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Free Music Notes for Crime of the CenturyFree Music Review: Impressionante! Hit: 5 StarsDepois de ouvir qualquer CD da s?rie "THE SUPERTRAMP REMASTERS", qualquer f? sentir? a necessidade de substituir sua cole??o antiga, caso j? a tenha, pois os resultados, na minha opini?o, n?o poderiam ser melhores.
Essas remasteriza??es s?o perfeitas e ressuscitam o desejo de ouvir esse ?lbuns, com muito maior prazer.
Free Music Review: it's no crime to hear this great album Hit: 5 StarsCrime of the Century is probably the best album Supertramp ever made. Starting here the songwriting became top notch and memorable, and the mysteriously quiet vibe the band had throughout most of the 70's is most noticeable on this album.
The title song truly amazes me every time I hear it. It starts off quiet and eerie, like a detective snooping around through the rain in a dark city. Then it surprises you by shifting gears and throwing in an atmospheric and VERY spooky piano melody. The piano work builds into a jazzy jam while still maintaining the eerie vibe that really amazes me. Wow, what a song.
"Bloody Well Right" is probably one of their most well-known songs (yes, even more popular than the hits from Breakfast in America). I love the rocking verse melody and the poppy chorus. "Dreamer" will probably sound familar from the popular TV commercial it's been appearing on lately. Very good chorus, and a good way to figure out whether you'll like the lead singer or not (well, one of the two lead singers).
"School" has a brilliant jam in the middle that's catchy and melodic, and a good uplifting verse melody to make it a great song overall. "Asylum" shows signs of the songwriting style Supertramp would continue with all through the 70's.
A great early album from a band that would soon become even bigger.
Free Music Review: A classic of British Rock! Hit: 4 StarsBack in the mid 1970s, the launch of "Crime of the Century" was a question for Rock music fans. Another "Progressive" group? An alternative answer to Symphonic Rock? Together with ingenious lyrics and the use of keyboards, sax and even harmonica, this British band issued a series of successful albums.
The first one to consider, obviously, is this "Crime of the Century". To be noticed: first CD reissues captured the mid-to-low sound quality of the LP version. Luckily, people at A&M/Universal Music decided to reissue a remastered version. No extra tracks, no additional features, but the sound quality has been improved.
If you want to remind the best times of Rock music (the 70s), get this album, as well as "Breakfast in America" and "Even In The Quietest Moments".
Free Music Review: The first true Supertramp offering over 30 years later Hit: 5 StarsWhen English rockers Supertramp released their third album Crime of the Century in October of 1974, the band had been together for almost four years and went through hardships before recording this album.
The only holdovers from the original Supertramp lineup in 1969 were the two main songwriters and vocalists, guitarist and occasional keyboard player Roger Hodgson and keyboard player Rick Davies. After releasing two failed received albums 1970's self-titled and 1971's Indelibly Stamped, Supertramp called it quits.
Then in late 1973, Hodgson and Davies reformed the group which featured fellow Englishman John Helliwell on saxophones, woodwinds and occasional keyboards (he would also bring along his excellent sense of humor to the band), a Scotsman named Dougie Thomson on bass guitar and drummer Bob C. Benberg (real spelling of last name is Siebenberg), whom hailed from Southern California, USA.
The new lineup of the band went into Ramport Studios (owned by The Who) with co-producer Ken Scott (whom had worked with artists like David Bowie, Elton John and The Beatles) and created their first masterpiece which also spawned a single "Land Ho" b/w "Summer Romance" which would not appear on an album until 2005's 2-disc Retrospectacle.
Crime kicks off with Hodgson's "School" with a classic Hodgson guitar riff and the haunting harmonica by Davies and complete with school kids playing and was a radio staple. Next is Davies' "Bloody Well Right" which has a memorable chorus and was Supertramp's first American Top 40 hit in the spring of 1975. "Hide in Your Shell" is next and my favorite Hodgson track on this album and has a synth effect played by a saw with a violin bow and a beautiful melody and vocal from Hodgson. The first half concludes with my favorite Davies track on Crime entitled "Asylum", which is about the character of Rudy going insane and complete with cuckoo clocks at the end and Davies saying he's mad mad mad and the music is haunting.
Side two (the second half) kicks off with "Dreamer", which was Supertramp's first UK Top 20 hit and a classic Hodgson track. Next, is the album's tour-de-force "Rudy", which is a classic Rick Davies composition and you feel like you are on a train with this song. "If Anyone Was Listening" is next and has a Beatles kind of vibe to it since Hodgson was a Beatles nut and a nice ballad. The album concludes with the title track which had Davies' blues and jazz influences and the lyrics summed up the album in a nutshell.
Crime of the Century was the beginning of the classic Supertramp era and was the first album for the band to hit the US Top 40 and eventually went Gold (it would hit Gold after the success of Even in the Quietest Moments in 1977).
Today, this album stills holds up 31 years after its release, especially with the remastering superbly done by Greg Calbi and Supertramp engineer Jay Messina, whom painstakingly remastered this album in 2002.
Free Music Review: Awsome CD but what about a 5.1 mix Hit: 5 StarsThis has been one of my favorite Supertramp Cd's. I wish someone would make a 5.1 mix of this cd, that would be awsome. The Cd Crime of the Century was made for surround sound. I can't beleive that it has not been released as that yet. I'll be waiting.
More Free Music Notes: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
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