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Don't Look Back

 
Album Review: Don't Look Back

  • Artist: Boston
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1978 08
  • Total Time: 33:47
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The follow-up to Boston's mega-hit first album, Boston, Don't Look Back took two long years to complete, and it's hard to figure out why because it's almost exactly the same as their debut. The guitars still sound like they are being fed through computers and stacked into great walls of sound by robots, lead singer Brad Delp still sounds like he is ripping his throat out, and the harmony vocals still sound like a choir of androids warbling angelically. Most importantly, the songs are overflowing with hooks, there are plenty of riffs to air guitar to, and the songs stick in your head like dirt on a dog. The main difference lies in the semi-melancholy tone of the record. Boston was a nonstop party of a record but one look at the song titles lets you know that Don't Look Back is a little different: "A Man I'll Never Be," "Used to Bad News," "Don't Be Afraid." These songs reveal a reflective side that was nowhere to be found on Boston. Not to say the record doesn't rock because it does mightily. "Don't Look Back" has a killer riff that's very similar to the timeless riff in "More Than a Feeling," "Party" is a storming rocker much like "Smokin'" and "It's Easy" is mellow 70's AOR at its absolute best. Don't Look Back is basically Boston, Pt. 2, but don't let that put you off because even though the band was treading water they were treading it like Esther Williams. This record is better than 96.7% of the AOR records released in the 1970s, combine it with Boston and you are looking at two tickets to AOR paradise. ~ Tim Sendra, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Don't Look Back Tom Scholz Boston (5:57)
The Journey Tom Scholz Boston (1:46)
It's Easy Tom Scholz Boston (4:26)
A Man I'll Never Be Tom Scholz Boston (6:37)
Feelin' Satisfied Tom Scholz Boston (4:11)
Party Brad Delp, Tom Scholz Boston (4:07)
Used to Bad News Brad Delp Boston (2:56)
Don't Be Afraid Tom Scholz Boston (3:48)

Credits

Joel Zimmerman (Reissue Art Director), Tom Scholz (Keyboards), Brad Delp (Vocal Harmony), Fran Sheehan (Bass), Fran Sheehan (Hands), Tom Scholz (Bass), Tom Scholz (Guitar (Rhythm)), Tom Scholz (Guitar), Dave Butler (Engineer), Barry Goudreau (Percussion), Tom Scholz (Engineer), Barry Goudreau (Slide Guitar), Tom Scholz (Cover Art Concept), Dr. Toby Mountain (Remastering), Eric Carr (Mixing Assistant), Tom Scholz (Piano), Sib Hashian (Percussion), Bill Ryan (Remastering), Tom Scholz (Remastering), Sib Hashian (Hands), Tom Scholz (Organ), Tony Lane (Art Direction), Tom Scholz (Guitar (12 String)), Brad Delp (Percussion), Sib Hashian (Drums), Tom Scholz (Artwork), Tom Scholz (Producer), Joel Zimmerman (Reissue Design), Fran Sheehan (Percussion), Kim Hart (Design Consultant), Tom Scholz (Percussion), Ron Pownall (Photography), Fran Sheehan (Guitar (Bass)), Tom Scholz (Guitar (Acoustic)), Brad Delp (Hands), Barry Goudreau (Guitar (Rhythm)), Paul Ahern (Management), Kim Hart (Artwork), Tom Scholz (Guitar Effects), Barry Goudreau (Guitar), Kim Hart (Art Consultant), Tom Scholz (Arranger), Tom Scholz (Art Consultant), Dave Butler (Engineer), Brad Delp (Guitar), Tom Scholz (Guitar (Bass)), Gary Norman (Cover Art), Tom Scholz (Hands), Tom Scholz (Design Consultant), David Wild (Liner Notes), Tom Scholz (Concept), Brad Delp (Vocals), Brad Delp (Harmony)
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Wikipedia: Don't Look Back (Boston album)
Top
Don't Look Back
Studio album by Boston
Released August 2, 1978
Recorded Tom Scholz's Hideaway Studio and Northern Studio in Maynard, MA, 1977-1978
Genre Rock
Length 33:51
Label Epic
Producer Tom Scholz
Professional reviews
Boston chronology
Boston
(1976)
Don't Look Back
(1978)
Third Stage
(1986)

Don't Look Back is the second album by American rock band Boston, released in 1978 (see 1978 in music). The title track is one of the band's biggest hits, reaching #4 in 1978 on the Billboard Hot 100. The album sold over 4 million copies in the first month of its release, and over 7 million total in the U.S.

This album also marked the beginning of the band's legal fight with its record label Epic Records. Tom Scholz has been on record stating that executives at Epic pushed him and the band into releasing the album before they felt it was ready. Their next album Third Stage was not released for another eight years, by which time the band and record label had parted ways and were fighting a courtroom battle that Boston ultimately won.

This album and the group's first (Boston) were remastered and re-released on June 13, 2006. The re-releases were digitally remastered personally by Scholz after he heard (not directly) that the remastering project was to be handled by Sony's team, which he felt was unacceptable. He took it on himself after negotiations with Legacy. "I've always wanted to make those albums sound good on CD, and the chance arrived." [1]

A small number of the Sony-remastered versions briefly went on sale in Canada on April 4, 2006 before being pulled off the shelves. Those discs also included a live version of "Shattered Images" (mistitled "Help Me" on the packaging), an unreleased Boston original, from a 1976 concert in Philadelphia. [2]

Don't Look Back was among the first commercially produced compact discs when the format was introduced in 1983, but because of ongoing legal issues between Tom Scholz and CBS Records, the title was pulled after a small production run and did not re-appear on CD until three years later. Inserts for the original CD pressings contained the "spaceship blueprints" from the original album dust jacket; those illustrations were not included in the 1986 re-release.

The cover art for this album inspired the box art on the Atari 2600 release of the video game Space Invaders.[1]

Also, the original title for this album was supposed to be Arrival, but Boston members discovered that ABBA[2] already had an album by that name out, so Don't Look Back was chosen instead.

Tom Scholz has claimed in many interviews that he listens to the song "The Journey" before he goes to bed each night. Whether he continues to do this today or not is unknown.

Contents

Track listing

# Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Don't Look Back"   Tom Scholz 6:00
2. "The Journey"   Scholz 1:43
3. "It's Easy"   Scholz 4:23
4. "A Man I'll Never Be"   Scholz 6:36
5. "Feelin' Satisfied"   Scholz 4:11
6. "Party"   Scholz, Brad Delp 4:06
7. "Used to Bad News"   Delp 2:56
8. "Don't Be Afraid"   Scholz 3:56

Personnel

Production

  • Producer: Tom Scholz
  • Engineer: Tom Scholz
  • Arranger: Tom Scholz

Charts

Album - Billboard (North America)

Year Chart Position
1978 Pop Albums 1
1987 The Billboard 200 146

Singles - Billboard (North America)

Year Single Chart Position
1978 "Don't Look Back" Pop Singles 4
1979 "Feelin' Satisfied" Pop Singles 46
1979 "A Man I'll Never Be" Pop Singles 31
Preceded by
Grease (soundtrack) by Various artists
Billboard 200 number-one album
September 16 - September 22, 1978
October 7 - October 13, 1978
Succeeded by
Living in the USA by Linda Ronstadt

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Don't Look Back (Boston album)" Read more