Supertramp - Crisis? What Crisis? [A&M Records SP-4560] (14 September 1975)

Released: 14 September 1975
Country: US
Label: A&M Records
Catalog: SP-4560
Genre: Rock

Item# SR-AMSP4560
Ratings: C=VG+ LP=VG+


T R A C K L I S T:
01 Easy Does It
02 Sister Moonshine
03 Ain't Nobody But Me
04 A Soapbox Opera
05 Another Man's Woman
06 Lady
07 Poor Boy
08 Just A Normal Day
09 The Meaning
10 Two Of Us




Crisis? What Crisis?
Supertramp


LP to Digital [FLAC] transfer bundle
$37.99 plus shipping


Order ships in 3 to 6 weeks.




Submit an album review.

Album Review

Mike DeGagne [allmusic.com]

Nestled between the accomplished Crime of the Century album and 1977's Even in the Quietest Moments, Crisis? What Crisis? may not have given the band any chart success, but it did help them capture a fan base that had no concern for Supertramp's commercial sound. With Rick Davies showing off his talent on the keyboards, and Roger Hodgson's vocals soaring on almost every track, they managed to win back their earlier progressive audience while gaining new fans at the same time. Crisis received extensive air play on FM stations, especially in Britain, and the album made it into the Top 20 there and fell just outside the Top 40 in the U.S. ''Ain't Nobody But Me,'' ''Easy Does It,'' and the beautiful ''Sister Moonshine'' highlight Supertramp's buoyant and brisk instrumental and vocal alliance, while John Helliwell's saxophone gives the album even greater width. The songwriting is sharp, attentive, and passionate, and the lyrics showcase Supertramp's ease at invoking emotion into their music, which would be taken to even greater heights in albums to come. Even simple tracks like ''Lady'' and ''Just a Normal Day'' blend in nicely with the album's warm personality and charmingly subtle mood. Although the tracks aren't overly contagious or hook laden, there's still a work-in-process type of appeal spread through the cuts, which do grow on you over time.