Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)

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"Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)"
Single by Cold Chisel
from the album Breakfast at Sweethearts
A-side "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)"
B-side "Georgia on my Mind"
Released September 1978
Format 7" vinyl
Recorded Albert Studios, 1978
Genre Rock
Label WEA
Writer(s) Don Walker, Jimmy Barnes
Producer(s) Richard Batchens
Cold Chisel singles chronology
"Khe Sanh"
(1978)
"Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)"
(1978)
"Breakfast at Sweethearts"
(1979)

"Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)" was a 1978 single from Australian rock band Cold Chisel. Written by keyboardist Don Walker and vocalist Jimmy Barnes, it was released as a single in 1978, peaking at number 65 on the Australian charts. It appeared as a track on the 1979 album Breakfast at Sweethearts.[1]

Details

The single, "Goodbye (Astrid Goodbye)" preceded the album Breakfast at Sweethearts by some months, and was recorded when demos were being done for the album. The single is markedly different from the later album version.[2]

A fast-paced rocker, lyricist Walker said the song was written because the band, "needed a set finisher."[3] Described as, "the band's blazing showstopper,"[4] it was often played as the last song in concerts, and also on the live album Swingshift.

Lyrically, the song is written from the perspective of a husband leaving his wife. Opening with the lines, "Open up the door Astrid, cause I'm comin' down the stairs / And I ain't gonna listen to no more pissin' around", the three verses are all addressed to the wife. The lyrics were originally written for a completely different song that was sung by Ian Moss before being given to Barnes to write matching music. Walker later said he knew no-one named Astrid, and he had probably heard the name in relation to Bill Wyman's wife.[2]

Critic Toby Creswell described the song as a rudimentary 12-bar thrash. He said the song is, "full of wit and attitude. The Narrator lets fly his scorn for the woman's lifestyle. All the bottled-up anger spews out. Taking three chords and a simple story and transforming them into a unique and confronting piece like this takes real genius."[5]

Although included in Cold Chisel's greatest hits collections, the single received little airplay at the time of release.[6]

References

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