Abandoned Luncheonette

Abandoned Luncheonette
Studio album by Hall & Oates
Released November 3, 1973
Recorded 1973
Genre Soft rock, blue-eyed soul, folk rock
Length 36:42
Label Atlantic
Producer Arif Mardin
Hall & Oates chronology
Whole Oats
(1972)Whole Oats1972
Abandoned Luncheonette
(1973)
War Babies
(1974)War Babies1974
Singles from Abandoned Luncheonette
  1. "She's Gone"
    Released: February 9, 1974
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
CreemB– link

Abandoned Luncheonette is the second studio album by the American pop music duo Hall & Oates, released in 1973, which combines folk, philly soul, and acoustic soul. It is the most commercially successful of their first three albums of the duo's Atlantic Records period, the album reached #33 on the Billboard Top LPs & Tapes chart. Twenty-nine years after its release, the album was certified platinum (over one million copies sold) by the Recording Industry Association of America.

It is the duo's favorite Hall & Oates album.[1]

Background

"Recording that album was where we learned how songs become records. Our producer, the legendary Arif Mardin carefully crafted each song, every bit of nuance, bringing in the perfect players for the right moments. And it all worked together as one beautiful musical tapestry."

John Oates on an interview with Chris Epting.[2]

After their first album, Whole Oats failed to make an impact the duo moved from Philadelphia to New York and started recording Abandoned Luncheonette, it became the first album they recorded as New Yorkers.[3]

"...experiencing the city, and being exposed to a whole new level of musicianship through the good will and artistic choices of Arif Mardin and Atlantic Records. We felt like we were where we needed to be. We had high hopes.” “That space was one of the most amazing, exciting, and inspiring (studio) that I’ve ever experienced in my life, we’d walk out the door and see Bette Midler, Aretha Franklin, Bob Dylan, Doug Sahm, Led Zeppelin. They’d just walk in — it was crazy. Now I think back on it, and I just wish I’d taken pictures. It was a very exciting time, because we were at the epicenter of what was going on in New York recording at the moment.”

John Oates on an interview for Ultimate Classic Rock.[3]

Their producer was still Arif Mardin but they wanted to get away from the commercial standards to establish the parameters of their musical identity, and Arif helped in this regard. He liked the American musical influence that Hall & Oates had been brought up on and he knew just how to bring all their ideas to life, adding much of his own vision. When Daryl and John began producing themselves in the early 80s, they thought back to everything they learned from watching Arif.[2]

Unlike later albums, this one contains a relatively even songwriting split with both partners contributing a handful of their own songs, while still making room for a few co-writes.[3]

Synthesizers were included as part of the records to obtain what the duo wanted on the album.[3]

Critical reception

Initially, the album wasn't very successful in the US, but it received significant airplay on a local Minneapolis-St. Paul FM radio station, KQRS, resulting in it being a hit in that area. The duo was happy that they became popular on the college circuit and that underground radio embraced the album, and they began touring all over the country, playing in a large variety of venues: backwoods towns, big cities, colleges, clubs and auditoriums.[3]

"We opened for amazing people — Cheech & Chong, David Bowie, Stevie Wonder. So we had all these experiences for the first time behind a record we were really proud of, and people were digging. Everything was all good.”

John Oates on an interview for Ultimate Classic Rock.[3]

After She's Gone was re-released in 1976 and became a hit, the album peaked at #33 on the Billboard 200, but by that time the duo had left Atlantic Records and moved to RCA Records, where they would become one of the biggest acts of the 1980's.

Stephen Thomas Erlewine, from Allmusic, gave the album five stars, calling it "the first indication of the duo's talent for sleek, soul-inflected pop/rock".[4] On December 13, 2002 it was certified platinum by the RIAA.[5]

Notable songs

The most well-known track from the album is "She's Gone". While the tune did not become a hit when first released as a single (it only peaked at #60 on the U.S Billboard Hot 100), the song gained momentum from two later covers, one by Lou Rawls, and one by Tavares. After the latter cover topped the Billboard R&B chart in 1974, the original was re-released and became a Top 10 pop hit in 1976, reaching #7 in the U.S, while the album reached #33 on the Billboard Top LPs & Tapes chart. The single version was included on the album Rock and Soul Part 1 while the album version is included in numerous other compilations such as The Singles (2008), The Essential (2005), Looking Back: The Best of (1991) but the song is missing on the albums The Very Best of Daryl Hall & John Oates (2001) and Playlist: The Very Best of Daryl Hall & John Oates (2008) although it's one of Hall & Oates' favorite songs.

Another song from the album, "Las Vegas Turnaround (The Stewardess Song)," although written by Oates, draws its inspiration from Hall's then-girlfriend and future songwriting collaborator Sara Allen, much as the later "Sara Smile" would.

Album cover

The diner on the album cover was formerly the Rosedale Diner, located in Pottstown, Pennsylvania. When it went out of business, its structure was dumped in a small wooded area located along Route 724 in Kenilworth, PA,[6] at the entrance of Towpath Park in East Coventry Township, where the photo on the linked page was taken. Stripped by souvenir-hunters, the structure remained in place until about 1983, when Ridge Fire Company, along with the owner, burned what was left to clear the land.

The images were shot by a young fine artist photographer named Barbara Wilson. She had originally met Oates in the late 60s while they were both in college, and over the years became friendly with Daryl as well.[2]

“They paid me $1000, and Atlantic Records considered that to be highway robbery."

—Wilson on an interview with Chris Epting.[2]

On a warm summer day, once the album was finished, Wilson, her husband, Hall and Oates drove from New York city to the rural spot on the road about 40 miles outside of Philadelphia. The group arranged permission to take photos of the old restaurant but they thought that the session was incomplete without getting inside. And so they snuck in and Wilson started shooting, carefully tip-toeing around broken glass and tile. The guys squeezed into a booth and the rest is album cover history (the interior was used as the back cover). The owner began screaming at them when he realized where they were, and they quickly left.[2]

Wilson shot the black-and-white 35mm images on an old Nikon SLR and then began a silkscreen process to create the surreal color imagery, using a different stencil for each hue and then hand-coloring the final piece. Atlantic Records bought the idea with one change, to re-do the neon tubing letters, which had all been done by hand. It was the only album cover Wilson ever did.[2]

She had also spent a day in the Atlantic studios while the album was being recorded and managed to capture a series of intimate images of the two.[2]

Track listing

Side one
  1. "When the Morning Comes" (Daryl Hall) – 3:12
  2. "Had I Known You Better Then" (John Oates) – 3:22
    • Daryl Hall - electric piano
    • John Oates - lead vocals, acoustic guitar
    • Chris Bond - electric guitar
    • Jerry Ricks - acoustic guitar
    • Steve "Fontz" Gelfand - bass
    • Rick Marotta - drums, percussion
  3. "Las Vegas Turnaround (The Stewardess Song)" (Oates) – 2:57
    • Daryl Hall - lead vocals, electric piano
    • John Oates - lead vocals, acoustic guitar
    • Joe Farrell - tenor saxophone
    • Chris Bond - acoustic guitar
    • Pat Rebillot - organ
    • Gordon Edwards - bass
    • Bernard Purdie - drums
    • Pancho Morales - congas
  4. "She's Gone" (Hall, Oates) – 5:15
    • Daryl Hall - lead vocals, electric piano
    • John Oates - lead vocals, wah-wah guitar
    • Joe Farrell - tenor saxophone
    • Chris Bond - electric guitar, mellotron, moog synthesizer
    • Steve "Fontz" Gelfand - bass
    • Bernard Purdie - drums
    • Ralph MacDonald - percussion
  5. "I'm Just a Kid (Don't Make Me Feel Like a Man)" (Oates) – 3:20
    • Daryl Hall - electric piano
    • John Oates - lead vocals, acoustic guitar
    • Chris Bond - electric guitar, mellotron
    • Jerry Ricks - acoustic guitar
    • Gordon Edwards - bass
    • Bernard Purdie - drums
Side two
  1. "Abandoned Luncheonette" (Hall) – 3:55
    • Daryl Hall - lead vocals, piano, part of the humanity chorus
    • Joe Farrell - alto saxophone
    • Richard Tee - piano
    • Gloria Agostini - harp
    • Gordon Edwards - bass
    • Bernard Purdie - drums
    • Arif Mardin, Christian Bond, Donald Wanner, John Oates, Kathy Mae Hohl, Ronald Wanner, Walter F. Hohl - humanity chorus
  2. "Lady Rain" (Hall, Oates) – 4:26
    • Daryl Hall - lead vocals, mandolin
    • John Oates - lead vocals, acoustic guitar
    • John Blair - electric Vi-tar
    • Hugh McCracken - electric guitar
    • Steve "Fontz" Gelfand - bass
    • Bernard Purdie - drums
    • Ralph MacDonald - percussion
  3. "Laughing Boy" (Hall) – 3:20
  4. "Everytime I Look At You" (Hall) – 7:04
    • Daryl Hall - lead vocals, keyboards
    • John Oates - electric guitar
    • Larry Packer - fiddle
    • Chris Bond - electric guitar, mellotron, synthesizer
    • Mark Horowitz - banjo
    • Steve "Fontz" Gelfand - bass
    • Bernard Purdie - drums[7]

Production

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1973–75) Peak
position
US Top LPs & Tapes (Billboard) 33

References

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