Cover of Tom Hooker Come Back Home
Cunnuemammadua

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For fans of italo disco,followers of tom hooker and den harrow,1980s music enthusiasts,lovers of electronic and dance music,readers interested in music history
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THE REVIEW

American composer and singer transplanted to our beloved Boot since 1980, Tom Hooker is best known for lending his voice, from around '84 to '88, to that musical project called Den Harrow which, thanks to the use of mime Stefano Zandri (idol of the girls of the time) and the commercial strategies of Roberto Turatti and Michele "Miki" Chieregato, achieved very good sales results ("Future Brain", "Mad Desire", "Catch the Fox" among many others) inversely proportional to the quality of the offer. These successful outcomes allowed him to enrich his parallel solo career until the late Eighties, with the usual, overused, formulaic Italo disco.

But before landing at Baby Records and the subsequent Den Harrow project, Tom Hooker released several singles that went almost unnoticed, although, for the record, with "Toccami" in 1981 he managed to secure a spot at the Sanremo Festival. Among the various works, a twelve-inch from 1983 is worth mentioning: "Come back home" is a long track over six minutes, which does not yet fully feel the Italo disco about to explode.

The extensive use of electronic instrumentation, the overwhelming rhythm, the vaguely funk echoes, the excellent command of the language and singing techniques allow the track to achieve its own dignity and, in its being an ordinary fresco of the era and at the same time an anomaly in the Italian music scene, to look overseas: it is closer to the Kool (blatantly Eighties) and Raydio than to the Righeira. Finally, the reimaginings of the track, in various forms, on the B-side are negligible and not at all transcendent.

After the Eighties, Tom Hooker struggled in the face of the inevitable decline of Italo dance, so in '94 he returned to the States and left music behind. Finally, through a series of curious circumstances, he changed his name to Thomas Barbey. After several controversies with Stefano Zandri concerning authorship rights, he returned to the scene in 2011 and reinterpreted in a dance key the "hits" of the Den Harrow project. 

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Summary by Bot

Tom Hooker, known for his voice in the Den Harrow project, released the 1983 track 'Come Back Home' before Italo disco peaked. The song blends electronic instrumentation with funk echoes, standing out as both typical and unique within the genre. Despite its artistic merit, the reimaginings of the track are seen as negligible. Hooker later left music but returned in 2011 amid controversies over rights.

Tracklist

01   Come Back Home (Vocal Version) (06:08)

02   Come Back Home (Radio Version) (04:37)

03   Come Back Home (Instrumental Version) (05:05)

Tom Hooker

American singer associated with Italo disco; provided lead vocals for the Den Harrow project in the mid-1980s and had a parallel solo career in Italy. Noted for the 1983 12" "Come Back Home" and later activity returning around 2011.
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