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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Seger Goes The Distance
After releasing his stellar live album Nine Tonight, Bob Seger came back with the best album of his career, The Distance. The album is full of vivid tales of the common man. "Even Now" is a soaring rocker while "Makin' Thunderbirds" is a pulsating, Detroit flavored shaker that Bonnie Raitt provides backup vocals for. On Against The Wind, Mr. Seger...
Published on July 20, 2001 by Thomas Magnum

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Remastered really stinks
When I saw the 2011 remastered version of Bob Seger The Distance I was excited to get this. What a disappointment. This cd is definitly not remastered.No comparison to early seger vol. 1 ,live bullet and nine tonight. The remastering on these 3 cd's are surpreme. 2 stars only because of amazon markets this as a remastered cd .iT'S NOT. Wasted my money.
Published 3 months ago by Scung


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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Seger Goes The Distance, July 20, 2001
After releasing his stellar live album Nine Tonight, Bob Seger came back with the best album of his career, The Distance. The album is full of vivid tales of the common man. "Even Now" is a soaring rocker while "Makin' Thunderbirds" is a pulsating, Detroit flavored shaker that Bonnie Raitt provides backup vocals for. On Against The Wind, Mr. Seger played a number of song with a country flavor. He goes one step further on Rodney Crowell's "Shame On The Moon". The song has a hypnotic piano and great harmonies and moved up to number two on the charts which at the time was his highest charting single. "Love's The Last To Know" is good ballad while "House Behind A House" shakes along. "Roll Me Away" is classic Seger with tales of freedom and a powerful chorus. "Comin' Home" is a tale of redemption while the closer "Little Victories" is a great portrait of the little moments in everyday life where one triumph's over life's obstacles.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Going the Distance, January 20, 2000
By A Customer
Bob Seger made (and makes) some of the most honest music in the history of rock and roll. This album is not his best work but that just makes it twice as good as the normal rock cd, instead of ten times as good. "Shame on the Moon" is a great song and should've been on his Greatest Hits. The think I like about Seger's cds is that you get great songs that never received any airplay. "Little Victories" falls into that category on this release. Great, honest rock.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Outstanding Record!!, August 10, 2000
By 
B Ardell Young (Camden, SC United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
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I recently listened to this album for the first time in five years or more and was really impressed with strength of the album. Seven of the nine songs are the type that are not skipped to reach another more favorite song.

The album also features perhaps Seger's best song of his career, "Roll Me Away", and the top notch "Shame On The Moon". The rest of the material is solid rock music that make Seger the best at what he does.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The last of the "real" Seger, December 14, 2004
By 
Ryan Richards "reb77" (Midland, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
By the early '80s, Bob Seger had established himself as a firm proponent of the guitar-heavy, rhythmically driven, classic-rock school of American music. Many consider The Distance to be his final album in that vein, and what a heck of an album it is. This is one to pop in the CD player when you first get in the car and just drive, drive, drive. This album demonstrates all of the musical categories Seger created for himself and went on to dominate. The pure, guitar-driven rockers "Even Now" and "Makin' Thunderbirds," two of Seger's most compelling tunes, start out the album; the latter hearkens back to the Chuck Berry sound he so assiduously assimilated in his earlier days, while the former represents the apex of the Bob Seger sound he went on to create. "Boomtown Blues" powers on in a similar vein, although it slows things down slightly to create (true to its name) a more bluesy feel. "Shame on the Moon," "Love's the Last to Know" and "Comin' Home" showcase another famous side of Seger's talent: the simple, soulful, almost country ballad in the style of "We've Got Tonight." "Roll Me Away," on the other hand, foreshadows a genre Seger would turn to with increasing frequency later in his career: the "rock tale." Here it's a story of a love that died as abruptly as it began, couched within the larger framework of one man's journey to find himself. Lyrically, it's an irresistibly compelling song--although it's admittedly pretty easy to miss the lyrics if you're focusing on the great beat (as I've been guilty of doing). This album has everything that makes Seger great: the simplicity and easy accessibility, the inspired lyrics, and--above all--that great Heart of America sound. It's one of his best efforts and a worthy addition to your collection.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Blistering Dispatches From The Recession's Front Lines, August 2, 2002
America was deep in economic recession when this record came out in 1982. The "Global Economy" was just beginning to emerge, taking jobs away from Detroit's auto workers. While Springsteen's Nebraska is usually listed as the work which best addressed the country's doubts at the time, I believe that Bob Seger came closer to getting it right: People WERE sad and scared, but they were also highly pissed off!

"Making Thunderbirds," "Boomtown Blues" and even "Little Victories" perfectly capture their righteous anger, but "Roll Me Away" is the classic here: A song obstensibly about escaping a dead-end town on a Harley and never looking back, it might just as well be talking about the abandonment of the American work ethic - and its accompanying values - by our people. But, in the end, the singer realizes that to abandon his home is also abandoning what he stands for. And so he starts back home, to "get it right."

The Distance is NOT a Night Moves, or Stranger In Town, but the addition of Roy Bittan (of Springsteen's E Street band) opens up the arrangements of the songs in ways not possible before. And the writing here has a true sense of wistfullness to it, as if Seger realized that the world he grew up in was leaving town for good...

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great classic rock & roll, February 1, 2000
Bob Seger may be the last great rock 'n roller for us old heads (read: his contemporaries). The Distance has some of his best work. It has some of the greatest hard driving rock ever to blast through the speakers. If played in a moving car, "Even Now" is guaranteed to increase your speed by at least ten MPH (actually, I once talked a state trooper out of a ticket by telling him it was the fault of the Bob Seger coming through the tape player!). "Roll Me Away" is the greatest song to accompany a motorcycle ride since "Born to be Wild". This album rates less than five stars, though, because as great as "Even Now", "Roll Me Away" and the classic "Shame on the Moon" are, the rest of the songs are adequate by comparison. Certainly worth the money, though, by any standards.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Remastered really stinks, November 5, 2011
By 
Scung (Rhode Island, USA) - See all my reviews
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When I saw the 2011 remastered version of Bob Seger The Distance I was excited to get this. What a disappointment. This cd is definitly not remastered.No comparison to early seger vol. 1 ,live bullet and nine tonight. The remastering on these 3 cd's are surpreme. 2 stars only because of amazon markets this as a remastered cd .iT'S NOT. Wasted my money.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Rollin with Bob, August 1, 2000
This was Bob Seger's 1980s "comeback" album (he had taken a three year hiatus). As such, there are some classic Seger performances on the record, including "Roll Me Away," one of his best songs, the cover tune "Shame on the Moon" and the rocking "Making Thunderbirds" and "Little Victories." If the album has a flaw it is that it lacks the rawness that characterized Seger's earlier music, particularly the twin classics "Night Moves" and "Live Bullet." Seger is still and first rate singer and an excellent performer and this album has enough good songs to make it worthwhile.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TOTALLY AWESOME! SEGER RULES!, February 23, 2000
By 
E.R. GREY BULL (POPLAR, MONTANA USA) - See all my reviews
This album is fine! Bob Seger rocks! On songs like "Shame On the Moon", are some of the best music i have heard in so long! Bob Seger seems to always been a great American rock God! Totally underrated! If you don't have this album-do pick it up! You won't be dissappointed.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Bob Seger The Distance Remastered on Demand Exclusive on Amazon, August 20, 2009
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I Had This Cassette The original Release on cd and Thanks To Amazon I Have The remastered cd Let me be perfectly candid with you THE REMASTERED VERSION BLOWS THEM ALL AWAY!!!!!! the distance has always been one of my favorites. Even if you have the original release in my opinion it doesnt compare to the remastered version.
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Distance
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