This Is Big Audio Dynamite

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (84 ratings)
This Is Big Audio Dynamite album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 43:13

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Outstanding debut

JNathan

Listening to this 25 years later, it's easy to see why Mick Jones was sacked by The Clash...he was doing better stuff. There's not a wasted moment on here. That said, I think their second album, No. 10, Upping Street) (produced by...Joe Strummer?) is even better.

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Classic and Visionary

tommartin

This review is based on the vinyl I bought in 1985, plus the CD purchased in the 90's. Ground-breaking work not only musically (mixing genres and setting the stage for electronic music of the 90's) but lyrically as well, touching on AIDS, corporations, African colonialism... The songs still stand up all these years later.

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Excellent

Muse8

Excellent. Still the best BAD album. The best elements of the Clash with dub/electronic production. Clever lyrics and smart productions.

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Awesome!!

drjeckyl

I completely forgot how awesome this band was. Genius!! Definitely give a listen to E=MC2 and the Bottom Line

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Blazing a Trail...

curehead

Mick and crew were pioneers in using samples...yes, using samples before most even understood what they were. This album is an audio collage of magnificent proportions...simply beautiful.

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Think Of It As "The Clash Goes Futurisitc."

Godozo

With Combat Rock, the band was working their way more towards epic, cinematic songs which tended to create whole worlds more than pick at issues and thoughts. Mick Jones' getting the boot from the clash gave him license to take those tendencies to a whole new level, with loops, samples (including the first reputed guitar samples), and strong lyrics on such subjects as Aparthied, AIDS and Japanese Culture amongst other subjects. There is not a weak song on the platter, and this release (along with the misbegotten, misrecorded Cut The Crap) signaled the end of The Clash as anything but an icon of the past.

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They Say All Music Guide

Elbowed out of the Clash, Mick Jones responded forcefully with Big Audio Dynamite, a modernist audio-terrorist outfit whose 1985 debut, This Is Big Audio Dynamite, seemed all the more futuristic when compared to Joe Strummer’s reductionist retro rejiggering of the Clash on Cut the Crap. Strummer may have been intent on shedding every experimental element of the Clash’s prime, but Jones, in collaboration with longtime friend filmmaker Don Letts, picked up where Sandinista! left off, anchoring BAD in dance and rap, building the group’s debut on layers of samples and drum machines. As is often the case, what was once forward-looking seems inextricably tied to its time in retrospect and the clanking electro rhythms, Sergio Leone samples, chicken-scratch guitars, bleating synths, and six-minute songs of This Is Big Audio Dynamite evoke 1985 in a way few other records do. Nevertheless, BAD’s boldness remains impressive, even visionary, pointing toward the cut-n-paste masterpieces of the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, and since Jones did not abandon his innate gift for hooks — if anything, he found ways to create rhythmic hooks as well as melodic ones — it’s quite accessible for an album that is, at its core, avant-rock. [Legacy’s 2010 double-disc expansion of This Is Big Audio Dynamite remasters the original eight-track LP and adds a second 12-track CD. Befitting BAD’s futuristic dance bent, almost all of these are 12" remixes of the album’s singles -- “Medicine Show,” “E=MC2,” and “The Bottom Line” -- including no less than four previously unreleased mixes -- and there’s also the outtake “Electric Vandal,” plus the B-sides “Albert Einstein Meets the Human Beatbox” and “This is Big Audio Dynamite,” with every last one of these 12 songs extending the modernist sampledelia of the album proper.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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