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Big Country - The Crossing (1983)

Posted By : Virginia Plain | Date : 03 Feb 2010 18:12:51 | Comments : 5 |
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Big Country - The Crossing (1983)
Flac (tracks)+CUE+LOG | 326 MB | Covers (300 dpi PNG)


Kurt Loder, Rolling Stone, Sep 15, 1983 wrote:
Here's a big-noise guitar band from Britain that blows the knobs off all the synth-pop diddlers and fake-funk frauds who are cluttering up the charts these days. Big Country mops up the fops with an air-raid guitar sound that's unlike anything else around, anywhere, and if their debut album promises more than the four musicians can quite deliver at this stage in their young career, what it does deliver – especially on the Top Ten U.K. hit "Fields of Fire," one of the great, resounding anthems of this or any other year–is sufficiently scintillating to preclude any extended critical carps about the group's occasional lack of focus. At this point, the big picture is clear enough.

Like the Irish band U2 (with whom they share young, guitar-wise producer Steve Lillywhite), Big Country has no use for synthesizers, and their extraordinary twin-guitar sound should make The Crossing a must-own item for rock die-hards. Generally dispensing with power chords, the group's two lead guitarists, Scotsmen Stuart Adamson (formerly of the Skids) and Bruce Watson, whip up skirling, bagpipelike single-string riffs that, on such crackling tracks as "Fields of Fire," "In a Big Country" and the grandly martial "Harvest Home," are a nonstop, spine-tingling delight. The slightly out-of-kilter guitar lines intertwine into a trebly alarm that has all the galvanic urgency of an ambulance careening down a darkened city street–it's really something to hear.

There's more, too. Adding oomph down below is the muscular rhythm section of bassist Tony Butler and drummer Mark Brzezicki (both were featured on Pete Townshend's last two solo albums, and Butler appeared on the Pretenders' "Back on the Chain Gang" single). Brzezicki, in particular, is more than just a sideman, adding both mainline whomp and wailing fills on all the best tracks. The group's vocal sound (all four members sing) is identifiably human–a refreshing concept–and though Adamson's leads sometimes lack nuance; one suspects he'll get the hang of it. At his full-throated best, he already approximates some of the arena-reaching, emotional power of a young Bruce Springsteen, and that'll do for starters.

If The Crossing were all blast and bellow, it would still be a gripping LP. But several of the ten songs here–all blessedly free of the cheap, received decadence that disfigures so much current Anglo pop–are lyrically stirring in their own right. The brotherly, against-the-trend optimism of "In a Big Country" ("...that's a desperate way to look/For someone who is still a child") is mightily appealing in an era of witless gloom mongering, and the tenderness of the conception of "Chance," a tale of mismarried youth ("...you played chance with a lifetime's romance/And the price was far too long"), is unusual for a band of such hard musical instincts. Even when they address the common helplessness felt in the face of impending nuclear apocalypse in "1000 Stars" ("It's not between you and me/But we are losing"), Big Country aims for the heart, not mere pop hyperbole.

The Crossing is not without flaws: the tone setups cause the guitars to lapse into murk at times, subverting the power of the playing, and the lyrics are occasionally so private–or so poorly thought out–as to be inscrutable. But the big sound is truly unique, and the best songs speak to real subjects.


Tom Demalon, All Music Guide wrote:
With producer Steve Lillywhite at the helm, Scotland's Big Country managed to deliver earnest, socially conscious arena anthems in a similar vein to U2 and the Alarm. The twist was their trademark bagpipe sound, achieved through the use of E-Bow. The unique sound of "In a Big Country" garnered the band considerable attention and a Top 20 single in the U.S. The Crossing, however, is an album whose richness goes beyond the single. The more subdued "Chance" is more sparse and its personal lyrics are every bit as heartfelt as the more populist-inclined anthems like the wonderful "The Storm" or the thundering "Fields of Fire." The lyrics are straightforward and, despite the grand themes of many of the tracks, manage to steer clear of being overly pretentious. While this album earned the band a gold record, Big Country's sound and image (reinforced by the members tartan, checked shirts) resulted in them being tagged a novelty and they never duplicated their initial success in America.


Amazon.com wrote:
I was going through some things in storage and found my old The Crossing tape. Popped the tape in my tapedeck and it's been there ever since for the last three months playing it to and from work. It's a solid album thoughout and still stands up to the test of time. Thet have a unique sound early U2 but with a unique bagpipe guitar sound on this album, which was unusual at the time because new wave was the rage at the time. When I bought this originally it was for In A Big Country, but now my favorite is Close Action especially the guitar solo and drums. I've just picked up a few of their later albums that I missed out on, and it's been like rediscovering an old friend. Do yourself a favor and pick up this album and others for one of the most under-recongized rock bands in recent times. They've matured over time and it's a shame that (1) they didn't get much recognition in the states after their first album The Crossing, and (2) the recent passing of lead singer Stuart Adamson. I was looking forward to seeing them in concert in the future but it looks now I will just have to settle for the next best thing...what they recorded when Adamson was alive.


Amazon.com also wrote:
I was going through some things in storage and found my old The Crossing tape. Popped the tape in my tapedeck and it's been there ever since for the last three months playing it to and from work. It's a solid album thoughout and still stands up to the test of time. Thet have a unique sound early U2 but with a unique bagpipe guitar sound on this album, which was unusual at the time because new wave was the rage at the time. Once you listen to the song samples you will get what I mean by their sound. When I bought this originally it was for In A Big Country, but now my favorite is Close Action especially the guitar solo and drums. I've just picked up a few of their later albums that I missed out on, and it's been like rediscovering an old friend. Do yourself a favor and pick up this album and others for one of the most under-recongized rock bands in recent times. They've matured over time and it's a shame that (1) they didn't get much recognition in the states after their first album The Crossing, and (2) the recent passing of lead singer Stuart Adamson. I was looking forward to seeing them in concert in the future but it looks now I will just have to settle for the next best thing...what they recorded when Adamson was alive.






Tracklisting:
1. In a Big Country (4:45)
2. Inwards (4:38)
3. Chance (4:25)
4. 1000 Stars (3:54)
5. The Storm (6:22)
6. Harvest Home (4:21)
7. Lost Patrol (4:53)
8. Close Action (4:16)
9. Fields of Fire (3:32)
10. Porrohman (7:54)

Total Time: 49:00

Line-Up:
- Stuart Adamson / guitar, piano, vocals, e-bow
- Bruce Watson / guitar, mandolin, sitar, vocals, e-bow
- Tony Butler / bass, vocals
- Mark Brzezicki / drums, percussion, vocals

Pressing: Mercury/Polygram/Phonogram 812 870-2

EAC Log
Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 4 from 23. January 2008

EAC extraction logfile from 9. August 2009, 6:13

Big Country / The Crossing

Used drive : SONY DVD RW DRU-840A Adapter: 1 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 6
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Installed external ASPI interface
Gap handling : Appended to previous track

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 320 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\FLAC\flac.exe
Additional command line options : -5 -V -T "ARTIST=%a" -T "TITLE=%t" -T "ALBUM=%g" -T "DATE=%y" -T "TRACKNUMBER=%n" -T "GENRE=%m" -T "COMMENT=Exact Audio Copy (Secure Mode)" %s


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
---------------------------------------------------------
1 | 0:00.32 | 4:44.63 | 32 | 21394
2 | 4:45.20 | 4:38.00 | 21395 | 42244
3 | 9:23.20 | 4:24.72 | 42245 | 62116
4 | 13:48.17 | 3:53.58 | 62117 | 79649
5 | 17:42.00 | 6:21.42 | 79650 | 108266
6 | 24:03.42 | 4:20.53 | 108267 | 127819
7 | 28:24.20 | 4:53.37 | 127820 | 149831
8 | 33:17.57 | 4:16.08 | 149832 | 169039
9 | 37:33.65 | 3:32.17 | 169040 | 184956
10 | 41:06.07 | 7:53.58 | 184957 | 220489


Track 1

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\01 - In a Big Country.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:02.32

Peak level 91.7 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC B10F4B02
Copy CRC B10F4B02
Accurately ripped (confidence 27) [6DB9946C]
Copy OK

Track 2

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\02 - Inwards.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:00.10

Peak level 87.6 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC C5A094C6
Copy CRC C5A094C6
Accurately ripped (confidence 27) [18C694F3]
Copy OK

Track 3

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\03 - Chance.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:01.04

Peak level 92.5 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 4D9529B8
Copy CRC 4D9529B8
Accurately ripped (confidence 27) [89F6F816]
Copy OK

Track 4

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\04 - 1000 Stars.wav

Peak level 96.0 %
Track quality 99.9 %
Test CRC B6B6477F
Copy CRC B6B6477F
Accurately ripped (confidence 27) [45BB266D]
Copy OK

Track 5

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\05 - The Storm.wav

Peak level 93.6 %
Track quality 99.9 %
Test CRC 0425DB22
Copy CRC 0425DB22
Accurately ripped (confidence 27) [6FA814AE]
Copy OK

Track 6

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\06 - Harvest Home.wav

Peak level 87.8 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC A8AF53E3
Copy CRC A8AF53E3
Accurately ripped (confidence 26) [4E3D944B]
Copy OK

Track 7

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\07 - Lost Patrol.wav

Peak level 90.7 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 508EE3E6
Copy CRC 508EE3E6
Accurately ripped (confidence 27) [8245B6E3]
Copy OK

Track 8

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\08 - Close Action.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:00.72

Peak level 85.1 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 9C4E8B33
Copy CRC 9C4E8B33
Accurately ripped (confidence 26) [9FBDC107]
Copy OK

Track 9

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\09 - Fields of Fire.wav

Peak level 95.4 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC CF28B71B
Copy CRC CF28B71B
Accurately ripped (confidence 26) [926BFC0C]
Copy OK

Track 10

Filename C:\FlowerJewel\EAC Ripped\Big Country - The Crossing (1983) [FLAC] {W. Germany Atomic}\10 - Porrohman.wav

Peak level 90.5 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 7B61737D
Copy CRC 7B61737D
Accurately ripped (confidence 23) [A3485619]
Copy OK


All tracks accurately ripped

No errors occurred

End of status report



Available at the following links:

Part 1 | Part 2

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Posted By: lobomiau Date: 03 Feb 2010 21:42:02
Another great post, thank you very much
Posted By: devhead Date: 04 Feb 2010 20:15:21
Aaaaah! I can't tell tell you how much I miss this album. Thanks a million!!
Posted By: Dr. Robert Date: 05 Feb 2010 05:16:14
Thanks a bunch
Posted By: albyee Date: 28 Apr 2010 23:04:20
cheers that reminds me of my youth back in the early 80's. It's a shame they haven't done anything like this album afterwards, really a great album this. Thank you very much!
Posted By: diluiz Date: 28 Jul 2010 13:02:18
Thanks a lot. One of the great discs of the 80's.
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