Hai Hai is the second solo album by ex-Supertramp singer/guitarist/keyboardist Roger Hodgson, released in October 1987. Co-produced by future No Doubt and Black Crowes producer Jack Joseph Puig, and recorded at Hodgson's 48-track home studio in Nevada City, California, the album is a merger of Supertramp-styled progressive pop-rock and extensive use of Los Angeles session musicians and late-1980s synthesizer technology.

Hai Hai
Studio album by
Released9 October 1987[1]
RecordedNevada City, California
GenreDance-pop, pop rock, synthpop
Length48:48
LabelA&M
ProducerRoger Hodgson, Jack Joseph Puig
Roger Hodgson chronology
In the Eye
of the Storm

(1984)
Hai Hai
(1987)
Rites of Passage
(1997)

Overview

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Hai Hai features ten songs, all of which were written by Hodgson, with the exception of "Land Ho", an old Supertramp song (at the time never released on an album but only as a single), which Hodgson co-wrote in 1974 with his long-time partner Rick Davies. Hodgson had previously recorded the song in 1983 for his solo album In the Eye of the Storm, but it was never released.[2]

Background

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Hodgson was unable to fully promote or tour behind Hai Hai, having sustained injuries to both of his wrists in a fall a week after its release.[3] After that accident, Hodgson stopped his musical career for the next decade, returning to the public in 1997 with live shows and a live album, Rites of Passage. His next studio album, Open the Door, was released in 2000.

In the song "Hai Hai", backmasking is used 13 seconds in. When played in reverse, a whisper says "what happened to you?"

Hai Hai was re-released in Canada on November 14, 2006.

Reception

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Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic      [4]
New Musical Express1/10[5]

Allmusic panned the album in their retrospective review. They declared Hodgson's decision to abandon progressive rock and experiment with other genres a disaster, since he failed to fully commit to any of these genres, resulting in songs that are musically very basic and uninteresting. They also commented that the lyrics "are at times juvenile and embarrassing... he may have been trying to say something, but the poetry reads like a bored high school student wrote them." They added that the album's over-reliance on electronics and technology made the already uninspired songs sound cold and soulless.[4]

Track listing

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All songs written by Roger Hodgson, except where noted.

  1. "Right Place" 4:15
  2. "My Magazine" 4:30
  3. "London" 4:11
  4. "You Make Me Love You" 5:09
  5. "Hai Hai" 5:28
  6. "Who's Afraid?" 4:57
  7. "Desert Love" 5:26
  8. "Land Ho" (Rick Davies, Roger Hodgson) 4:06
  9. "House on the Corner" 5:30
  10. "Puppet Dance" 5:16

Personnel

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  • Roger Hodgson - Vocals, Synclavier Drums (5), Keyboards (3, 4, 5, 7-10), Piano (6), Synthesizer (6, 10), Synth bass (1, 4), Guitars (1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10), 12-String Guitar (7), Bass (7), Backing Vocals (1, 3-5, 8-10)
  • Dan Huff - Guitars (1, 3, 5, 6-10)
  • Ken Allardyce - Harmonica (1, 5), Rhythm Guitar (3), Backing Vocals (3, 8)
  • Nathan East - Bass (3, 6, 9 & 10)
  • Leland Sklar - Bass (8)
  • Robbie Buchanan - Synths (1), Synth Programming (4, 6, 10), Synth Bass (5), Fender Rhodes Piano (6), Keyboards (3-5, 9)
  • David Paich - Synth Bass (2), Hammond Organ (2), Synth Brass (2)
  • Steve Porcaro - Synth Programming (2)
  • Larry Williams - Saxophone (3), Synth Programming (7)
  • Mikail Graham - DX7 Seetar Solo (3)
  • Rhett Lawrence - Fairlight Programming (5, 8, 10), Synths (10)
  • Eric Persing - Synth Programming (5, 6)
  • Albhy Galuten - Synclavier Drums (5)
  • Bruce Albertine - Synclavier Drums (5)
  • Omar Hakim - Drums (1)
  • Joseph Pomfret - Drums (1, 4, 6-8) [this is a pseudonym for Hodgson himself; Joseph is his second name and Pomfret his mother's surname[citation needed]]
  • Jeff Porcaro - Drums (2-4, 6, 9)
  • Carlos Vega - Drums (7, 8)
  • Lenny Castro - Percussion (1-6, 8-10)
  • Anni McCann - Backing Vocals (1, 3-5, 8-10)
  • Willie Hines - Backing Vocals (2)
  • Brad Lang - Backing Vocals (2)
  • Claire Diament - Backing Vocals (3)
  • Marc Russo - Saxophone (8)

Charts

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Album

Chart Position
The Billboard 200 163
Canada 42
Australia (Kent Music Report)[6] 88
Switzerland 16
Norway 20
Netherlands 52

References

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  1. ^ "Music Week" (PDF). p. 38.
  2. ^ Melhuish, Martin (1986). The Supertramp Book. Toronto, Canada: Omnibus Press. pp. 177–192. ISBN 0-9691272-2-7.
  3. ^ Coleman, Andy (28 September 2007). "Supertramp star plans tribute to city colleague". Birmingham Mail. Archived from the original on 10 October 2008. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  4. ^ a b Hai Hai at AllMusic
  5. ^ DJ Fontana (28 November 1987). "Roger Hodgson: Hai Hai". New Musical Express. p. 34.
  6. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 140. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.