The Stories Behind the Songs
Supertramp
The Logical Song
In
1979, Paul McCartney was
asked to name his favourite
song of the year. He chose
The Logical Song by
Supertramp. For Roger
Hodgson, Supertramp's
co-leader, it was the
greatest of compliments.
"Having been brought up on
The Beatles," he says, "it
was wonderful to hear Paul
McCartney loved my song."
But Hodgson always knew The Logical Song was something special.
"When you're writing a
song," he says, "sometimes
you feel like you're eighty
per cent successful, but
with The Logical Song
I felt like I'd nailed it
one hundred per cent. As a
melody, a lyric, an
arrangement and a recording,
it really is perfect in its
completeness."
The Logical Song was the biggest hit of Supertramp's career,
reaching the Top Ten in the
US and UK, and transforming
parent album Breakfast in
America into a
chart-topping,
multimillion-selling
phenomenon. It also won a
prestigious Ivor Novello
award for Best Song
Musically And Lyrically. And
as Hodgson acknowledges, it
was the lyrical content, as
much as the expertly crafted
music, that made The
Logical Song connect
with such a huge audience.
"A great song," he says," is
one that people can relate
to, that touches them, makes
them feel something."
And in The Logical Song, Hodgson drew on the experiences of his
own troubled childhood to
create an existentialist
pop-rock classic in which he
addressed the biggest
question of all: the meaning
of life.
Ever since Supertramp formed in 1969, it was Hodgson and Rick Davies who
formed the band's creative
nucleus. Both sang lead
vocals and played keyboards,
and between them they wrote
all of the songs. Hodgson
and Davies had a similar
arrangement to Lennon and
McCartney in The Beatles:
they wrote separately, but
always shared the writing
credits. However, as Hodgson
says now: "The Logical
Song wasn't co-written
in any way. It was very much
my song."
It was in early 1978 that The Logical Song started coming
together. The band were in
Los Angeles, about to begin
recording the Breakfast
in America album, when
Hodgson sat alone at a
Wurlitzer electric piano and
began playing around with a
chord progression he'd toyed
with, off and on, for a
couple of months. "I had
these chords written," he
says, "and I hadn't thought
much of them, to tell the
truth. But then one day when
I was playing the chords, I
heard the melody. And as I
started singing the melody,
the first word that came to
me was 'liberal'..."
Immediately, Hodgson reeled off words that rhymed: intellectual,
radical... logical. And in
that moment, the whole
concept for the song came
into focus. "Right away, I
knew what I wanted to say.
The song was born out of my
questions about what really
mattered in life. Throughout
childhood we're taught how
to behave, yet we're very
rarely told anything about
the deeper purpose of life.
We go from the innocence and
wonder of childhood to the
confusion of adolescence,
and that often ends up in
disillusionment in
adulthood. And many of us
spend our lives trying to
get back to that innocence."
In The Logical Song, Hodgson delivered a damning critique of the
education system. It was a
subject he had tackled
before in School, a
song from Supertramp's 1974
breakthrough Crime of the
Century, a landmark
progressive rock album. But
as Hodgson says, The
Logical Song was "very
autobiographical." Its
first-person narrative made
specific reference to his
years at boarding school as
a 'shy and sensitive' boy,
deeply affected by his
parents' divorce when he was
12: 'They sent me away to
teach me how to be sensible,
logical, responsible,
practical/And they showed me
a world where I could be so
dependable, clinical,
intellectual, cynical..."
Hodgson invested
"a lot of work" in the
lyrics. "I had to come up
with all the words ending in
'al'," he says. "So it was
the one and only time I
consulted a dictionary when
writing a lyric." And for
the music, his attention to
detail bordered on the
obsessive. The electric
piano riff was the
foundation. "It had a very
percussive, rhythmical feel
I really liked."
But when work began at LA's Village Recorder studios, Hodgson dictated
what each member of the band
would play. "I was the main
arranger in the band," he
says. "I used to go through
all the parts, even down to
drum fills. It's like a
jigsaw puzzle. Anything
extraneous shouldn't be
there. Everything was
orchestrated and that's why
it works so well."
Incorporated into the finished track were various sound effects. John
Helliwell having contributed
a rasping saxophone solo,
provided the heavy sigh in
the intro and blew a whistle
to signal the outro. And a
surprise comic twist was
added by the bleeping 'goal'
sound from a Mattel football
game that Rick Davies loved
to play between takes. "We'd
hear that sound echoing
around the studio all day,"
Hodgson says. "So we put it
in the run-out after I sang
the word 'digital'."
Due to Hodgson's perfectionism, it took two weeks for the final mix of
the song to be completed. "I
wouldn't rest until it was
absolutely right," he says.
However, the end justified the means. Released in the summer of 1979,
The Logical Song was
acclaimed by Rolling Stone
as "a small masterpiece",
and its success turned
Supertramp into superstars.
Thirty-four years on - and 30 since he exited Supertramp - Roger Hodgson
still sings The Logical
Song every night when
performs as a solo artist.
"I can still hit that big
note at the end of the
song," he laughs. "But it is
damn high."
Most importantly of all for Hodgson, it's a song that has lost none of
its meaning. "I was 29 when
I wrote The Logical Song,"
he says. "I was searching
for answers. The burning
question in that song was: 'Please
tell me who I am,' I'm
62 now, and I still don't
have all the answers. But I
knew there was something
deeper out there - a place
of peace. And in the end, I
found it."
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