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Christ the Album

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Download links and information about Christ the Album by Crass. This album was released in 1982 and it belongs to Rock, Punk, Alternative genres. It contains 34 tracks with total duration of 01:35:07 minutes.

Artist: Crass
Release date: 1982
Genre: Rock, Punk, Alternative
Tracks: 34
Duration: 01:35:07
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Have a Nice Day 2:44
2. Mother Love 2:52
3. Nineteen Eighty Bore 4:09
4. I Know There Is Love 2:47
5. Beg Your Pardon 3:07
6. Birth Control 'n'Rock'n'Roll 2:59
7. Reality Whitewash 3:28
8. It's the Greatest Working Class Rip-off 3:21
9. Deadhead 2:16
10. You Can Be Who? 3:01
11. Buy Now Pay As You Go 2:22
12. Rival Tribal Revel Rebel (Pt. 2) 3:09
13. Bumhooler 3:19
14. Sentiment (White Feathers) 3:36
15. Major General Despair 4:34
16. Banned from the Roxy/The Sound of One Hand 4:30
17. Punk Is Dead 1:58
18. Nagasaki Nightmare 4:31
19. Darling/Bata Motel Blues 2:15
20. Berkertex Bribe/Fold It In Half 2:40
21. Big Hands/Heart-Throb of the Mortuary 2:14
22. Bumhooler 2:21
23. Big a Little A 4:26
24. First Woman 1:05
25. Arlington 73 1:24
26. Bomb Plus Bomb Tape 4:04
27. Contaminational Power 1:48
28. I Ain't Thick 1:49
29. G's Song 0:29
30. Securicor 1:41
31. I Can't Stand It 1:48
32. Shaved Women/A Part of Life 3:21
33. Do They Owe Us a Living 1:22
34. So What / Salt'n'Pepper 3:37

Details

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Released with unplanned irony as the Falklands War raged — an event that would provide grist for the band's eventual masterwork, Yes Sir I Will — Christ, another two-album half-studio/half-live set like Stations of the Crass, once again aims to take no prisoners. Ratcheting up the continued "leave no stone unturned" lyrical approach that characterized the group from the start, Crass again sounds like the group's about to explode in eight million directions. Ignorant takes over the lead vocal role again, his rough ramalama bitterly leading the charge against the loathed Thatcher government and the society that allowed it to come into power. Libertine, here appearing as Peeve Libido, adds backing vocals while De Vivre takes the lead on "Birth Control" and "Sentiment." Free's guitar work roars along with the usual vim, as does the Pete Wright aka Sybil Right/Rimbaud rhythm section, while continual spiking of the musical punch via production or sonic collages, or even almost power pop catchiness at points, prevents things from being one note. "Reality Whitewash" even has a swelling string and brass combination to propel it along. Mock and real found-sound bites, from official statements to slams at Crass itself, pepper the studio side as bridges between songs or concurrently running elements of the tunes themselves. While hints had always been present in earlier songs, Crass collectively starts wearing their hearts on their sleeves even more than before; "I Know There Is Love" is another all-encompassing rejection of societal roles in favor of a real, untainted feeling, at once impolite and passionate. The live material, recorded at a June 1981 show, is interspersed with a variety of material from other sources, including more found-sound/media snippets and, in an interesting nod to the past, two cuts from the group's very first time in a studio.