Goat wrote:
Big Country better songwriters than U2?! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
By far. Everything about them is superior.
Stuart is a better singer than Bono, and for that matter Tony is better than Bono too.
Stuart was a better guitarist than the edge and so was Bruce., It isn't even close. Those two could shred like any metal guitarist around, they chose not to unless it worked with the song, like the way Ships guitar solo fit.
They are far more techincal. I tried to break down how many chords and licks were in "in a big country" and it was too much. Another song that's impossible to play as recorded unless you are a band member or have an unlimited amount of patience and don't mind learning all 15 variations of the same note sequence.
Tony Butler and Mark Brzezecki were some of the most respected studio musicians around when adamson found them. They can do anything. I consider butler a top 5 bassist ever and Mark is the second best drummer ever, slightly better than bill bruford. David Bowie wanted to hire them, but they weren't interested. That's tony butler playing bass on "back on the chain gang" too.
Big Country were never sellouts. They changed their musical direction at their own discretion, unlike U2 and weren't afraid to fail either. When stuart realized that punk was only gonna get him so much of his musical vision, he left the skids and started his own band. His bandmate would form simple minds. The skids suffered from shit music and lousy sales after these two left, stuartson being the principle songwriter. In the late 80's they abandoned their trademark sound and hired famed virtuoso producer peter wolf. It didn't produce very good music, but they were at least trying not to rehash their past.
anyway that's enough to chew on.