scintillating to preclude any extended critical carps about the group's occasional lack of focus. At this point, the big picture is clear enough.
Like the Irish band U2 (with whom they share young, guitar-wise producer Steve Lillywhite), Big Country has no use for synthesizers, and their extraordinary twin-guitar sound should make The Crossing a must-own item for rock die-hards. Generally dispensing with power chords, the group's two lead guitarists, Scotsmen Stuart Adamson (formerly of the Skids) and Bruce Watson, whip up skirling, bagpipelike single-string riffs that, on such crackling tracks as "Fields of Fire," "In a Big Country" and the grandly martial "Harvest Home," are a nonstop, spine-tingling delight. The slightly out-of-kilter guitar lines intertwine into a trebly alarm that has all the galvanic urgency of an ambulance careening down a darkened city streetit's really something to hear.
There's more, too. Adding oomph down below is the muscular rhythm section of bassist Tony Butler and drummer Mark Brzezicki (both were featured on Pete Townshend's last two solo albums, and Butler appeared on the Pretenders' "Back on the Chain Gang" single). Brzezicki, in particular, is more than just a sideman, adding both mainline whomp and wailing fills on all the best tracks. The group's vocal sound (all four members sing) is identifiably humana refreshing conceptand though Adamson's leads sometimes lack nuance; one suspects he'll get the hang of it. At his full-throated best, he already approximates some of the arena-reaching, emotional power of a young Bruce Springsteen, and that'll do for starters.
If The Crossing were all blast and bellow, it would still be a gripping LP. But several of the ten songs hereall blessedly free of the cheap, received decadence that disfigures so much current Anglo popare lyrically stirring in their own right. The brotherly, against-the-trend optimism of "In a Big Country" ("...that's a desperate way to look/For someone who is still a child") is mightily appealing in an era of witless gloom mongering, and the tenderness of the conception of "Chance," a tale of mismarried youth ("...you played chance with a lifetime's romance/And the price was far too long"), is unusual for a band of such hard musical instincts. Even when they address the common helplessness felt in the face of impending nuclear apocalyps