This Is Big Audio Dynamite Explained

This Is Big Audio Dynamite
Type:Studio album
Artist:Big Audio Dynamite
Cover:BAD_This_is_BAD.jpg
Released:[1]
Studio:
Genre:
Label:Columbia
Producer:Mick Jones
Next Title:No. 10, Upping St.
Next Year:1986

This Is Big Audio Dynamite is the debut studio album by the English band Big Audio Dynamite, led by Mick Jones, the former lead guitarist and co-lead vocalist of the Clash. It was released on 1 November 1985 by Columbia Records. The album peaked at No. 27 on the UK Albums Chart and at No. 103 on the Billboard 200, and was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). Three singles were released from the album, all of which charted in the UK. "The Bottom Line" released a month before the album, barely made the Top 100, peaking at No. 97, becoming their lowest charting single, whereas its follow-up single "E=MC²" released in 1986, became their only Top 20 hit, peaking at No. 11, and becoming their best-selling single. The final single from the album, "Medicine Show" also released in 1986, became their last single to chart within the Top 40 under the original line-up, peaking at No. 29. The music video for "Medicine Show", directed by Don Letts, featured two other former members of the Clash, Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon as police officers as well as John Lydon of the Sex Pistols and Public Image Ltd.

A remastered Legacy Edition was released in 2010 with a second disc composed of alternate mixes and versions. In 2016, independent vinyl reissue label Intervention Records reissued the album on 180-gram vinyl.[2]

Album cover

The album's cover depicts most of the band dressed in cowboy clothing as a four piece band, minus keyboardist Dan Donovan who took and designed the photo.

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the This Is Big Audio Dynamite liner notes.[3]

Big Audio Dynamite

Production and artwork

Samples used on the album

Medicine Show

Sampled liberally throughout this song are sound bites from four motion pictures, three of them Spaghetti Westerns. This list is based on order of appearance.

Sony

E=MC²

Sudden Impact

Notes and References

  1. 26 October 1985. News Digest. Record Mirror. 37. 6 October 2022.
  2. Web site: This Is Big Audio Dynamite 180G LP – Intervention Records. www.interventionrecords.com. en-US. 2018-05-16.
  3. This Is Big Audio Dynamite. Big Audio Dynamite. 1985. Columbia Records. CD booklet.
  4. http://www.esmark.net/bad/bad-samples01.htm This Is Big Audio Dynamite – esmark.net.