Title: Crossing The Red Sea With The Adverts. Artist: The Adverts. From the sonic Armageddon which ushers in 'One Chord Wonders' through to the deliriously protracted fade of 'Great British Mistake', 'Crossing The Red Sea' never put a foot wrong.
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About this product
Product Identifiers
Record LabelFire Records, Firr
UPC0809236114310
eBay Product ID (ePID)24046036666
Product Key Features
Release Year2022
FormatRecord
GenreRock
ArtistAdverts
Release TitleCrossing the RED Sea with the Adverts
Dimensions
Item Height0.32 in
Item Weight1.10 lb
Item Length12.43 in
Item Width12.41 in
Additional Product Features
Number of Tracks25
Country/Region of ManufactureUnited States
Tracks1.1 One Chord Wonders 1.2 Bored Teenagers 1.3 New Church 1.4 On the Roof 1.5 Newboys 1.6 Gary Glimore's Eyes 1.7 Bombsite Boys Side 1.8 No Time to Be 21 1.9 Safety in Numbers 1.10 New Day Dawning 1.11 Drowning Men 1.12 On Wheels 1.13 Great British Mistake 2.1 One Chord Wonders (Single Version) 2.2 Quickstep (Single Version) 2.3 Gary Gilmore's Eyes (Single Version) 2.4 Bored Teenagers (Single Version) 2.5 Safety in Numbers (Single Version) 2.6 We Who Wait (Single Version) 2.7 On Wheels (Live) 2.8 Newboys (Live) 2.9 New Church (Live) 2.10 Gary Gilmore's Eyes (Live) 2.11 Drowning Men (Live) 2.12 No Time to Be 21 (Live)
Number of Discs2
Notes"One of the greatest punk records of all time" Fire Records reissue the 1978 classic debut punk record 'Crossing The Red Sea with The Adverts'. Released after an ever growing live following and the string of successful chart hits The Advert's debut has cemented it's place in punk rock history. Reworked into the familiar Fire package by John Foster, the record will be available on CD and LP, both with the extra single and live bonus tracks. From the sonic Armageddon which ushers in 'One Chord Wonders' through to the deliriously protracted fade of 'Great British Mistake', 'Crossing The Red Sea' never put a foot wrong. Created at the height of Punk, recorded with all the venom and passion which gave the era such vitality, "Crossing the Red Sea" was at once a statement of intent and a bellow of defiance, a refusal to take anything for granted, even it's own brilliance. More than that, though, the album defined and thus became the precious moment in time when the establishment rules of rock fell away, and new ones still had to be carved out.