Christ: The Album is
Crass' fourth album, released in
1982. It was released as a boxed set double vinyl LP package, including one disk of new studio material and another, entitled
Well Forked.., featuring a live recording of their June
1981 gig at the
100 Club[?] in
London along with other tracks and fragments. The album also included a book,
A Series Of Shock Slogans and Mindless Token Tantrums (which featured
Penny Rimbaud's essay
The Last of the Hippies, telling the story of the suspicious death of his friend
Wally Hope[?]) and a large size poster painted by
Gee Vaucher.
The album took over a year to record, produce and mix, during which time the Falklands War had broken out and been fought. This caused Crass to fundementally question their approach to making records, for as a group who's very reason for existing was to comment upon political issues, they felt they had been overtaken and made to appear redundant by real world events. Subsequent releases, including the singles "How does it Feel to Be the Mother of A Thousand Dead" and "Sheep Farming in the Falklands" and album Yes Sir, I Will saw the band strip their sound 'back to basics' and issued as 'tactical responses' to political situations.
Studio tracks
- Have A Nice Day
- Smother Love
- Ninteen Eighty Bore
- I Know There Is Love
- Beg Your Pardon
- Birth Control 'n' Rock 'n' Roll
- Reality Whitewash
- Its The Greatest Working Class Ripoff
- Deadhead
- You Can Be Who?
- Buy Now Pay As You Go
- Rival Tribal Revel Rebel (pt 2)
- Bumhooler
- Sentiment (White Feathers)
- Major General Despair
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License