Blaze of Glory (Joe Jackson album)

Blaze of Glory
Studio album by
Released17 April 1989
RecordedNovember–December 1988
Studio
GenreRock
Length57:10
LabelA&M
ProducerJoe Jackson
Joe Jackson chronology
Tucker
(1988)
Blaze of Glory
(1989)
Stepping Out: The Very Best of Joe Jackson
(1990)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic
New Musical Express6/10
Q
Record Mirror
Rolling Stone

Blaze of Glory is the tenth studio album by English rock musician Joe Jackson, released in 1989. Jackson has stated that the album and the songs themselves were an examination of his generation as the 1980s were ending, ranging from the optimism of the 1950s ("Tomorrow's World") to the politics of terrorism ("Rant and Rave") and the Cold War ("Evil Empire"), to yuppies ("Discipline") and rockers who are well past their prime ("Nineteen Forever"). The title track compares the legacy of a classic rock musician who died young ("...went out in a blaze of glory") with the current wannabes ("They're just cartoons" who "think they're Superman" but "can't even fly").

Although Blaze of Glory was a modest seller, the resultant single "Nineteen Forever" reached No. 4 in the US Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart. Jackson felt the album was one of his best efforts and toured to perform and support it with an eleven piece band in the U.S. and Europe from June to November 1989, and was disappointed with both the critical and commercial reaction as well as his record label's lack of support.