The Big Lad in the Windmill | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | It Bites |
Cover: | It Bites-Big Lad Windmill.jpg |
Released: | 25 August 1986 |
Genre: | Progressive rock |
Length: | 43:07 |
Label: | Virgin (UK), Geffen (US) |
Producer: | Alan Shacklock |
Next Title: | Once Around the World |
Next Year: | 1988 |
The Big Lad in the Windmill is the debut album of British progressive pop/rock band It Bites.
The album reached No. 35 in the UK album charts and produced three singles - "All in Red", "Calling All the Heroes" and "Whole New World". "Calling All the Heroes" and "Whole New World" both charted, although "Calling All the Heroes" was by far the more successful of the two, reaching No. 6 in the UK charts and remaining the band's biggest and only significant hit.[1]
Although marketed as a 1980s pop album, The Big Lad in the Windmill features an unusual mix of musical styles including pop, hard rock, Prince-style funk, power balladry and progressive rock, often all within the same song. The album also showcased the band's musical virtuosity, featuring multiple changes of dynamics and tempo plus prominent guitar and keyboard solos. The version of "Calling All the Heroes" included on the album is the full-length version rather than the better-known single edit, and features additional musical sections plus several false endings.
Paul Stump, in his 1997 History of Progressive Rock, called The Big Lad in the Windmill "stunning", citing its mix of "satirically clichéd cock-rock posturings ... with punkish timbral abrasiveness and a harmonic arsenal which recalled the great days of 1960s epic pop more graphically and wrenchingly than any of the 'subversive' new-poppers ever did." He made special note of how "Wanna Shout" repeatedly reintroduces a Prince-style riff with dramatic jerks in the tempo, making the tune danceable in an ingeniously perverse way.[2]
UK/European version
North American version