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Driving to Damascus

Big Country

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Big Country

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Driving to Damascus Big Country 3:58 $1.29 View In iTunes
2 Dive Into Me Big Country 5:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 See You Big Country 3:50 $0.69 View In iTunes
4 Perfect World Big Country 4:02 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Somebody Else Big Country 4:04 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Fragile Thing Big Country 4:33 $0.69 View In iTunes
7 The President Slipped and Fell Big Country 2:57 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 Devil In the Eye Big Country 4:15 $0.69 View In iTunes
9 Trouble the Waters Big Country 4:10 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Bella Big Country 3:34 $1.29 View In iTunes
11 Your Spirit to Me Big Country 5:13 $0.69 View In iTunes
12 Grace Big Country 5:10 $0.69 View In iTunes

Album Review

Big Country's 1995 album, Why the Long Face, was a very tough act to follow. But they succeeded brilliantly with their first full-length studio album, Driving to Damascus. This is one of their finest moments, full of trademark Big Country sounds (the guitar, the heavy beat, and Adamson's fantastic vocals). What sets this CD apart from their other releases is the strong use of melody tied together with heartbreaking stories and well-constructed arrangements. Listening to the harmony vocals melt with the guitars in "Fragile Thing," it's difficult not to be moved. Adamson has never sounded better, and the band is tighter than ever before. Hearing this album, it is hard to believe that the band was celebrating their 20-year anniversary and still sounding so fresh and excited. This is a group who have not mellowed out, but are able to structure melodic, driving songs. There are a couple of interesting points with this album. First, Ray Davies (of the Kinks) co-wrote two songs with Adamson (the brilliant "Somebody Else," and the wonderful "Devil in the Eye"). To hear these, one would never guess that there was any involvement from Davies. The songs fit for Big Country, but would be out of place on a Davies' or Kinks' album. Also, the CD appears on the Track Records label (famous for Hendrix and the Who, to name two). It seems fitting that Big Country is signed to the resurrected label — it just fits. It is the mixture of old and new that helps Big Country form their own distinct (and brilliant) sound. This CD is highly recommended.

Recent Customer Reviews

Not their best... Not their worst....
     
by karlt10

Good for rounding out a Big Country collection, but don't let it scare you from trying their better works. This album is thin and seems to be reaching for adult contemporary air play. Doesn't have the depth, originality or power of earlier albums. Too bad it was the final 'official' work.

It's ok..
     
by firemancarl

This album is OK. I was one of the original memebers of the offical BC webpage and remember talking to Bruce Watson and him saying that this would be totally different than any BC record to date. It was, and unfortunately, it left me wishing for a return to the "Mercury years" when BC release The Crossing, Steeltown( quite possible the best BC long player. It just gets better everytime I listen to it!) and The Seer. The best traack on here are Perfect World ( a better chance at success for radio play than Fragile Thing in my opinion.) See You is fantastic, pure emotion and heartbreak. BC never got the credit they deserved and were an original band in a time of rehashed synthpop in the early 80s. A breath of fresh air. RIP Stuart.

At Their Best
     
by 5stringer

It is most unfortunate that this was to be their last album, because it is the best and most complete record that Big Country released. Stuat is sorely missed, by a world that needs more music like this.

Biography

Formed: 1981 in Dunfermline, Scotland

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s

With their ringing, bagpipe-like guitars and the anthemic songs of frontman Stuart Adamson, Scotland's Big Country emerged as one of the most distinctive and promising new rock bands of the early '80s, scoring a major hit with their debut album, The Crossing; though the group's critical and commercial...
Full Bio

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