Goodbye Tiger
1977 studio album by Richard Clapton
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Goodbye Tiger is the fourth studio album by Australian rock music singer-songwriter, Richard Clapton. It was released in October 1977 via Infinity Records/Festival Records and was produced by Richard Batchens. It peaked at No. 11 on the Kent Music Report Albums Chart.
| Goodbye Tiger | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | October 1977 | |||
| Recorded | 1977 | |||
| Studio | Festival Studios, Sydney | |||
| Genre | Rock | |||
| Length | 38:33 | |||
| Label | Infinity/Festival | |||
| Producer | Richard Batchens | |||
| Richard Clapton chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Singles from Goodbye Tiger | ||||
| ||||
It was the final studio album he recorded for Infinity Records and the last produced by Batchens.[1][2]
In October 2010 it was listed at No. 15 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums.
Background
Australian singer-songwriter-guitarist, Richard Clapton, started writing tracks for his fourth studio album after he and a group of friends were at Sydney Town Hall to see American journalist, Hunter S. Thompson, in October 1976.[3][4] Clapton was referred to as "Tiger" by "[his] 'beat poet' buddies."[3] They got drunk and the binge continued until he got on a flight to Germany before crashing out at a friend's place in Frankfurt.[3]
He wrote the title track at that friend's apartment and later recalled, "It was the only time I've ever written a song and then not gone back and changed a word. It seemed like it had been the end of our innocence or something."[3][5] He was later snowed in at a resort in Denmark, where there was a blizzard and they were trapped, "but we had enough beer so it didn't really matter."[5] It was there that he wrote most of Goodbye Tiger,[5][2]
Clapton's backing band for the album was: Gunther Gorman on guitar, Michael Hegerty on bass guitar (ex-Stars), Kirk Lorange on lead guitar, Diane McLennan on backing vocals, Cleis Pearce on viola (ex-MacKenzie Theory) and Greg Sheehan on drums (ex-Blackfeather, MacKenzie Theory).[1][2] Additional musicians on some tracks included Tony Ansell on keyboards, Tony Buchanan on saxophone and Jim Penson on drums.[1][2] Clapton has said that working on the album was the worst year of his life, "but I guess that's the record I will always be remembered for."[5] During 1978 he toured nationally in support of its release with Ansell, Hegerty, Lorange, McLennan and Sheehan.[1]
Reception
Australian musicologist, Ian McFarlane, described Goodbye Tiger as, "his most celebrated work, an album full of rich, melodic and accessible rock with a distinctly Australian flavour. It established Clapton's reputation as one of the most important Australian songwriters of the 1970s."[1] Australian rock music historian, Chris Spencer, explained why it is one of his favourites, "[It] represents one of the pinnacles of Australian rock music. Clapton, essentially a singer-songwriter, working within the security of numerous band line-ups, wrote his best lyrics on this album. He never reached the same heights again, particularly with his melodies, visions and observations of urban Australia."[6]
In October 2010 it was listed at No. 15 in the book, 100 Best Australian Albums.[3] The writers and music journalists, Toby Creswell, Craig Mathieson and John O'Donnell, described how, "Strangely, all the songs were about Australia..." despite being written while he was in Europe.[3] They noticed that Clapton's work with Batchens, "was fraught with suspicion and hostility."[3] While "The overriding mood of the album is edgy; like a hangover... All of the songs amplify the themes of the key songs 'Deep Water', 'Down in the Lucky Country' and the title song."[3]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Richard Clapton.[7]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Down in the Lucky Country" | 3:42 |
| 2. | "Wild Child" | 3:32 |
| 3. | "Goodbye Tiger" | 5:42 |
| 4. | "I Can Talk to You" | 6:15 |
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Deep Water" | 5:26 |
| 2. | "Out on the Edge Again" | 3:10 |
| 3. | "Hiding from the Light" | 4:36 |
| 4. | "Wintertime in Amsterdam" | 6:10 |
Charts
| Chart (1977) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)[8] | 11 |
Personnel
- Musicians
- Richard Clapton – vocals, guitar
- Tony Ansell – keyboards
- Tony Buchanan – saxophone (tracks 2, 7, 8)
- Dalvanius, Diane McLennan – backing vocals
- Gunther Gorman – bass guitar (tracks 2, 3, 4, 6, 7), lead guitar (track 2)
- Michael Hegerty – bass guitar
- Kirk Lorange – lead guitar
- Cleis Pearce – viola
- Jim Penson – drums (track 5)
- Greg Sheehan – drums, percussion
- Technical and recording
- Producer – Richard Batchens at Festival Studios, Sydney
- Audio engineer – John Frolich, Batchens
- Artwork – Geoff Kleem
- Photography – Violette Hamilton
Release history
| Country | Date | Label | Format | Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | October 1977 | Infinity Records | LP | L 36352 |
| Australia | 1992 | Infinity Records | CD / Cassette | C19584, D19584 |
| Australia | 16 August 2024 | Warner Music Australia | CD / LP / digital | 2173225815 |