Label: Polygram Records (Germany), 393 129-2
Style: Progressive Pop, Soft Rock
Country: London, England
Time: 40:23
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 251 Mb
Charts: AUS #53, US #158. CAN & FRA: Gold.
Rick
Davies and Roger Hodgson more or less pressed the reset button on
Indelibly Stamped. The band was re-tooled to include Dave Winthrop
(flute/sax), Frank Farrell (bass/keyboards) and Kevin Currie (drums) and
the progressive affectations of Supertramp were replaced with English
rock/pop that drew from a mix of influences while still managing to
sound original. Unfortunately, what the album lacks is a compelling
raison d’etre. Maybe that’s what happens when you’re bankrolled by a
rich Dutch patron.
For years, I’ve viewed this album as a
disappointment. And, in view of what came before and after, it is. But
there are some interesting songs that fans will want to salvage:
Forever, Rosie Had Everything Planned, Times Have Changed.
Stylistically, Indelibly Stamped is all over the place. The Beatles,
Procol Harum, Traffic (Aries) and even Frank Zappa (Potter) are equally
valid reference points along the way. English pop/rock in 1970/1 was
still finding its way in a world without The Beatles, and Indelibly
Stamped sometimes feels like that search set to music.
Over their
career, it’s easy to see Supertramp‘s second album as a wrong turn or a
case of turning the wheel too sharply in a different direction after
drifting into deep progressive waters. Yet it’s rarely less than
interesting and you have to at least partially admire the band’s
ambitions. While you won’t find a pair of lost hits on here (unless
you’re looking at the album cover), Indelibly Stamped isn’t the inedible
stump that some have made it out to be.
“There was confused
testosterone going off in all directions. There is no theme or
continuity to the album or its artwork, but there is some interesting
stuff on it.” — Roger Hodgson, talking about Indelibly Stamped in a
Goldmine interview (March 17, 2006).
(progrography.com/supertramp/supertramp-indelibly-stamped-1971/)
Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog.
D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The
second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the
format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).
01. Your Poppa Don't Mind (03:03)
02. Travelled (04:24)
03. Rosie Had Everything Planned (03:01)
04. Remember (04:12)
05. Forever (05:00)
06. Potter (02:23)
07. Coming Home to See You (04:44)
08. Times Have Changed (03:49)
09. Friend in Need (02:07)
10. Aries (07:36)

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