Crossing The Red Sea With The Adverts

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 25   Total Length: 69:26

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Great album, crap encoding

bclayj

This is a fantastic, seminal album by one of the forgotten punk bands BUT the encoding here sucks! Most tracks were less than 190 kbps VBR, and the live tracks sound terrible. Maybe still worth the 6 bucks, maybe not if you can find it with better encoding elsewhere.

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The Adverts

Exiled_from_FLA

Great album. This is the first album of theirs that I have heard, and it did not disappoint.

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They Say All Media Guide

A devastating debut, one of the finest albums not only of the punk era, but of the 1970s as a whole, Crossing the Red Sea With the Adverts was the summation of a year’s worth of gigging, honing a repertoire that — jagged, jarring, and frequently underplayed though it was — nevertheless bristled with hits, both commercial and cultural. “No Time to Be 21,” “One Chord Wonders,” and “Bored Teenagers” were already established among the most potent rallying cries of the entire new wave, catch phrases for a generation that had no time for anthems; “Bombsite Boy,” “Safety in Numbers,” and “Great British Mistake” offered salvation to the movement’s disaffected hordes; and the whole thing was cut with such numbingly widescreen energy that, even with the volume down, it still shakes the foundations. The band’s original vision saw a rerecording of “Gary Gilmore’s Eyes,” a Top 20 hit during summer 1977, included on the album — it was dropped (for space considerations) at the last minute. Several early ’80s reissues of the album attempted to rectify the omission by appending the single version to side two of the LP, but it was 1983 before the rerecording itself made it out, as a minor U.K. hit single, and 1998 before Smith himself was finally able to restore Red Sea to its original glory, with “Gary Gilmore’s Eyes” slotted in immediately before “Bombsite Boy,” and another absentee, “New Day Dawning,” following “Safety in Numbers.” This revised CD release also wrapped up the remainder of the Adverts’ 1977-era singles as additional bonus tracks; in 2002, the so-called “Ultimate Edition” of Red Sea appended a further six tracks, drawn from a riotous live show in early 1978, effectively doubling the original album’s length. – Dave Thompson

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