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01. "Gone Hollywood (2010 Remastered)" 02. "The Logical Song (Remastered 2010)" 03. "Goodbye Stranger (2010 Remastered)" 04. "Breakfast In America (2010 Remastered)" 05. "Oh Darling (2010 Remastered)" 06. "Take The Long Way Home (2010 Remastered)" 07. "Lord Is It Mine (2010 Remastered)" 08. "Just Another Nervous Wreck (2010 Remastered)" 09. "Casual Conversations (2010 Remastered)" 10. "Child Of Vision (2010 Remastered)"
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 | Number of discs: |
1 |
 | Description: | Supertramp's Blockbuster Features Catchy Hooks, Rhapsodic Melodies, Symphonic Bluster, Meticulous Production: Breakfast in America Includes "The Logical Song," "Take the Long Way Home"
Mastered from the Original Master Tapes for Supreme Sonics: Mobile Fidelity's Hybrid SACD Presents the Record's Famed Dynamics, Colors, Tones, and Instrumentation in Full-Range Glory
Supertramp's Breakfast in America has it all: Illustrious artwork. Sing-a-long hooks. Contagious melodies. Symphonic bluster. Rhapsodic thrust. Signature Wurlitzer electric piano sounds. Two Grammy Awards, including one for Best Engineered Album. More than 20 million copies sold. Four Billboard hit singles that continue to dominate radio airplay today. Every aspect of the chart-topping art-rock set screams blockbuster, not the least of which is the production, the result of painstaking studio setups and months of mixing. Now, you can experience the sonic brilliance in unprecedented clarity on Mobile Fidelity's definitive-sounding reissue.
Mastered from the original master tapes, this numbered-edition hybrid SACD wrings out the record's dynamics, colors, and tones in all their full-range glory. Absent artificial ceilings, Breakfast in America unfolds with an expansiveness and radiance that parallels the vibrancy of its iconic New York-themed cover. Crucial traits such as imaging, separation, balance, transients, and openness achieve near-epic levels of realism and presence. Songs unfold and breathe on mammoth soundstages that put the effort's legendary production â?? and stellar playing â?? into proper perspective. The 1979 set has been reissued multiple times in the past, but it's never sounded so engaging, lifelike, or entertaining.
Indeed, aside from the undeniably catchy nature of the ten tracks, fun remains the most central element of Breakfast in America. The band even titled the record to fall in line with the overall joyful feeling of the material. About the latter: Few late 1970s rock albums feature a more cohesive, harmony-drenched parade of stunningly executed, wondrously arranged works. The collective offspring of members Rick Davies and Roger Hodgson, each tune reflects the creative pulses of each musician, with the resultant contrasts lending to their appeal. Davies' penchant for grittier, bluesy strands blends with Hodgson's witty, pop-leaning techniques. The combination proves unstoppable.
Home to a quartet of commercial staples â?? "The Logical Song," "Goodbye Stranger," "Take the Long Way Home," and the title track â?? Breakfast in America teems with arena-sized drama, meticulous craftsmanship, and mesmerizing refrains. Shrewd lyrical turns abound, whether on the phonetic, adjective-stacked "The Logical Song," life-in-America portrait "Child of Vision," or move-to-L.A. saga "Gone Hollywood." U.S. references also dot the smash title track, which reflects the glib humor, romantic fantasies, and pop culture permeating the record.
Breakfast in America also retains its vitality because of its expert instrumentation and placement. Deemed a "a textbook-perfect album of post-Beatles, keyboard-centered English art rock that strikes the shrewdest possible balance between quasi-symphonic classicism and rock & roll" by Rolling Stone shortly after its release, the record serves as a blueprint of reference-setting production and mixing. Check the scorching guitar outro on "Goodbye Stranger," gospel accents on "Lord Is It Mine," saxophone lines on "Take the Long Way Home," or chemistry of the choruses on basically every piece here. It's enough to make one long for the 70s again.
Fortunately, Mobile Fidelity's reissue brings the decade, music, and spirit right into your room. - .. AMERICA / 2010 REMASTEREDDigitally remastered edition of this 1979 release. Their sixth album, Supertramp's most popular and successful work, Breakfast in America was released in March 1979, and reached #3 in the UK and #1 in the United States where it stayed on top for six weeks. It yielded the hit singles 'The Logical Song', 'Take the Long Way Home', 'Breakfast in America' and 'Goodbye Stranger'.Issued in a standard jewel case with 8-page booklet containing credits, lyrics and photo.
[Back]
?2010 © 2010 A&M Records, a Universal Music Group Company
Made in the EU
[Booklet]
Rehearsed at Southcombe Studios, Burbank
Recorded at The Village Recorder, Los Angeles
Mixed at Crystal Sound's Studio 'B', Los Angeles
Engineered at Air London
[CD]
? 2010 © 2010 A&M Records
Made in the EU
You can read printed on inlay :
"Breakfast in America was remastered at Sterling Sound New York by Greg Calbi August 2010".
"The Supertramp Remasters""Breakfast In America (2010 Remastered)" is a classic album by the legendary British rock band Supertramp, presented here in its remastered 2010 edition on CD. Originally released in 1979, this iconic record features timeless hits such as "The Logical Song," "Goodbye Stranger," and the title track "Breakfast In America." The album showcases Supertramp's unique blend of progressive rock and pop sensibilities, characterized by catchy melodies, thoughtful lyrics, and sophisticated arrangements. Supertramp achieved worldwide fame with this release, which sold over 20 million copies globally and won two Grammy Awards. The band is renowned for their distinctive sound led by Roger Hodgson?s vocals and Rick Davies? keyboard work. This edition comes from A & M Records, a label known for nurturing some of the most influential artists in music history including Sting, Janet Jackson, and The Police. |  | No. of tracks: |
10 |
 | Manufacturer No.: |
5330437 |
 | Product Safety
Responsible Person for the EU:
Universal Music GmbH Mühlenstrasse 25, 10243 Berlin, DE productsafety@umusic.com |  |
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Eugene S. - 03/Aug/2023  The sixth studio album by the English rock band Supertramp, released by A&M Records on 16 March 1979. It holds an RIAA certification of quadruple platinum and became Supertramp's biggest-selling album, with more than 4 million copies sold in the US and more than 3 million in France (the fourth ever best-selling album).
|  | Yuriy P. - 10/Dec/2019  The sixth Breakfast in America album turned out to be the most commercially successful for this interesting team, which is not so common - after all, the guys played a rather original art rock that not everyone could like, especially considering his pomposity, and at that time, when punk thundered everywhere. However, this time the pop harmonies did their job, and all the songs from this album were in the top twenty in the UK. As before, the compositions are divided into those written by Hodgson (his voice began to resemble the Gibbs brothers very much) and Davis, but now the main instrument on them is now the piano and keyboards, although the guitars that played a significant role in previous releases do not remain side. At the same time, the texts became more interesting, and many of them relate to impressions of American reality, since in 1977 the guys moved to Los Angeles.
The opening album "Gone Hollywood" introduces the two vocalists together. The piano grows, the rhythm section enters (the guitar sometimes riffs quite hard); after the vocal part, the music quietens slightly, yielding the solo on the saxophone. From the text we learn about Hollywood, which is not as wonderful as it turned out, a place where you only understand that nobody needs you. At the end, our attention again appears gradually silencing saxophone, playing to the pulsating bass rhythm and piano.
Among other two-vocal compositions, there are several more. Firstly, it is “Goodbye Stranger”, a sort of confession of Lovelace, who in the morning always says goodbye to his next girlfriend, with whom he spent the night. At the beginning, the piano sounds (it seems Davis' favorite instrument, which is mainly sung here), the rhythm section appears, giving way to the piano for a while. Hodgson here for some reason sang a falsetto a la Bee Gees. In general, a very bright composition was obtained (despite the text). Towards the end, she becomes more fervent, the guitar sounds until the music subsides.
“Oh Darling”, where we again hear two vocalists, represents the recognition of the lyrical hero both in love and in the fact that he will not back down to get this girl for himself. Naturally, the song is built on the piano (and organ) game, however, the electric guitar is also present. Once again, it turned out to be quite provocatively, but here the text at least corresponds to the proper extent to the music.
Other things, except the final one, the guys are singing separately. There are only two Davis songs performed by him. This is Just Another Nervous Wreck. Again her piano foundation, only more and more energetically. The blues solo on the electric guitar under the organ turned out to be excellent. From the text we learn about a person who has become disillusioned with life in everything, and again here we observe some discrepancy between quite peppy music and not very cheerful lyrics.
Davis also introduced the ballad Casual Conversations. In the beginning, something like a vibraphone sounds, the piano, organ and guitar enter. A saxophone also appears. The song is a monologue of a man who is at odds with his chosen one and in the end invites her to leave, declaring that he will only be happy about this.
The most memorable, as before, are Hodgson's songs. First of all, this is the famous hit “The Logical Song” with emotional vocals and lyrics about the generation of the 70s, about the influence of society on every person, when you have to behave rationally, logically, respectably, etc., to be accepted. Music is more energetic, then lyrical. In the background you can hear the strings. The excellent saxophone solo with sharp piano chords is especially memorable.
The title pop composition, with clarinet solo, presents us with a humorous description of America, where there are many beautiful girls, as well as millionaires. She cheers up well, but too bad she’s too short.
“Take the Long Way Home” with a piano, harmonica and clarinet resembles a country, and its lyrics are devoted to various aspects of life, when along with the positive moments something still goes wrong.
“Lord Is It Mine” is a somewhat sad (unlike everything else) piano ballad with a clarinet solo, which is a kind of prayer in which the lyrical hero asks God to find himself in a place where he feels good.
The album closes with the energetic “Child of Vision”, the longest (over 7 minutes) and the most prog-rock thing on the album, although the keyboards and guitar here may resemble disco. The recall of vocals before the chorus, the chorus itself, as well as the long piano solo with accented chords is very memorable. The song expresses its attitude towards the Americans, who only live with their Coca-Cola and television, as if this is all in life.
Maybe not all lovers of art rock will like a large abundance of ballads, a jazz bias and an almost complete absence of darkness and depression (although the lyrics are sometimes somewhat pessimistic despite the softness of the music), but there's nothing to be done - the guys saw or wanted to see the world just like that .
|  | Pablo D. - 09/Apr/2019  great album from this great band. Perfect edition.I reccommend
|  | William Pinfold - 31/Oct/2010  Overblown soft rock goingbegging In many ways, Supertramp are the classic example of the overblown 70s AOR stadium band. Despite enjoying modest succ...
|  | John Doran - 29/Oct/2010 If you were to listen to music journalists (never a very sensible thing to do) you could be forgiven for thinking that Joy Division, Public Image Limi...
|  | Rob Dodgson - 14/Oct/2010  The remastered Supertramp album 'Breakfast In America (Deluxe Edition)' comes thirty one years after the original album release and contains an extra...
|  | Andres V. - 29/Jan/2018  Remasterización del álbum de 1979 del grupo Supertramp. Fue su sexto álbum y con éste álbum lograron ser conocidos internacionalmente además de ganar dos premios grammy y ser el álbum más vendido del grupo. El disco en sí contiene varios éxitos radiales como "The Logical Song".
Incluye un folleto de 8 páginas con la letra de las canciones.
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