Big Smash

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (21 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 28   Total Length: 93:41

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TOO MANY GREAT SONGS TO LIST!

THECLEANINGGUY

GET THEM ALL!!! THIS GUY IS THE BOMB!

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Scruffy Hero

fatanky

Like Yossei, I have this still on brown vinyl. Went to see him live in Southend during punk days and he was terrific; I think he was supported by the Electric Bluebirds, another great, long forgotten band. So many great songs and post-ironic before we even knew ironic, this man should have been a superstar, and to some of us he was..and still is!

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Reconnez Wreckless

Yossel

I once saw Wreckless walking down a London street yonks ago, and bought his first albumn on brown vinyl. Scruffy, voice at times like he eats 100 Watt bulbs with his cornflakes, at others like he has carrots stuffed up his nostrils, but sounds great on your MP3 or driving on the Motorway. Some classics (Whole Wide World, Reconnez Cherie) and a few lesser known numbers. The great 'Joe Meek' Is on Donovan of Trash Albumn on Emusic. Take you pick.

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They Say All Media Guide

It’s entirely possible that the title to Wreckless Eric’s second album Big Smash! was meant sincerely, it’s entirely possible that it was an ironic joke — such is the charm of Wreckless is that both answers are entirely plausible. The thing is, the truth doesn’t matter — as Eric reveals in the liner notes to the 2007 expanded reissue, he didn’t even think of the title, merely chose it from two options offered by Stiff. Nevertheless, Big Smash! sure sounds like an attempt to have a big pop smash, something that Wreckless wryly admits with the opening “A Pop Song,” a sly jibe at the record company asking for a hit, with Eric acquiescing to their demands with a song as sardonic and hooky as his one-time producer, Nick Lowe. But Big Smash!, overall, sees Wreckless Eric toning down his sense of humor considerably while tightening up his attack, which makes this a very different affair than the debut or his early singles. Those were wild, unruly, unhinged — truly, they were reckless, where this is just eccentric, but that doesn’t mean it’s tamed. In fact, a cleaned-up Wreckless Eric still packs a powerful punch, as evidenced by his rampaging cover of “Break My Mind,” and the cleaner attack highlights his skills as a pop songwriter, capable of writing tunes that are as barbed lyrically as they are musically, but also capable of a surprising sweetness. It’s hard not to draw comparisons to the Stiff alumni Elvis Costello and Nick Lowe, since the music is reminiscent of Costello’s new wave pop and his style is closer to Lowe’s, but Eric is certainly his own unique thing, which Big Smash! makes clear in a way that his debut didn’t. Again, clarity is the key here — the magic of the debut is that it was a drunken mess, but here there’s no debris, just pure pop and rock & roll, and it’s every bit as addictive as his debut, and it’s more cohesive, too, so it may just trump it in that regard. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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