Sunday, February 13, 2022

Sunday Music: Take The Long Way Home


 After five lackluster albums, and two years in L.A., once Breakfast In America debuted, you couldn't get away from the Brits of Supertramp for the rest of 1979. This was their second Top Ten single that year. And it still holds up well after 43 years.


11 comments:

kurt9 said...

Goodbye Stranger is the best song on that album.

McChuck said...

Song mashup: Take a look at my long way home.

pyrrhus said...

SuperTramp is quite good, yet undefinable...so tends to be forgotten...

Off The Wall said...

Put the bong down, dude! Lackluster might apply to US sales before Breakfast in America, but not the music. Brilliant albums! Topped the charts in Canada.

Aesop said...

Nothing wrong with their early work, other than the fact than almost nobody ever heard it.
That's lackluster.
Not bad, but undistinguished.

Wayne said...

That’s a Logical choice.

RandyGC said...

Another fine choice sir.

I was working at a small town radio station when this hit. Us younger DJs slipped in other cuts from the album besides this and Goodbye Stranger when we could.

Goodbye Stranger actually hits me more on the nostalgia front as I knew ladies named Mary and Jane, and we did never meet again...

Dave Bagwill said...

Goodbye Stranger was really good and could have been GREAT with a long guitar outro; the beat and vibe was just begging for some loud fast and tasty lead guitar.

John Wilder said...

A lot of listening to this on the wrestling bus. Good times.

YouTube thinks I love it so much they put it on my playlist WHENEVER I listen to music on it.

They're not wrong.

Toirdhealbheach Beucail said...

Long Way Home is the most haunting and descriptive of the moment when one realizes what middle age and dreams of youth really mean.

Anonymous said...

A couple years after this came out I was a teenager pumping gas in a small town out west and up north. Guy comes in driving a nondescript older van and speaking in a not-from-round-these-parts accent. Made small talk, checked his oil, washed the windshield, filled the tank. He paid by check (remember those?) and only then did I realize I was waiting on Roger Hodgson. Smiled as I took it from him, said thanks and "goodbye stranger!" and he drove off with a laugh. Saw him a few more times before I moved on to bigger and better things. Nice guy, always paid by check.

Great album and song, both still in my regular rotation. Earlier Supertramp was damn good too--Dreamer, Give A Little Bit, Bloody Well Right to name a few. Roger's one solo song that I still play often is Had A Dream / Sleeping With The Enemy. It appeared in the Amazon series Red Oaks...which, if you are a product of the 80s and haven't yet seen, you need to fix that pronto.