Supertramp Crime of the Century (CD, A&M Records, 1974) *** Supertramp Crisis? What Crisis (CD, A&M Records, 1975) ***
Supertramp Breakfast in America (CD, A&M Records, 1979) *****
Supertramp ...Famous Last Words... (Vinyl, A&M Records, 1982) ***
Supertramp Live 1997 (CD, Audio Culture, 1999) ***
Supertramp Retrospectacle - The Supertramp Anthology (CD, A&M Records, 2005) ****
Genre: Prog rock
Places I remember: HMV, Fives, Marbecks Records, The Warehouse
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: School (Crime...)
Gear costume: Child of Vision (Breakfast...)
They loom large in his legend (The Album Collection playlists): Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5; Part 6
Active compensatory factors: Supertramp is a prog band who also had a lot of chart success with some catchy singles. I've always thought there were similarities between Supertramp and 10CC. Both had clever clogs writing weirdly commercial songs and an eccentric English take on things. Other bands like Pink Floyd and The Beatles were clearly inspirations for the band members of Supertramp.
Amazingly, the band's membership was consistent for a decade and cover all of their albums in my collection. Supertramp were: Rick Davies (vocals, keyboards); Roger Hodgson (also vocals, keyboards, guitars); Dougie Thomson (bass), Bob Siebenberg (drums) and John Helliwell (saxophone).
Crime of the Century was their big breakthrough record with three great songs - Dreamer, Bloody Well Right and School. The follow up - Crisis? What Crisis also has some nifty songs on it - Ain't Nobody But Me, and Lady.
I didn't buy Even in the Quietest Moments. I'd borrowed a copy from a friend and wasn't that impressed. So, the next album for me is Breakfast in America - their prog/pop masterpiece. In truth it was more pop than progressive rock by this stage, but that just meant it reached more people. It sold on a massive scale.
The four singles did the business: The Logical Song, Goodbye Stranger, Breakfast in America, and Take the Long Way Home. Although it wasn't intended to be a concept album, the satirising of America is a theme that does run through the album and gives it a nice spice.
...Famous Last Words... was their last album with Roger Hodgson before he went solo. It's the one with My Kind of Lady and It's Raining Again on it. The sound leans toward the poppier end of their continuum and as such it's quite a successful album. I don't hear the band tensions between Roger and Rick that must have been happening. It's not their best album, but it's also not a bad one.
The band that appears on the live set from 1997 is different to the 'classic' Supertramp band. Mark Hart is the Roger Hodgson stand in. Rick Davies, John Helliwell and Bob Siebenberg remain from the 'classic' years.
This is a one CD version of the double live album It Was the Best of Times (also released in 1999). I much prefer the truncated version.
The performance is fine - very professional. It almost sounds like a studio recording with applause added after the fact. They come into their own when they launch into those hits in the second half of this CD.
The double CD compilation Retrospectacle is a comprehensive overview of the band. It covers their career from 1970's debut Supertramp to their last album in 2002 - Slow Motion. It includes the hits, live versions and album cuts.
Where do they all belong? Retrospectacle is your best introduction, then you'll want Crime of the Century and Breakfast in America.