Agree Stuart was a brilliant lyricist, singer and extremely extremely underrated guitarist The band was incredibly talented as well. He could write a beautiful ballad as well as a Hard driving rock song and they’re covers of other peoples work was incredible I believe their version of rockin in the free world is better than Neil’s version It’s a shame they were’nt supported here in the US because they’re one of you best bands of the last 4 decades
I turned 50 some weeks ago, I love Look Away just as much as the first time I saw it on my vhs tape which was "Now thats what I call music #15" I believe!
I saw them live twice, and they rocked live! Stuart would leave the stage and come down and shake hands , he did mine, and shot me that cheeky smile! they were different, and had a sound! he loved the audience! and could literally play anything, Laurel and Hardy theme tune??? he did that! The WARRIOR POET, GUITAR IN HAND, HE PLAYED AND SANG ABOUT HIS NATIVE LAND, (yes he was born in England) but grew up in Scotland! he sang with heart, he sang with fire! what he said you knew it was true! A POET OF HIS GENERATION, A WRITER OF GREAT SONGS! HIS LEGACY! CHANCE, AND EILEDON , my faves! GONE WAY TOO SOON!
'The Crossing' album was an absolute masterpiece. 'Steeltown' was a brilliant follow-up. I love the early stuff. Stuart, Bruce, Tony and Mark were all accomplished musicians and together they created a unique and original sound. My fav band of the 80s. I wore tartan/check shirts back in the day.
@@riskydigitsta1794 I think In a Big Country is actually the weakest track on The Crossing, though it's still excellent. Where the Rose is Sown, Like a Shadow, One Great Thing and The Seer from Steeltown and The Seer are also quite magnificent.
As an American of Scottish decent who speaks a bit of Gaelic (Scots and Irish) I was enthralled when the song In a Big Country came out. I had gone back to university at that time and here was this driving, riveting, uplifting song by a band with music that literally spanned the centuries! It certainly drove my homework as I felt like i could conquer anything while listening to it! So happy you brought this wonderful song and the band Big Country up! I will let you in on a little secret now that I've known all this time about this song: it's not just Celtic-sounding, there is gaelic in it! Only one word, the word you mentioned that nobody knows what it is unless you know the slang. 'Ea', which sounds like 'sha' to an American ear, is the gaelic slang equivalent of 'YEAH!' In American, so Stuart Adamson is shouting gaelic enthusiasm all over the song! No wonder it sounds so bright and happy! Thanks for the memories! Slán! ('Bye!)
Absolutely correct, not Scots Gaelic at all! plus we say Gaelic like you'd pronounce garlic bit without the 'r' 😂 Nice pronunciation of the town Dunfermline! 😮 broken up Dun ferm line... say it as one word and as if there's no e ... Dunfermlin But hey apart from that..there's a lot of Scottish place names that we Scots get wrong 😅 Big Country, such a brilliant band!
This song literally helped me quit my job and get serious about my own business. I used to run on my lunch hour and listen to music. I had been wrestling with leaving a job I was burnt out on but that offered security, or stepping out to pursue a less stable but infinitely more satisfying line of work. There was a nature/exercise track that ran behind my place of work and along a wash. It was full of hills and curves and at times you can't see the road, just desert. Every lunch hour I would use the entire break to push my running limits and totally disconnect from my very stressful job. I would think and pray and listen to music as I ran as a way to reset my brain to have a better afternoon. I'd been doing this for a few months and I still couldn't get past my worry about quitting and leaving a known paycheck behind, but my dissatisfaction was getting intense. It was a Friday and I was pressing myself pretty hard to finish up the week and I was almost done with my run back back to work when Big Country came on. I love that song and decided to use it to help me power my run up the final hills for the day. Just as my buildings were coming in to sight and it was the final hill at the end, the lines "--I thought the pain and truth were things that really mattered, but you can't stay here when every single hope you had shattered ". With the last word my foot hit the top of the hill and I was staring directly at my work building. It may sound strange but I honestly believe that was the direct answer to my prayer for direction. It was the "can't stay here" while looking at my work that finally convinced me to leave. I put in my notice the next Monday and I've been way happier since!
Very cool. I love to hear when people aren't afraid to step out on "nudges from God". Been there & done that a time or two and have yet to regret it. 👍✌️🙏
Big Country are my favorite band of all time. I was instantly a fan the first time I heard The Crossing. I had borrowed the tape from my best friend and I was alone in my house. I played the album cranked up on my parents stereo, and I was blown away. The music spoke to me, and just seemed to be the music I had always been looking for. One of my biggest regrets is that I never got to see them live. I missed them on The Crossing tour (with Wang Chung opening)when they came to near to my town. I have all their albums along with many EP’s and 12 inch singles. They will always be number one in my heart. RIP Stuart Adamson it’s a tragedy you left us so young.
I got lucky and got to see them in 1990... I saw Bruce and Mark a few years ago too, playing all the hits. I was heartbroken when I heard about Stuarts passing.
Big Country’s music is so high-energy that playing it on my home stereo always creates the risk that I’m going to break something in my house. // Saw them in concert in the late 90’s in Dublin, Ireland where they still had a huge, passionate following. The band rocked as hard as ever. The crowd was ecstatic. Stuart was beaming. It was an incredible experience.
I ran into Adamson a couple of times through mutual acquaintances while he was living in Nashville and fronting The Raphaels. Likeable guy, but sadly had some personal issues that ultimately got the best of him. In the end, Stuart lost that hope he sang about. It was a sad day when I heard that he passed, even though we weren't close. Big Country had a one-of-a-kind sound.
I had just started working in radio in New Zealand when the classic In A Big Country came out. And even though it only reached the 30s in the charts here, it has amazing longevity. It's now 2023 and it STILL gets big airplay on the station I am on now. 40 years of this song and it still sounds as fresh as it did back then.
Finally! Adam, been waiting on this FOREVER!!! I think I emailed you several years ago for this request. I always loved Big Country and sadly they weren’t that big in the US but should have. So many epic songs that most Americans don’t even know. Thank you for this one!
Love Big Country. What a fantastic band with such a unique sound. Stuart is greatly missed and was a brilliant musician. Their first few albums are special.
When I heard this song the first time, it hit me how different it was from everything else that was out. You couldn’t put these guys into a particular box and you still can’t today. Being different back in the 1980s meant it was hard to market a band and I think that’s what happened. If they were coming up today, they’d be bigger stars.
I have to say every time I hear this song it hits me.... It's a masterpiece... The energy and the sound was ahead of its time and frankly it's timeless. People could not appreciate the genius.... I love '80s music because it was a fairly narrow band of sounds... But at the same time that is one of the detriments in hindsight.
There albums were amazing...their live shows were like a celebration. The Live at the Barrowlands concert recorded by the BBC for New Years eve was the pinnacle of live concert video for me - energetic, sweaty and emotional from start to finish. Legends
This band is one of the best bands to ever come out. Where do I begin and end, classic sound Great debut "The crossing " ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS BAND Stuart Adamson what a songwriter guitarist. CHANCE is my favourite. THEY WHERE NEVER ONE HIT WONDERS THEY WHERE TOO GOOD FOR THE CHARTS. STUART YOU WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN ❤️
I was a high school freshman living in Albany, New York. The first time I heard the song was on MTV. I was hooked right away. The sound, the drums, guitars, and the feeling it brought went through your body. There was nothing like it. When you close your eyes their music brings you to a different place living in a story. I got The Crossing (record) for Christmas 1983 and made a tape of it. To this day, I vividly remember during our Christmas vacation (school) walking in the cold, the crunch of each footstep from the snow and ice as I made my way to swim practice at the high school, I listened through my walkman. I didn't notice it was freezing because of the music that changed my life. I'm 54 and those are awesome memories which feel like yesterday. - Stay alive
Loved this episode! I loved Big Country from the first time I heard them. I was lucky enough to see them live in Indianapolis at a fairly small venue. The played every song on The Crossing, came back out for an encore as I remember it, played In A Big Country again, then played a Motown song, because that’s all they had! What a Great memory. Thanks Adam!
Thank you for your deep dive into this band and their iconic hit. I appreciate your very hard work. I've loved BC from the age of 13, and love them today. ♥️🎸♥️
My friend in high school, Leroy, looked so much like Adamson it was uncanny. People accused him of copying Adamson’s hair style, but Leroy’s hair was always stiff and sticking up. When Big Country was popular in the U.S., girls started to notice Leroy more in high school. He got popular by proxy! Great work Professor!
My best friend gave me the 45 In A Big Country, in 1983 for Xmas. Omg, I treasured it! Still do! Great band, always a favourite album. Thanks so much for this. RIP Stuart.
I honestly don't remember the first time I heard this song but it captivated me immediately. I was a DJ while going to high school and was a regular in record stores. I made a special trip to buy the single, but there were no singles only a lone copy of the cassette. It was worth the purchase. I envisioned this song starting off my set. I mean, why wouldn't I, right? And it did. I still dream about those days and fantasize about putting together an 80s DJ show, playing 80s music only. Again, this song leads the way in that fantasy.
One of my top 5 favorite bands of all time. Started loving them as a 10 year old with this song and never looked back. So much spent at Newbury Comics for imports, long before the internet.
My favourite band of all time, was around 14 when I first heard East of eden and 💥 boom💥that was it, I'm 52 now and still listening... Stuart gone but not forgotten ✨🤍✨
I was really hoping the story wouldn't have ended how it did for the lead singer. But music is eternal, good music that is, and Big Country will live on!
This is a Great tribute. I loved this song from the first moment I heard it back in the 80's. I didn't know anything about the band. So sorry to hear what happened to the lead singer. Thank you.
Love this song. It always picks me up and there is nothing better than blasting it on the highway with the windows down and the sunroof open. Hope Adamson is at peace in his own big country high in the heavens.
Absolutely one of my favorite songs ever. I was 10 years old when it came out and I first heard it. I don't know why this Scottish rock band resonated with a small kid in Tucson, but it absolutely did and still does to this day. I was actually listening to this song a few minutes ago and all of a sudden his video popped up as a recommended one. Serendipity I guess. Or the internet is tracking me, but whatever.
The release date, May 20th, 1983 was my 15th birthday. I love when you spotlight music from this Era. The 80's, imo, was the most was the most musically eclectic decade ever. There was literally something for everyone. Thanks POR. You truly ROCK.🤘
Beautiful! You missed mentioning “One great thing” it’s that song that always means something different to me depending when in my life I am hearing it, but always gets me revved up to put my best effort forward.
So many great songs from Big County! Lost Patrol, Where the Rose is Sown, Fields of Fire, Look Away, Wonderland, Just a Shadow, Harvest Home, etc. Saw them at the Hollywood Palladium on their first US tour. Great band!
After moving to New Mexico, I heard this track Asleep In The Desert by ZZ Top while out camping in the desert.... The line of this song has always stood out to me is, "I'm not expecting to grow flowers in a desert But I can live and breathe and see the sun in wintertime."
It was a great tribute to Adamson that Bono and Billie Joe Armstrong did a cover of the Skids' "The Saints are Coming" for Hurricane Katrina relief in 2006. A tip of the hat to a lost contemporary and an acknowledgement that his songs have staying power. The Crossing is one of those albums that still sounds like nothing else 40 years later.
Big Country with Stuart Adamson were just a great live band. I thoroughy recommend Without the Aid of a Safety Net. They did 2 sets first acoustic then with “the loud guitars”. One of the best live albums of all time imho.
Back in the day my bands were The Alarm, Big Country, and U2. Yes, I liked a lot of synth bands, but I'm a guitar girl at heart. I was going through a lot of heavy stuff back then, and those 3 bands kept me from offing myself, no joke. Broke my heart when Stuart offed himself, and loved it when Mike stepped in to sing. U2 has let me down over the years, but The Alarm and Big Country never has.
Please welcome the professor of rock to the untold ranks of people trying and failing to pronounce Mark Brzezicki's name correctly! Love Big Country, what a band.
I'll never forget getting "The Crossing" on cassette for Christmas in '83. I was hooked, and never stopped loving this band. In my mind, it's criminal that they're remembered as a "one hit wonder", bc there is so much great music on their early records (and subsequent releases as well). It was a punch to the gut when Stuart took his life; when Mike Peters joined the band it felt so natural and so right. It's a shame he didn't stay with the band, but Mike needed to do his thing and God bless him he has been a fighter through all of his health issues. If the only BC song you know is "In A Big Country" - get busy and do some digging into their back catalogue! "The Crossing", "Wonderland (EP)", "Steeltown", "The Seer" - and that's just for starters!
Agreed been thinking this for as long as I’ve loved this band. People call them a one hit wonder because they haven’t heard their other songs not because they’re bad songs.
@@thomasrehorst1801 coincidentally enough, there's another UA-cam channel I follow where a guy puts out a series of videos called "One Hit Wonderland", where he does deep dives into the history of the band/song, as well as their other music, and gives his opinion on if the band deserved more than just their one hit. An example: ua-cam.com/video/C9Fr5wcLEjM/v-deo.html
Amen to that ! I like a great number of other groups and artists but need to say it, they tower head and shoulders above them in terms of the dedication and quality of their music.
Big Country is my favorite band...full stop. "In a Big Country" launched music into the center of my life when I was in high school and it has stayed there throughout. I love all my music...but Big Country retains that special pace in my heart that will last there until I die. Was heartbroken to hear of Stuart's passing but forever grateful to him and the band. My favorite Big Country song - "Tall Ships Go" from Steeltown. A son struggling with his complicated feelings about his father...me in a nutshell.
Man I never get tired of this song, or the delightfully cheesy adventure video. What a magnificent slice of the 80's.....Great job Mr. Professor....as always
Absolutely my favourite band growing up, Stuart was an amazing musician, his song writing is second to none and guitar playing was out of this world, saw them live several times and went to the tribute concert in the barrowlands , it was the one of the saddest days when I saw the news of his passing, still play his music and will forever, stay alive.
I never understood why the band didn't do better in the US. I know so many people who LOVE them--not just the one song, but the albums and the band as a whole. Stuart Adamson's voice is unique to the skinny tie genre, and their harmonies make them a true force. The video, as well, went perfectly with this "drive-fast-and-play-at-full-blast" song. Had no idea he had committed suicide. So tragic. I hope he has found peace wherever he has gone.
Exactly-The Crossing was a hit album in the US so some Americans do know the songs and also when they played them tracks live as well in the US. Are you from the US?
Couple years ago they performed in the USA. There’s some vid clips here on YT perhaps small crowd but man you can feel the energy through out the video.
The Edge from U2 said in a Big country Tribute concert a while back said that he Wished U2 had written songs like Big Country. He is so full of Crap, he was just trying to be nice.
Big Country is one of my all time favorite bands. Great songs, great albums and if you have a chance to see their concert album taped in Moscow, it's fantastic. I really loved these guys and was truly saddened when Stuart passed. A major loss.
The Crossing was released when I was 14yrs old, and still remember purchasing the album….It was the music of my teens, and now into middle age….RIP Mr Adamson ❤
This was an early MTV hit and was played often- always a favorite for me and my friends. Absolutely amazing song, but what a sad ending 😢 another great video from you Adam- you're a highlight of my day every day ❤
Absolutely timeless,in my opinion one of the best rock/pop songs ever produced.Saw them live at Cornwall Coliseum St Austell ,UK in the mid 80s ,still a great memory.
Well done! I love this channel. The storytelling format teaches you so much while simultaneously entertaining. Bravo! Nothing says 80's more than this song. It will allow Stuart Adamson to live forever, all you gotta do is hit rewind. Keep up the great work!
Yeah the Professor is a cool head who really studies bands and songs and albums and backstories and individual musical artists to the point of informal seminar,, in a way it's just trivia but I think it was either Darwin or Groucho Marx that said trivia is what separates us from the animals LOL...
I’m a lifelong big country fan and still go to gigs now just to hear they’re music , it’s timeless, I love watching this post , Thankyou for sharing your thoughts and facts
Great, great band and such a tragic loss when Stuart Adamson left us. I remember loving their stuff as a kid watching Top Of The Pops in the UK and wondering why so many of the older, cooler kids were wearing plaid shirts years before the grunge explosion! For any fans, old and new I would also recommend tracking down a film called "Restless Natives" that featured a soundtrack composed by the band...great little film too. Cheers, Prof!
I was a recent immigrant in Australia from the UK when this song was released. It was especially relevant to me, as well as being a fantastically hopeful and uplifting tune.
THANK YOU! They deserve coverage! Big Country were an awesome band live as well! Thanks to youtube everyone can see a glimpse of their performances though it probably pales in comparison to those lucky enough to be there live! "Steeltown"will always be there best album in my honest opinion and that song was amazing live as well!
The chorus of this song definitely stays with you, that's for sure! I remember The Skids when I was a child growing up in the UK but didn't know of the connection between them and Big Country. The guitars also remind me of a song by another group called the Associates named "Club Country", whose front man was another Scot, Billy McKenzie.
Interesting report! Stuart A..RIP. I saw these guys back November of 83 at First Avenue. Heavy snow, hopped on a city bus to get to the show, driver was furious because we didn’t put enough coinage in the box. Yes, the anthemic vocals and Celtic guitar vibe (some say air-raid guitar) makes their music great!!
Surprising really, I would have guessed that ‘Fields of Fire’ would have been Big Country’s biggest hit. Seen them live in Carlisle on their farewell tour. Great live band and Stuart was a ⭐️ RIP brother
I saw BC in 1983 right after The Crossing was released (Front row, directly in front of Bruce...) I have seen a million concerts in my life and there is NO COMPARISON to how great they were in concert.... That concert changed my life and inspired me to pick up the electric guitar...Because of that concert years later I was able to play in a successful band and later on, start my own band that now plays shows.... I saw them again years later after Stuart died, with Mike Peters, and I got to meet those guys and hang out with them- They were the nicest guys you could ever meet! Awesome, humble down to earth guys that were really fun to hang out with. That one concert when I was in high school literally changed my life. I can not believe they did not have more commercial success... They were the greatest rock band of all time!!!! Long live Big Country!!! And by the way....The Crossing is a masterpiece, but the Steeltown record is twice as good, my all time favorite... The crossing is like episode IV of Starwars, and Steeltown is like The Empire Strikes Back...
Big Country was one of my ALL TIME FAVORITE bands when I was a kid… I remember watching Friday Nite Videos one May evening and In a Big Country and I was MESMERIZED!! I’d always been a big fan of bagpipes (not sure how since my family is NO WHERE NEAR Scottish, but the first I Time I ever heard the bagpipes, AGAIN, I was completely mesmerized!), so when I heard the solo of the song, I turn to my sister and say to her “this sounds like a bagpipe line!” I was 14 at the time and had to BEG my mom to take me to the mall to buy the record (which I HATED doing since everything was a “deal”. I take you to the mall and you clean the bathroom!) well, cleaned that bathroom and then DISAPPEARED into my bedroom to listen to my new album that DID NOT DISAPPOINT!! I was a HUGE fan of Big Country all through the 80’e and 90’s… (till mu music taste wandered over to harder stuff). I remember hearing about Adamson’s death and CRIED!! I remember thinking that at least his surroundings were paradise when he left… I think Big Country were so… ear catching BECAUSE it was s sound we, here in American at least, had never heard before and it sounded so hyped, enthused, motivated. It made me want to get up and just dance and jump!! I never did get the chance to see them live… my fricken mother and her STUPID rules and ways of thinking. “NO! You’re too you f and there will be DRUGS there!!” At a fricken Big Country concert?! Mom, YOU’RE the one on drugs!! Yeah, I’m still a little upset at all the life experiences I missed out on… I’m so sorry my week has be so damn busy! Cuz, I’m late again for something that would’ve brought me a little joy…. Thanks for your submission Adam…
I adored this song when it came out and I love it just as much today. In amongst thousands and thousands of great songs of the 80s, this one is right at the top.
@@ProfessorofRock San Diego, CA and if my memory works it was at an old converted movie theater called the California. Besides the performance one thing that I remember is they had to stop once because a certain piece of equipment they used for the tone on one song failed. Wish I could remember what.
One of my absolute favorite bands! Today this song brings a little tear to my eye when he sings “stay alive” - I wish Stuart had hung on and listened to his younger self 😢 Those albums were so full of hope and life. Big Country’s 90s albums are very under appreciated as well. Although the post-Stuart album “The Journey” with Mike Peters of the Alarm seems out of place. I love Mike Peters, but Stuart was THE voice of Big Country.
In a Big Country is one of my favorite songs ever. I started hearing it in my head as soon as I looked at the click-bait thumbnail for this video because it objectively IS the greatest 1 hit wonder of all time.
I was the 1st person I knew to own that album by about 3 months because I ordered the albums for a small town record store. I now have a heavy heart after finding out what happened to Stuart. RIP.
As a kid, I hated that song. But over the past few years, I've begun to love it, based on the lyrics. So sad to see such a disparity between these lyrics and what happened to Stuart.
Thanks for this great video about an even greater band. Stuart really was the heart of the band, being the main songwriter and the lead singer and one of the lead guitarists. I was gutted when I found out he had passed away, I think he left us with a lot of great material and the Crossing and Steeltown are still among my favorite albums. Good job representing the band in this video, I'm glad you did them justice!
@@ProfessorofRock. To me they are a two hit wonder with Fields of Fire also, remember watching the vid on USA’s Night Flight (the only vid show to show Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s og Relax vid).
This song brings back such fond memories! wonderful to learn about the background of the band and the song. and i was today's days old when i learned those weren't bagpipes in this song!1
What a terrible way to treat a band at a concert. I'm glad they didn't let it deter them and continued to make great music, even if it didn't chart here like it did in countries that could appreciate them. Big Country is a great song. Thanks for showcasing it. Have an excellent day, Adam.
The 80s produced so many hits! It's hard to precisely leaf through the pages of my memory, but I've got to say that In a Big Country was my favorite song of that decade. Even now, when I hear that song I feel the wings sprouting from my feet. What a time; what a song.
Loved Big Country and saw a lot of beyond amazing shows by them. Never forget they had The Rainmakers open for them in Davis, Ca and both bands were amazing. I will admit I cry everytime I go back and have a run playing all my albums. So sad Stuart didnt make it.
Poll: What is your pick for the greatest anthem of the 80s? One that lifts you up every time!
Total Eclipse of the Heart
I'll nominate "America" by Neil Diamond.
Metal Health - THE Quiet Riot
Girls Girls Girls - Crue
Rock N Roll is King - E. L. O.
Tom Sawyer - Rush
It’s So Easy - GNR
Living On A Prayer- Bon Jovi.
In A Big Country or The Spirit Of Radio
Big Country is one of the best rock bands ever, full stop. The Crossing is still one of my favorite albums of all time. RIP Stuart.
Tortured genius rip Stuart
Agree Stuart was a brilliant lyricist, singer and extremely extremely underrated guitarist
The band was incredibly talented as well. He could write a beautiful ballad as well as a Hard driving rock song and they’re covers of other peoples work was incredible
I believe their version of rockin in the free world is better than Neil’s version
It’s a shame they were’nt supported here in the US because they’re one of you best bands of the last 4 decades
Steeltown was my fave album, Wonderland fave song. All the Extended rocked. Need to release the Kate Bush extended of The Seer.
When you are 12 years old, Big Country live in your head. They are the greatest band you have ever heard. And my young ears were not wrong.
I turned 50 some weeks ago, I love Look Away just as much as the first time I saw it on my vhs tape which was "Now thats what I call music #15" I believe!
I saw them live twice, and they rocked live! Stuart would leave the stage and come down and shake hands , he did mine, and shot me that cheeky smile! they were different, and had a sound! he loved the audience! and could literally play anything, Laurel and Hardy theme tune??? he did that! The WARRIOR POET, GUITAR IN HAND, HE PLAYED AND SANG ABOUT HIS NATIVE LAND, (yes he was born in England) but grew up in Scotland! he sang with heart, he sang with fire! what he said you knew it was true! A POET OF HIS GENERATION, A WRITER OF GREAT SONGS! HIS LEGACY! CHANCE, AND EILEDON , my faves! GONE WAY TOO SOON!
Eiledon is one of the best songs most Americans have never heard.
'The Crossing' album was an absolute masterpiece. 'Steeltown' was a brilliant follow-up. I love the early stuff. Stuart, Bruce, Tony and Mark were all accomplished musicians and together they created a unique and original sound. My fav band of the 80s. I wore tartan/check shirts back in the day.
Agree. These albums are still amazing to this day!
Such a shame they never got credit for their other tracks. I’d put In a Big Country behind Porrohman and Where the Rose Is Sown.
My 20 something neighbor loaned me The Crossing when I was 14.
It was one of the 1st tapes I dubbed, and he was lucky to get the LP back. 🤭
Agree brother with all you say, I frequented the Big Country mosh pit on many occasions and I still fill up thinking about it 🤟🏻👌😘
@@riskydigitsta1794 I think In a Big Country is actually the weakest track on The Crossing, though it's still excellent. Where the Rose is Sown, Like a Shadow, One Great Thing and The Seer from Steeltown and The Seer are also quite magnificent.
RIP Stuart. One of my favorite bands of all time. The Storm is one of the greatest songs ever recorded.
I should check out more of their songs. Fields of Fire and Chance are two other really good ones from them.
Finally we get a Big Country video. Thank you professor!
The most underrated band in rock history.
They were rated exactly where they belonged.
INXS says hold my beer.
More people need to know and appreciate the majesty of Big Country.
As an American of Scottish decent who speaks a bit of Gaelic (Scots and Irish) I was enthralled when the song In a Big Country came out. I had gone back to university at that time and here was this driving, riveting, uplifting song by a band with music that literally spanned the centuries! It certainly drove my homework as I felt like i could conquer anything while listening to it! So happy you brought this wonderful song and the band Big Country up!
I will let you in on a little secret now that I've known all this time about this song: it's not just Celtic-sounding, there is gaelic in it! Only one word, the word you mentioned that nobody knows what it is unless you know the slang. 'Ea', which sounds like 'sha' to an American ear, is the gaelic slang equivalent of 'YEAH!' In American, so Stuart Adamson is shouting gaelic enthusiasm all over the song! No wonder it sounds so bright and happy! Thanks for the memories! Slán! ('Bye!)
Wow, I really enjoy learning about the Gaelic angle. Thank you for this interesting piece of information.
I'm sorry but as a Scot, that is not true, it's not gaelic. 98% of Scots don't speak or know any gaelic words. We speak old Scots and English.
Absolutely correct, not Scots Gaelic at all! plus we say Gaelic like you'd pronounce garlic bit without the 'r'
😂 Nice pronunciation of the town Dunfermline! 😮 broken up Dun ferm line... say it as one word and as if there's no e ... Dunfermlin
But hey apart from that..there's a lot of Scottish place names that we Scots get wrong 😅
Big Country, such a brilliant band!
This song literally helped me quit my job and get serious about my own business. I used to run on my lunch hour and listen to music. I had been wrestling with leaving a job I was burnt out on but that offered security, or stepping out to pursue a less stable but infinitely more satisfying line of work.
There was a nature/exercise track that ran behind my place of work and along a wash. It was full of hills and curves and at times you can't see the road, just desert. Every lunch hour I would use the entire break to push my running limits and totally disconnect from my very stressful job. I would think and pray and listen to music as I ran as a way to reset my brain to have a better afternoon. I'd been doing this for a few months and I still couldn't get past my worry about quitting and leaving a known paycheck behind, but my dissatisfaction was getting intense. It was a Friday and I was pressing myself pretty hard to finish up the week and I was almost done with my run back back to work when Big Country came on. I love that song and decided to use it to help me power my run up the final hills for the day. Just as my buildings were coming in to sight and it was the final hill at the end, the lines "--I thought the pain and truth were things that really mattered, but you can't stay here when every single hope you had shattered ". With the last word my foot hit the top of the hill and I was staring directly at my work building. It may sound strange but I honestly believe that was the direct answer to my prayer for direction. It was the "can't stay here" while looking at my work that finally convinced me to leave. I put in my notice the next Monday and I've been way happier since!
Thank you for sharing this. Hopefully you’re in a better place now.
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 much better! 😄
Very cool.
I love to hear when people aren't afraid to step out on "nudges from God".
Been there & done that a time or two and have yet to regret it.
👍✌️🙏
Great story, Linda..
You understand HOW to live!
🌹
Awesome! Stay alive!
As a Scot it made me smile at the way you butchered the town 'Dunfermline'. As always, loving the content PoR, many thanks.
Completely agree made my ears bleed the way he pronounced Dunfermline LMAO
You don’t really have the 80s without this group.
Great band!
Actual Gen X’er here and can confirm they’re irrelevant to remembering the 80s!
Big Country are my favorite band of all time. I was instantly a fan the first time I heard The Crossing. I had borrowed the tape from my best friend and I was alone in my house. I played the album cranked up on my parents stereo, and I was blown away. The music spoke to me, and just seemed to be the music I had always been looking for. One of my biggest regrets is that I never got to see them live. I missed them on The Crossing tour (with Wang Chung opening)when they came to near to my town. I have all their albums along with many EP’s and 12 inch singles. They will always be number one in my heart. RIP Stuart Adamson it’s a tragedy you left us so young.
Sorry you didn’t get to see them live. I do love hearing people’s stories of connection with their favourite music and bands.
Seeing them live would have been a great experience.
I got lucky and got to see them in 1990... I saw Bruce and Mark a few years ago too, playing all the hits. I was heartbroken when I heard about Stuarts passing.
They were and still are my favourite band. Saw them many times. I still listen to them every day.
Met Stuart once and the band once, too.
Big Country’s music is so high-energy that playing it on my home stereo always creates the risk that I’m going to break something in my house. // Saw them in concert in the late 90’s in Dublin, Ireland where they still had a huge, passionate following. The band rocked as hard as ever. The crowd was ecstatic. Stuart was beaming. It was an incredible experience.
I ran into Adamson a couple of times through mutual acquaintances while he was living in Nashville and fronting The Raphaels. Likeable guy, but sadly had some personal issues that ultimately got the best of him. In the end, Stuart lost that hope he sang about. It was a sad day when I heard that he passed, even though we weren't close. Big Country had a one-of-a-kind sound.
I had just started working in radio in New Zealand when the classic In A Big Country came out. And even though it only reached the 30s in the charts here, it has amazing longevity. It's now 2023 and it STILL gets big airplay on the station I am on now. 40 years of this song and it still sounds as fresh as it did back then.
Finally! Adam, been waiting on this FOREVER!!! I think I emailed you several years ago for this request. I always loved Big Country and sadly they weren’t that big in the US but should have. So many epic songs that most Americans don’t even know. Thank you for this one!
What a great band - better live. Probably the best band I've ever seen live.
I can’t argue with that
Love Big Country. What a fantastic band with such a unique sound. Stuart is greatly missed and was a brilliant musician. Their first few albums are special.
When I heard this song the first time, it hit me how different it was from everything else that was out. You couldn’t put these guys into a particular box and you still can’t today. Being different back in the 1980s meant it was hard to market a band and I think that’s what happened. If they were coming up today, they’d be bigger stars.
I have to say every time I hear this song it hits me.... It's a masterpiece... The energy and the sound was ahead of its time and frankly it's timeless. People could not appreciate the genius.... I love '80s music because it was a fairly narrow band of sounds... But at the same time that is one of the detriments in hindsight.
Well said....no one was like them then, and no one is like them now.
The first time I heard this song in MTV it blew my mind, I thought it was the greatest song of all time for quite some time.
I loved this band when they came out, and I still love them. Thanks for covering them. They were unique, and they rocked.
They’re one of the greatest bands of their big country.
There albums were amazing...their live shows were like a celebration. The Live at the Barrowlands concert recorded by the BBC for New Years eve was the pinnacle of live concert video for me - energetic, sweaty and emotional from start to finish. Legends
This band is one of the best bands to ever come out. Where do I begin and end, classic sound Great debut "The crossing " ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS BAND Stuart Adamson what a songwriter guitarist. CHANCE is my favourite. THEY WHERE NEVER ONE HIT WONDERS THEY WHERE TOO GOOD FOR THE CHARTS. STUART YOU WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN ❤️
What a tragic loss. R.I.P. Stuart.
One of my all time favorite bands! Thank you for your care in covering the story of Big Country.
One of the best bands of all time 🏴
Only a "one hit wonder" in the U. S. In Europe and the UK they were huge with multiple hits. This is my absolute favorite band! RIP Stuart 😞
That's right!
Not forgetting Stuarts earlier band The Skids !
Some of the biggest bands in the UK never even had a single hit in the US, and those that did were extremely lucky.
Angers me when I hear 1 hit wonder. Just ignorant.
I was a high school freshman living in Albany, New York. The first time I heard the song was on MTV. I was hooked right away. The sound, the drums, guitars, and the feeling it brought went through your body. There was nothing like it. When you close your eyes their music brings you to a different place living in a story. I got The Crossing (record) for Christmas 1983 and made a tape of it. To this day, I vividly remember during our Christmas vacation (school) walking in the cold, the crunch of each footstep from the snow and ice as I made my way to swim practice at the high school, I listened through my walkman. I didn't notice it was freezing because of the music that changed my life. I'm 54 and those are awesome memories which feel like yesterday. - Stay alive
Loved this episode! I loved Big Country from the first time I heard them. I was lucky enough to see them live in Indianapolis at a fairly small venue. The played every song on The Crossing, came back out for an encore as I remember it, played In A Big Country again, then played a Motown song, because that’s all they had! What a Great memory. Thanks Adam!
Thank you for your deep dive into this band and their iconic hit. I appreciate your very hard work. I've loved BC from the age of 13, and love them today. ♥️🎸♥️
I’ve never heard a lead guitar doing bagpipe riffs the way big country did… The double vocal had a great punch to a great song
That hexatonic scale.
Mike Oldfield was another great guitar sounding like bagpipes specialist
They certainly had a sound of their own! This song never fails to bring a smile to my face!
It sounded so unique.
If AC/DC could or would do that, they could've played one of their best songs at the live shows
Saw them new years eve in Manhattan 83 into 84, great show. I do remember them opening with the luck of 1000 stars and it just kept getting better.
First band I ever saw live, they did a soundtrack to a cult indy film "restless natives" which is amazing
My friend in high school, Leroy, looked so much like Adamson it was uncanny. People accused him of copying Adamson’s hair style, but Leroy’s hair was always stiff and sticking up. When Big Country was popular in the U.S., girls started to notice Leroy more in high school. He got popular by proxy! Great work Professor!
RIP Stuart, amazing singer and guitarist.
My best friend gave me the 45 In A Big Country, in 1983 for Xmas. Omg, I treasured it! Still do! Great band, always a favourite album. Thanks so much for this. RIP Stuart.
I honestly don't remember the first time I heard this song but it captivated me immediately. I was a DJ while going to high school and was a regular in record stores. I made a special trip to buy the single, but there were no singles only a lone copy of the cassette. It was worth the purchase. I envisioned this song starting off my set. I mean, why wouldn't I, right? And it did. I still dream about those days and fantasize about putting together an 80s DJ show, playing 80s music only. Again, this song leads the way in that fantasy.
One of my top 5 favorite bands of all time. Started loving them as a 10 year old with this song and never looked back. So much spent at Newbury Comics for imports, long before the internet.
One of my favorites is still "Wonderland".
ANOTHER FABULOUS SCOTTISH ARTIST WITH THEIR OWN UNIQUE STYLE AND SOUND, RIP STUART ADAMSON.
My favourite band of all time, was around 14 when I first heard East of eden and 💥 boom💥that was it, I'm 52 now and still listening... Stuart gone but not forgotten ✨🤍✨
Dude.....This song gets the radio turned to the max. I love how they made the guitar sound like a steel drum and bagpipes.
I was really hoping the story wouldn't have ended how it did for the lead singer. But music is eternal, good music that is, and Big Country will live on!
This is a Great tribute. I loved this song from the first moment I heard it back in the 80's. I didn't know anything about the band. So sorry to hear what happened to the lead singer. Thank you.
Love this song. It always picks me up and there is nothing better than blasting it on the highway with the windows down and the sunroof open. Hope Adamson is at peace in his own big country high in the heavens.
It’s a lot of fun isn’t it?
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 absolutely
Absolutely one of my favorite songs ever. I was 10 years old when it came out and I first heard it. I don't know why this Scottish rock band resonated with a small kid in Tucson, but it absolutely did and still does to this day.
I was actually listening to this song a few minutes ago and all of a sudden his video popped up as a recommended one.
Serendipity I guess.
Or the internet is tracking me, but whatever.
Let's go with the universe being serendipitous!
The release date, May 20th, 1983 was my 15th birthday. I love when you spotlight music from this Era. The 80's, imo, was the most was the most musically eclectic decade ever. There was literally something for everyone. Thanks POR. You truly ROCK.🤘
I turned 24 on that day
Happy belated, Nicky! Did you know that the number one song in America on the day you were born was Tighten Up by Archie Bell & the Drells in 1968?
Beautiful! You missed mentioning “One great thing” it’s that song that always means something different to me depending when in my life I am hearing it, but always gets me revved up to put my best effort forward.
So many great songs from Big County! Lost Patrol, Where the Rose is Sown, Fields of Fire, Look Away, Wonderland, Just a Shadow, Harvest Home, etc. Saw them at the Hollywood Palladium on their first US tour. Great band!
I saw them at the Paladium too!
Awesome!
After moving to New Mexico, I heard this track Asleep In The Desert by ZZ Top while out camping in the desert.... The line of this song has always stood out to me is, "I'm not expecting to grow flowers in a desert
But I can live and breathe and see the sun in wintertime."
It’s a beautiful line.
It was a great tribute to Adamson that Bono and Billie Joe Armstrong did a cover of the Skids' "The Saints are Coming" for Hurricane Katrina relief in 2006. A tip of the hat to a lost contemporary and an acknowledgement that his songs have staying power. The Crossing is one of those albums that still sounds like nothing else 40 years later.
Big Country with Stuart Adamson were just a great live band. I thoroughy recommend Without the Aid of a Safety Net. They did 2 sets first acoustic then with “the loud guitars”. One of the best live albums of all time imho.
Those guitars add force.
Back in the day my bands were The Alarm, Big Country, and U2. Yes, I liked a lot of synth bands, but I'm a guitar girl at heart. I was going through a lot of heavy stuff back then, and those 3 bands kept me from offing myself, no joke. Broke my heart when Stuart offed himself, and loved it when Mike stepped in to sing. U2 has let me down over the years, but The Alarm and Big Country never has.
Please welcome the professor of rock to the untold ranks of people trying and failing to pronounce Mark Brzezicki's name correctly! Love Big Country, what a band.
I'll never forget getting "The Crossing" on cassette for Christmas in '83. I was hooked, and never stopped loving this band. In my mind, it's criminal that they're remembered as a "one hit wonder", bc there is so much great music on their early records (and subsequent releases as well). It was a punch to the gut when Stuart took his life; when Mike Peters joined the band it felt so natural and so right. It's a shame he didn't stay with the band, but Mike needed to do his thing and God bless him he has been a fighter through all of his health issues. If the only BC song you know is "In A Big Country" - get busy and do some digging into their back catalogue! "The Crossing", "Wonderland (EP)", "Steeltown", "The Seer" - and that's just for starters!
Agreed been thinking this for as long as I’ve loved this band. People call them a one hit wonder because they haven’t heard their other songs not because they’re bad songs.
More like “One hit Wonderland”! 😉😊
@@thomasrehorst1801 coincidentally enough, there's another UA-cam channel I follow where a guy puts out a series of videos called "One Hit Wonderland", where he does deep dives into the history of the band/song, as well as their other music, and gives his opinion on if the band deserved more than just their one hit. An example:
ua-cam.com/video/C9Fr5wcLEjM/v-deo.html
Another later one to listen to is Buffalo Skinners, some brilliant tracks on that.
Amen to that ! I like a great number of other groups and artists but need to say it, they tower head and shoulders above them in terms of the dedication and quality of their music.
Big Country had such a HUGE sound! Every song was an anthem. Fantastic band, so much more than a one-hit wonder.
They did the soundtrack to the movie “Restless Natives” as well. Great movie!
Big Country is my favorite band...full stop. "In a Big Country" launched music into the center of my life when I was in high school and it has stayed there throughout. I love all my music...but Big Country retains that special pace in my heart that will last there until I die. Was heartbroken to hear of Stuart's passing but forever grateful to him and the band. My favorite Big Country song - "Tall Ships Go" from Steeltown. A son struggling with his complicated feelings about his father...me in a nutshell.
Man I never get tired of this song, or the delightfully cheesy adventure video.
What a magnificent slice of the 80's.....Great job Mr. Professor....as always
"Music to move mountains by"
Big Country was my first favorite band.
Thanks Prof!
Absolutely my favourite band growing up, Stuart was an amazing musician, his song writing is second to none and guitar playing was out of this world, saw them live several times and went to the tribute concert in the barrowlands , it was the one of the saddest days when I saw the news of his passing, still play his music and will forever, stay alive.
I never understood why the band didn't do better in the US. I know so many people who LOVE them--not just the one song, but the albums and the band as a whole. Stuart Adamson's voice is unique to the skinny tie genre, and their harmonies make them a true force. The video, as well, went perfectly with this "drive-fast-and-play-at-full-blast" song.
Had no idea he had committed suicide. So tragic. I hope he has found peace wherever he has gone.
Exactly-The Crossing was a hit album in the US so some Americans do know the songs and also when they played them tracks live as well in the US.
Are you from the US?
Couple years ago they performed in the USA. There’s some vid clips here on YT perhaps small crowd but man you can feel the energy through out the video.
The Edge from U2 said in a Big country Tribute concert a while back said that he Wished U2 had written songs like Big Country. He is so full of Crap, he was just trying to be nice.
@@rirchardrubio5621 What makes you think that- the first 4 Big Country Albums are some of the best in music history I would say!
It’s a great song for starting your day.
Big Country is one of my all time favorite bands. Great songs, great albums and if you have a chance to see their concert album taped in Moscow, it's fantastic.
I really loved these guys and was truly saddened when Stuart passed. A major loss.
I hope it’s online.
The Crossing was released when I was 14yrs old, and still remember purchasing the album….It was the music of my teens, and now into middle age….RIP Mr Adamson ❤
This was THE favorite song of the best person I’ve ever known. I still love it for the joy it always brought her.
It’s hard to top something that is basically perfect.
So many of these Professor of Rock episodes make me realize that the arrangement and the producer is what really makes a hit a hit.
This was an early MTV hit and was played often- always a favorite for me and my friends. Absolutely amazing song, but what a sad ending 😢 another great video from you Adam- you're a highlight of my day every day ❤
Absolutely timeless,in my opinion one of the best rock/pop songs ever produced.Saw them live at Cornwall Coliseum St Austell ,UK in the mid 80s ,still a great memory.
Well done!
I love this channel. The storytelling format teaches you so much while simultaneously entertaining. Bravo!
Nothing says 80's more than this song. It will allow Stuart Adamson to live forever, all you gotta do is hit rewind. Keep up the great work!
Yeah the Professor is a cool head who really studies bands and songs and albums and backstories and individual musical artists to the point of informal seminar,, in a way it's just trivia but I think it was either Darwin or Groucho Marx that said trivia is what separates us from the animals LOL...
I’m a lifelong big country fan and still go to gigs now just to hear they’re music , it’s timeless, I love watching this post , Thankyou for sharing your thoughts and facts
Great, great band and such a tragic loss when Stuart Adamson left us. I remember loving their stuff as a kid watching Top Of The Pops in the UK and wondering why so many of the older, cooler kids were wearing plaid shirts years before the grunge explosion!
For any fans, old and new I would also recommend tracking down a film called "Restless Natives" that featured a soundtrack composed by the band...great little film too.
Cheers, Prof!
I was a recent immigrant in Australia from the UK when this song was released. It was especially relevant to me, as well as being a fantastically hopeful and uplifting tune.
I love Big Country! Thanks for featuring one of my favorite bands from the 80s!
THANK YOU! They deserve coverage! Big Country were an awesome band live as well! Thanks to youtube everyone can see a glimpse of their performances though it probably pales in comparison to those lucky enough to be there live! "Steeltown"will always be there best album in my honest opinion and that song was amazing live as well!
Couldn't agree more!
I should definitely check out some of their live performances.
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 yes you should! Plenty of good recordings with BC out there!
The chorus of this song definitely stays with you, that's for sure! I remember The Skids when I was a child growing up in the UK but didn't know of the connection between them and Big Country. The guitars also remind me of a song by another group called the Associates named "Club Country", whose front man was another Scot, Billy McKenzie.
Thank you so much for featuring Big Country. You have now featured my top 3 favorite bands, Big Country, The Cars and Rush.
Genius group of people playing great tunes
Interesting report! Stuart A..RIP. I saw these guys back November of 83 at First Avenue. Heavy snow, hopped on a city bus to get to the show, driver was furious because we didn’t put enough coinage in the box. Yes, the anthemic vocals and Celtic guitar vibe (some say air-raid guitar) makes their music great!!
Surprising really, I would have guessed that ‘Fields of Fire’ would have been Big Country’s biggest hit. Seen them live in Carlisle on their farewell tour. Great live band and Stuart was a ⭐️ RIP brother
I think "fields of fire" is one of the best cruise on the highway songs of the 80s!
Although that is a great song as well, unfortunately they never had another BIG hit in the US.
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980 I believe "Look Away " did fairly well. I don't recall high how it charted though
Look Away, Chance, Fields of Fire & Wonderland were all top 10 hits in the UK, all bigger songs than this “one hit wonder”.
I love this song when I was a kid back 40 years ago. And I helped it reach #3 in Canada. This is 1 of my all time favourites.
"In a Big Country" is such a great song, to me it's one of the definitive sounds of the early 80s.
Amen! Such a feel good song!
A classic.
I saw BC in 1983 right after The Crossing was released (Front row, directly in front of Bruce...) I have seen a million concerts in my life and there is NO COMPARISON to how great they were in concert.... That concert changed my life and inspired me to pick up the electric guitar...Because of that concert years later I was able to play in a successful band and later on, start my own band that now plays shows.... I saw them again years later after Stuart died, with Mike Peters, and I got to meet those guys and hang out with them- They were the nicest guys you could ever meet! Awesome, humble down to earth guys that were really fun to hang out with. That one concert when I was in high school literally changed my life. I can not believe they did not have more commercial success... They were the greatest rock band of all time!!!! Long live Big Country!!!
And by the way....The Crossing is a masterpiece, but the Steeltown record is twice as good, my all time favorite... The crossing is like episode IV of Starwars, and Steeltown is like The Empire Strikes Back...
Big Country was one of my ALL TIME FAVORITE bands when I was a kid… I remember watching Friday Nite Videos one May evening and In a Big Country and I was MESMERIZED!! I’d always been a big fan of bagpipes (not sure how since my family is NO WHERE NEAR Scottish, but the first I
Time I ever heard the bagpipes, AGAIN, I was completely mesmerized!), so when I heard the solo of the song, I turn to my sister and say to her “this sounds like a bagpipe line!” I was 14 at the time and had to BEG my mom to take me to the mall to buy the record (which I HATED doing since everything was a “deal”. I take you to the mall and you clean the bathroom!) well, cleaned that bathroom and then DISAPPEARED into my bedroom to listen to my new album that DID NOT DISAPPOINT!! I was a HUGE fan of Big Country all through the 80’e and 90’s… (till mu music taste wandered over to harder stuff). I remember hearing about Adamson’s death and CRIED!! I remember thinking that at least his surroundings were paradise when he left… I think Big Country were so… ear catching BECAUSE it was s sound we, here in American at least, had never heard before and it sounded so hyped, enthused, motivated. It made me want to get up and just dance and jump!! I never did get the chance to see them live… my fricken mother and her STUPID rules and ways of thinking. “NO! You’re too you f and there will be DRUGS there!!” At a fricken Big Country concert?! Mom, YOU’RE the one on drugs!! Yeah, I’m still a little upset at all the life experiences I missed out on…
I’m so sorry my week has be so damn busy! Cuz, I’m late again for something that would’ve brought me a little joy…. Thanks for your submission Adam…
I adored this song when it came out and I love it just as much today. In amongst thousands and thousands of great songs of the 80s, this one is right at the top.
Heard them when they came out and still a fan today. Great to see them on your channel Adam. Thank you.
I saw them live in 1985 and it was easily one of the best concerts I've ever been too.
Wow. Where'd you see them?
@@ProfessorofRock San Diego, CA and if my memory works it was at an old converted movie theater called the California.
Besides the performance one thing that I remember is they had to stop once because a certain piece of equipment they used for the tone on one song failed. Wish I could remember what.
Was there an opener? Where was it?
One of my absolute favorite bands! Today this song brings a little tear to my eye when he sings “stay alive” - I wish Stuart had hung on and listened to his younger self 😢 Those albums were so full of hope and life.
Big Country’s 90s albums are very under appreciated as well. Although the post-Stuart album “The Journey” with Mike Peters of the Alarm seems out of place. I love Mike Peters, but Stuart was THE voice of Big Country.
In a Big Country is one of my favorite songs ever. I started hearing it in my head as soon as I looked at the click-bait thumbnail for this video because it objectively IS the greatest 1 hit wonder of all time.
It resonates to my olde Celtic soul
I was the 1st person I knew to own that album by about 3 months because I ordered the albums for a small town record store.
I now have a heavy heart after finding out what happened to Stuart. RIP.
As a kid, I hated that song. But over the past few years, I've begun to love it, based on the lyrics. So sad to see such a disparity between these lyrics and what happened to Stuart.
Thanks for this great video about an even greater band. Stuart really was the heart of the band, being the main songwriter and the lead singer and one of the lead guitarists. I was gutted when I found out he had passed away, I think he left us with a lot of great material and the Crossing and Steeltown are still among my favorite albums. Good job representing the band in this video, I'm glad you did them justice!
Loved this song back in the day. It took me a while to learn the lyrics but that didn’t stop me from singing it loud and proud and wrong. 😂😂
Ha ha. yes! Indeed!
I honestly don’t care if I sing them wrong, I still have fun during the process!
@@ProfessorofRock. To me they are a two hit wonder with Fields of Fire also, remember watching the vid on USA’s Night Flight (the only vid show to show Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s og Relax vid).
This song brings back such fond memories! wonderful to learn about the background of the band and the song. and i was today's days old when i learned those weren't bagpipes in this song!1
What a terrible way to treat a band at a concert. I'm glad they didn't let it deter them and continued to make great music, even if it didn't chart here like it did in countries that could appreciate them. Big Country is a great song. Thanks for showcasing it. Have an excellent day, Adam.
Well said! Thanks Jill! Got the email!
That was a humiliating experience. Nevertheless they persisted.
Thanks, @@ProfessorofRock! And I'm glad Cheri got in touch with you. Sending that shirt to you really means the world to her. ❤️
@@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980, indeed they did! We should all remember that in our lives.
@@jillwklausen They stood tall.
The 80s produced so many hits! It's hard to precisely leaf through the pages of my memory, but I've got to say that In a Big Country was my favorite song of that decade. Even now, when I hear that song I feel the wings sprouting from my feet. What a time; what a song.
Loved Big Country and saw a lot of beyond amazing shows by them. Never forget they had The Rainmakers open for them in Davis, Ca and both bands were amazing. I will admit I cry everytime I go back and have a run playing all my albums. So sad Stuart didnt make it.
I loved The Rainmakers. RIP, Steve Phillips.
Adam your thirst for justice is endearing beyond belief. I love your euphemisms...cracks me up everytime