Where the Rose Is Sown
"Where the Rose Is Sown" | ||||
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Single by Big Country | ||||
from the album Steeltown | ||||
B-side |
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Released | 16 November 1984[1] | |||
Length | 4:13 | |||
Label | Mercury Vertigo (Canada) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Stuart Adamson Mark Brzezicki Tony Butler Bruce Watson | |||
Producer(s) | Steve Lillywhite | |||
Big Country singles chronology | ||||
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Where the Rose is Sown is a song by Scottish rock band Big Country,[2] which was released in 1984 as the second single from their second studio album Steeltown. It was written by Big Country and produced by Steve Lillywhite.[3] "Where the Rose Is Sown" peaked at No. 29 in the UK and No. 25 in Ireland.[4][5]
Music video
A music video was filmed to promote the single. It received medium rotation on MTV.[6]
Critical reception
Upon release, Lesley White of Smash Hits commented: "More of the same from the frustrated messiahs of contemporary rock. A treat for lovers of "real music" everywhere - give me artful pretence any day."[7] Sunie of Number One said: ""It's the lovin' things you do..." Anyone remember the old '60s hit? It lurks just behind this song, artfully obscured by guitar solos, "heeyahs" and the Lillywhite wall of sound. I rather like it."[8]
Cash Box commented: "Big Country delivers a pounding slice of tragic political rock which is given its edge in Adamson's biting delivery. Trademark guitar riffs and a no-nonsense beat should help [it] become another anthemic classic from the band."[9] Billboard stated: "Group's stirring strength is sadly buried in muddy sound."[10]
In a retrospective review of Steeltown, Tim Peacock of Record Collector described the song as one of the album's "obvious go-to tracks", adding that it had an anti-war message "especially resonant in the wake of the Falklands".[11]
Track listing
- 7" single
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 4:03
- "Belief in the Small Man" - 5:12
- 7" single (German release)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 4:08
- "Bass Dance" - 1:40
- 7" single (US/Canada release)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 4:08
- "Prairie Rose" - 4:50
- 7" single (UK limited edition release)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 4:03
- "Belief in the Small Man" - 5:12
- "Wonderland" - 4:47 (Recorded live in Austin, Texas, 22 March 1984)
- "In a Big Country" - 6:15 (Recorded live in Austin, Texas, 22 March 1984)
- "Auld Lang Syne" - 1:09 (Recorded live in Austin, Texas, 22 March 1984)
- 7" single (US promo)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 3:58
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 3:58
- 12" single
- "Where the Rose Is Sown (Extended Remix)" - 7:43
- "Where the Rose Is Sown (7" Version)" - 4:03
- "Bass Dance" - 1:40
- "Belief in the Small Man" - 5:12
- 12" single (German release)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown (Extended Remix)" - 7:43
- "Bass Dance" - 1:40
- "Belief in the Small Man" - 5:12
- 12" single (Canadian release)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 4:44
- "Prairie Rose" - 4:47
- 12" single (US promo)
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 3:58
- "Where the Rose Is Sown" - 3:58
Chart performance
Chart (1984) | Peak position |
---|---|
Irish Singles Chart[5] | 25 |
UK Singles Chart[4] | 29 |
Personnel
- Big Country
- Stuart Adamson - vocals, guitar
- Bruce Watson - guitar
- Tony Butler - bass
- Mark Brzezicki - drums, percussion
- Production
- Steve Lillywhite - producer
- Will Gosling - engineer
- Other
- Brian Aris - sleeve photography
- Grant-Edwards Management - management
References
- ^ "singles".
- ^ "The Michigan Daily - December 6, 1984 - Big County - Steeltown". The Michigan Daily. 6 December 1984. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
- ^ William Ruhlmann. "Steeltown - Big Country | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
- ^ a b "BIG COUNTRY | full Official Chart History". Official Charts. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
- ^ a b "The Irish Charts - All there is to know". The Irish Charts. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
- ^ Billboard magazine - MTV Programming - 8 December 1984 - page 31
- ^ Smash Hits magazine - Singles - Lesley White - 6–19 December 1984 - page 19
- ^ Number One magazine - Singles - Sunie - 24 November 1984 - page 52
- ^ Cash Box newspaper - 8 December 1984 - Reviews: singles - page 11
- ^ Billboard magazine - Reviews: singles - 15 December 1984 - page 73
- ^ "Steeltown - Record Collector Magazine". Recordcollectormag.com. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
External links
- "Where The Rose Is Sown" at Discogs.com
- "Where The Rose Is Sown" at Allmusic.com
- v
- t
- e
- Bruce Watson
- Mark Brzezicki
- Jamie Watson
- Simon Hough
- Scott Whitley
- Stuart Adamson
- Pete Wishart
- Alan Wishart
- Clive Parker
- Tony Butler
- Pat Ahern
- Mike Peters
- Derek Forbes
- The Crossing
- Steeltown
- The Seer
- Peace in Our Time
- No Place Like Home
- The Buffalo Skinners
- Why the Long Face
- Driving to Damascus (John Wayne's Dream)
- The Journey
- Through a Big Country: Greatest Hits
- Without the Aid of a Safety Net
- Radio 1 Sessions
- Eclectic
- One in a Million
- Big Country at the BBC
- Wonderland
- Non!
- "Harvest Home"
- "Fields of Fire"
- "In a Big Country"
- "Chance"
- "Wonderland"
- "East of Eden"
- "Where the Rose Is Sown"
- "Just a Shadow"
- "Look Away"
- "The Teacher"
- "One Great Thing"
- "Hold the Heart"
- "King of Emotion"
- "Broken Heart (Thirteen Valleys)"
- "Peace in Our Time"
- "Save Me"
- "Heart of the World"
- "Republican Party Reptile"
- "Beautiful People"
- "Alone"
- "Ships (Where Were You)"
- "The One I Love"
- "I'm Not Ashamed"
- "You Dreamer"
- "Fragile Thing"
- "See You" / "Perfect World"
- "Somebody Else"
- Discography
- Skids