*** Welcome to piglix ***

Bloody Well Right

"Bloody Well Right"
Supertramp Dreamer single cover.jpg
Single by Supertramp
from the album Crime of the Century
A-side "Dreamer"
Released 1974
Recorded 1974
Genre Hard rock, progressive rock
Length 4:32
Label A&M
Songwriter(s) Rick Davies, Roger Hodgson
Producer(s) Supertramp, Ken Scott
Supertramp singles chronology
"Dreamer"
(1974)
"'Bloody Well Right'"
(1974)
"Lady"
(1975)
"Dreamer"
(1974)
"Bloody Well Right"
(1974)
"Lady"
(1975)
Crime of the Century track listing
  1. "School"
  2. "Bloody Well Right"
  3. "Hide In Your Shell"
  4. "Asylum"
  5. "Dreamer"
  6. "Rudy"
  7. "If Everyone Was Listening"
  8. "Crime of the Century"

"Bloody Well Right" is a song by the progressive rock band Supertramp from their 1974 album Crime of the Century. It appeared as the B-side of the single "Dreamer" in 1974. Listeners in the United States preferred it to the A-side, and "Bloody Well Right" became their breakthrough hit in the country, peaking at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100. It would remain the band's signature song in the U.S. for years to come.

Davies consciously linked the song to the album's opening track "School" with the line "So you think your schooling is phoney", helping to perpetuate the false impression that Crime of the Century is a concept album. According to Hodgson, any unifying thread beyond that was left to the listener's imagination.

The song begins with Rick Davies playing a Wurlitzer electric piano solo, exactly fifty one seconds long, leading into the rest of the band joining in. There is then a guitar solo played by Roger Hodgson, making use of the wah-wah pedal, leading in the first spoken word at the 1:36 mark in the song. The first verse and chorus occur with a short instrumental bridge into the second verse and second, slightly modified, chorus. The rest of the song is different variations of the chorus with a saxophone solo in the background. The song slowly fades away to the sound of the saxophone.

This song became a staple in Supertramp concerts after its release. The song's length is extended live often reaching over seven minutes. It appears on Paris, Live '88, It Was the Best of Times, and Is Everybody Listening?.


...
Wikipedia

...