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详情/曲目清单: |
01. "Give A Little Bit" 02. "Lover Boy" 03. "Even In The Quietest Moments" 04. "Downstream" 05. "Babaji" 06. "From Now On" 07. "Fool's Overture"
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 | 光盘数量: |
1 |
 | 描述: | Supertramp soared to #16 with this 1977 LP, their biggest success to date (as was it's hit single, the irresistible Give a Little Bit). Downstream sounds like a hit, too, and the album closer is a Beatles-esque epic, Fool's Overture., Runningtime: 00:00:00, Arranged By [Orchestral]: Michel Colombier, Arranged By [Orchestral], Producer: Supertramp, Art Direction: Mike Doud (2), Art Direction [Reissue]: Vartan (4), Bass: Dougie Thomson, Coordinator [Reissue Producer Coordination]: Beth Stempel, Design: Brian Hagiwara, Design: Mike Doud (2), Design [Reissue]: Michael Diehl, Drums, Percussion: Bob C. Benberg, Engineer [Assistant]: Steve Smith (3), Engineer [Assistant]: Tom Anderson (3), Engineer [Assistant]: Tom Likes, Engineer [Concert Sound]: Russel Pope, Engineer [Mixing]: Geoff Emerick, Engineer [Original Mastering]: Frank DeLuna, Engineer [Recording]: Peter Henderson, Engineer [Remix]: Tom Anderson (3), Management: Power Steering, Inc., Management: Sue Davies, Mastered By: Greg Calbi, Mastered By: Jay Messina, Photography By: Bob Seidemann, Photography By [Center Spread]: Kenneth McGowan, Programmed By [Oberheim]: Gary Mielke, Reissue Producer [Reissue Supervised By]: Bill Levenson, Vocals, Keyboards: Rick Davies, Vocals, Keyboards, Guitar: Roger Hodgson, Woodwind [Wind instruments], Vocals: John Helliwell, Words By, Music By: Rick Davies & Roger Hodgson, Labelcode 4933482 (493 348-2), Record Company UMG Recordings, Inc., Phonographic Copyright (p) A&M Records, Copyright (c) A&M Records, Made By EDC, Germany, Published By Almo Music Corp., Published By Delicate Music, Recorded At Caribou Ranch, Recorded At Record Plant, Los Angeles, Mastered At Sterling Sound |  | 制片人: |
Supertramp |
 | No. of tracks: |
7 |
 | Manufacturer No.: |
4933482 |
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欧盟负责人:
Universal Music GmbH Mühlenstrasse 25, 10243 Berlin, DE productsafety@umusic.com |  |
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HYUNG RAE K. - 2020年 11月 01日  One of Supertramp's finest albums, "Even in The Quietest Moments" manages to combine the pop grandeur of the title track, "Fool's Overture" and the more romantic musing of "Downstream" and "From Now On" which capture Rick at his most melodic.
|  | Yuriy P. - 2019年 12月 07日  By the mid-70s, an English art-rock band under the strange name “Superstroke” had already become quite famous thanks to its original sound, in which jazz influences played an important role. There were two vocalists in the team: Roger Hodgson with a higher voice and Rick Davis with a lower and nasal, and each of them wrote songs for themselves (although they tried to sing like one another on the debut album). So those who get acquainted with the group should keep this in mind before listening to this work, the fifth in the discography, because due to this alternation, it may seem that two different teams got on the album.
In truth, Hodgson’s songs look more interesting. The album opens with his hit single “Give a Little Bit”, a declaration of love and at the same time a request for reciprocity, a very bright and optimistic thing (although the voice seems plaintive), starting with the introduction of an acoustic guitar, which after some time follows rhythm section; also note the saxophone solo. The title theme also sounds pleasant, another romantic composition, full of desire never to part, with birds singing, the murmur of water and pastoral music (guitar, clarinet, organ), reminiscent of such things in Led Zeppelin (even the vocals are similar), and the excellent “Babaji ”, Which is an appeal to God, lyrical in piano introduction and energetic in refrain, with very emotional vocals, catchy piano passages and solo saxophone.
Davis’s compositions are jazz-like piano ballads that are similar to each other: a slightly protracted “Loverboy” (warning women about one lovelace), where an electric guitar appears in the middle, effectively following the vocals, and towards the end the composition becomes faster and more ferocious with a solo guitar and vocalises; a rather simple and therefore boring “Downstream” (about a boat trip with your beloved girl, where the ocean becomes a metaphor for life), in which there is practically nothing more than a piano (even drums are absent); and “From Now On” (about the daily routine that I want to change) with lingering vocals, with an excellent saxophone and fairly major gospel music (the choir doesn’t sing “Glory to God!”) towards the end.
Of particular note is the Hodgson’s 11-minute song “Fool’s Overture”, which concludes the album, in the best traditions of art rock with the most non-standard lyrics dedicated, for example, to the events of World War II. The beginning resembles the theme of Barclay James Harvest “Summer Soldier” - the piano sounds softly, then the noise of the crowd, bells, whistles, ovations and the quiet voice of Winston Churchill are heard: “We must go to the end. We will fight on the seas and oceans. We must protect our islands. At any cost. We must never give up! ”Gradually sounding keyboards, as well as a saxophone and drums gradually weave into the music, then one piano and the mournful vocals of Hodgson remain. With the introduction of drums, the saxophone reappears spectacularly. Then a sudden “bam” sounds, a wind appears, voices are heard somewhere far away. In the next vocal fragment, the choir already sings with Hodgson. At the end, we hear the sounds of an orchestra tuning in before playing, but that’s all. Well, the thing turned out to be quite interesting, although somewhat eclectic.
Compared to previous works, the band’s music has become less progressive and more commercial, but overall the optimistic atmosphere remains.
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