'Space Monkey,' 'Citizen Ship,' and 'Revenge' are not. It's absurd to place brilliant songs like 'Ghost Dance' and 'Because The Night' along side anything from Smith's last (and first-ever bad) album, Gung Ho. It's impossible to believe that a dominant number of fans wanted the sophomoric 'Glitter In Their Eyes' included here. Visionary Smith dazzlers from Peace And Noise--'Waiting Underground,' Blue Poles,' and 'Death Singing' are absent, but the weaker, overtly political '1959' is inexplicably included in their place. The disc closes with an interesting but mannered and too-safe cover of Prince's 'When Doves Cry' which illustrates how sober an artist Smith has become. 'When Doves Cry' sits squarely and unthreateningly in the middle of the road. The second disc, consisting of live cuts, demos, and rarities selected personally by Smith, should have made this album invaluable--at last, one assumed, the vaults would yield up blistering live tracks of classic era Patti Smith Group. But Disc 2 includes exactly one track from this period, a mediocre version of '25th Floor' which only leaves the listener newly in doubt about the group's live reputation. The other concert selections, recorded in 2001, are ho-hum at best, with the exception of 'Dead City,' one of the most powerful and cutting of Smith's later songs, and a slow, bluesy rendition of 'Birdland.' Demos 'Redondo Beach' and 'Distant Fingers' are throwaways, and unreleased Gone Again-era tracks 'Come Back Little Sheba' and 'Wander I Go' are undistinguished. The disc closes with a New Year 2002, post-September 11th-themed reading, 'Notes to the Future,' which, however sincere and well-intended, and perhaps stirring in the moment, makes for maudlin and mawkish, not moving, listening. The single revelation--other than 'Piss Factory'--on the second disc is riveting new song 'Higher Learning,' a loose, extended Lounge Lizard-like jazz number, featuring Smith gloriously blowing away on several moody clarinet solos. Unlike anything Smith has done previously, the lyrically subtle, uncommercial 'Higher Learning' maps out new territory and points to directions Smith may pursue on future recordings. Smith compromised her integrity and talent on the one-dimensional Gung Ho, but 'Higher Learning,' perhaps recorded during the sessions for that album, belongs with the best of her late-period work. Disappointing all around, Smith fans should consider purchasing the Patti Smith box set (originally released in 1996) instead, and the terrific return-to-form album which followed it, Peace And Noise. Land is unessential, uncomprehensive, irrelevant, and dull.
More Land (1975-2002) free music reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Description of Land (1975-2002)Our Seller's Notes and Fine Print :...PLEASE NOTE CAREFULLY THIS SALE IS ONLY FOR TWO DISCS ITSELF, AND FRONT BOOKLET.. In some ways, singer-songwriter Patti Smith seems an unlikely choice for a full-bore anthology. After all, she's had only one charting single with "Because the Night." Even at that time, most people probably were more familiar with Gilda Radner's spot-on parody of her on Saturday Night Live than with Smith herself. Yet her influence both on the fledgling NYC punk scene and as a protofeminist poet renders her something of an American counterculture icon. As such, Land (1975-2002) serves to frame an uncompromising career spanning four decades. Split over two discs and featuring 31 tracks and almost two-and-a-half hours of music, Land begins with a survey of Smith's studio albums, relying most heavily on 1978's Easter. All the greats are here--"Dancing Barefoot," "People Have the Power," "Gloria," "Rock 'n' Roll Nigger," "Frederick," and of course, "Because the Night," plus a newly recorded version of Prince's "When Doves Cry," one of two songs cut specifically for this collection. The second disc is where fans--who were solicited for track selection input via gigs and the Web--get the goods. Early demos, among them 1974's coveted "Piss Factory," plus two other pre-Horses recordings, "Redondo Beach" and "Distance Fingers," kick things off. What follows is a batch of previously unreleased live recordings--"Dead City," "Spell," "Boy Cried Wolf"--most captured during a 2001 tour through the U.S. and Europe, and studio outtakes. Smith herself helped remaster the recordings while stacking the accompanying booklet with fans' photos and the like. Land probably won't spark a Smith renaissance, but loyalists can marvel at an artist who's never turned a fast buck by easing up on the sweat, tears, hunger, and integrity that inform every one of these tracks. --Kim Hughes
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