# xmcd
#
# Track frame offsets:
# 183
# 20485
# 43800
# 62880
# 81200
# 99923
# 121963
# 140463
# 153470
# 171783
# 189695
# 208115
# 228835
#
# Disc length: 3281 seconds
#
#
# Revision: 9
# Processed by: cddbd v1.5.2PL0 Copyright (c) Steve Scherf et al.
# Submitted via: FreeRIP 2.96 
#
DISCID=a70ccf0d,ab0cce0d,af0ccf0d
DTITLE=Heart / Brigade
DYEAR=1990
DGENRE=Rock
TTITLE0=Wild Child
TTITLE1=All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You
TTITLE2=Secret
TTITLE3=Tall, Dark Handsome Stranger
TTITLE4=I Didn't Want To Need You
TTITLE5=The Night
TTITLE6=Fallen From Grace
TTITLE7=Under The Sky
TTITLE8=Cruel Nights
TTITLE9=Stranded
TTITLE10=Call Of The Wild
TTITLE11=I Want Your World To Turn
TTITLE12=I Love You
EXTD=Originally Released April 3, 1990 \n\nAMG EXPERT REVIEW: Heart entered the 1990s with Brigade, which isn't quite as strong as Heart or Bad Animals, but is nonetheless a respectable effort that has more pluses than minuses. While producer Richie Zito
EXTD='s approach is undeniably slick and glossy, he maintains enough rough edges to keep things interesting on songs ranging from the aggressive hard rock of "Call of the Wild" (not to be confused with the Ted Nugent/Amboy Dukes classic), "Wild Child," a
EXTD=nd "The Night" to the arena-oriented powerful ballads like "Stranded" and "Secret." Heart unintentionally generated some controversy with the hit "All I Want to Do (Is Make Love to You)," a tale of an intimate encounter with a hitchhiker. The "Thoug
EXTD=ht Police" argued that the song encouraged women to endanger themselves by picking up hitchhikers -- overlooking the fact that the song, like a romance novel, is pure fantasy. Though Heart or Bad Animals would serve as a better introduction to Heart
EXTD='s Capitol output, Brigade is an album that die-hard fans shouldn't overlook.  -- Alex Henderson\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nPretty good, even if the seams were beginning to show by now, April 20, 2002\nReviewer: 25-year old wallflower "Eric N An
EXTD=drews" (West Lafayette, IN)\nThe 1980s, at least the latter part of it, was when Heart began experiencing a commercial & creative renaissance. After being dropped by Epic Records in 1983 after the disappointment of PASSIONWORKS, Heart signed to Capi
EXTD=tol for their 1985 self-titled album. The results were no less than astonishing, topping the album charts, spawning 4 top 10 hits (not to mention their first #1) & pretty much making Heart cool again.\nThey repeated the streak on 1987's BAD ANIMALS,
EXTD= proving Heart's comeback was no fluke. But as the 1990s got underway, even Heart's new identity was starting to show signs of wear. Grunge was slowly making itself known & bands that specialized in power ballads (like 1980s Heart) would be wiped of
EXTD=f the charts. But before that happened, Heart gave the new formula another try on 1990's BRIGADE.\n\nThis album brought Heart 3 more hit singles, even if they were smaller ones now. "All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You" just barely missed the top, st
EXTD=alling at #2, but it's still a great song from the pen of producer & future husband of Shania Twain, Mutt Lange. The song caused a bit of controversy with its story of a lurid love affair, but it's still head & shoulders above Lange's other Heart so
EXTD=ng, "Will You Be There [In The Morning]", which would prove to be Heart's last hit single to date. Also, "All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You" remains one of my Uncle Tommy's favorite songs.\n\n"Stranded" is another song from Heart that was a small h
EXTD=it, but deserved to do better. Nancy Wilson's passionate vocal is one of her best & proves that Heart could do the whole power ballad thing that was, in fact, a huge contrast to what they wanted their music to be about. "I Didn't Want To Need You" w
EXTD=as BRIGADE's other hit, but this time, it doesn't quite measure up. Coming from the pen of ever-so-versatile songwriter Diane Warren (who's written a song for just about any artist today), the song seems to try too hard to rise above cliche & is a g
EXTD=ood reason why Heart was initially reluctant to do power ballads in the first place.\n\nElsewhere, BRIGADE is a hit-and-miss affair with one great song followed by a run-of-the-mill one. The opening "Wild Child" is a good reminder of Heart's roots a
EXTD=s balls-to-the-wall (no pun intended) rockers & proof of their Zeppelin influence. "Tall Dark Handsome Stranger" & "Call Of The Wild" (never a fan favorite), on the other hand, are unsuccessful attempts at regaining Heart's rocks. The ballads are so
EXTD=mewhat more successful, with "Under The Sky", "Secret" & "I Love You" shining bright. The last three songs show just how good of singers Ann & Nancy Wilson really are. No wonder they later formed their acoustic side project The Lovemongers.\n\nLike 
EXTD=most bands from the 1980s that specialized in power ballads, the 1990s saw their audience dwindle away in favor of the "woe-is-me" attitude of alternative. Unfortunately, latecomers to the power ballad trend Heart were among those being given the br
EXTD=ushoff. The fact that their material was slipping in quality only furthered the backlash. \n\nAfter 1994's middling DESIRE WALKS ON, Heart went on a hiatus that continues to this day. Even with no official announcement of breaking up, the Wilson sis
EXTD=ters are apparently doing their own things recently. I'm not sure what Ann is up to, but Nancy released an acoustic solo live album in 1999 & is probably enjoying her life as Mrs. Cameron Crowe. So while the chances of Heart returning to the limelig
EXTD=ht are still unknown, an album like BRIGADE will keep us company until or if they do.\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nAnthemic, January 2, 2002\nReviewer: S. Foster (Moira, Co Armagh United Kingdom)\nFollowing on from the perfectly polished 1987 worl
EXTD=d-wide smash Bad Animals, the Wilson sistas & co. came up with a much more raw sounding opus which remained closer to their folk-rock roots, without alienating the new fans they had acquired since their 1985 smash, Heart. Brigade is a simply stunnin
EXTD=g & savage tour de force, brimming with plenty of textured musical sounds & innovative instruments on a rock album. From the opening gambit of Wild Child with its live! sounding guitar riff & drum intro, the album sounds so energetic & raw. All I Wa
EXTD=nna Do (the controversial song about a woman getting pregnant to a stranger because her man ain't got the good to do it) is a perfect link between the AOR ballad which Heart were famed for & the new style they sought to deliver to their audience. Th
EXTD=e album contains a few rock-along trax with cheesy lyrix ahoy (Tall, Dark, Handsome Stranger & Call Of The Wild), but is predominantly full of lush ballads - most notably the gorgeously layered harmonies of Under The Sky, Nancy's wonderful US Smash,
EXTD= Stranded, the suggestive Secret & the album's closer, entitled I Love You, which magnificently reminds you what brilliant vocalists the Wilson sisters are & sends chills up your spine. There are a few trax which really should not have been included
EXTD= (The Night sounds like it was thrown together & Call of the Wild is dull rock), but hey, 2 bad trax out of 13 ain't terrible. With a big stadium world-tour to accompany the album (I saw it in Belfast & it rocked!), Heart fans certainly got the mess
EXTD=age about this one\n\nAMAZON.COM CUSTOMER REVIEW\nHighly Underrated, August 8, 2001\nReviewer: Chris S. "cscotts" (atlanta, ga United States)\nBy the time Heart released BRIGADE in 1990, they had completely fell out of favor with critics, as well as
EXTD= fans of their classic seventies work. This was only a slight deterrence, as the group was still riding very high on their mid-eighties comeback. The critical hatred seemed to continue with this album, which is sad because it easily outpaces their p
EXTD=revious two records, and it my opinion remains their best studio effort. In a possible attempt to appease new and old, BRIGADE offers a marriaging of sorts between the guitar-crunch sound they perfected in the seventies and the power balladry/corpor
EXTD=ate rock sound of the eighties,and the results are first-rate. Though 'All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You' was the big hit here, this album goes so much deeper, and wasn't given the fair shake it deserved. 'Wild Child' and 'Tall Dark Handsome Strang
EXTD=er' recall the Heart of old, and provide Ann Wilson a chance to ignite her firecracker voice. The power ballads here aren't bad either(even the two Diane Warren tunes), and Nancy Wilson shines vocally on two of the album's best cuts, 'Stranded' and 
EXTD='I Want Your World To Turn'. The album highlight, though, is 'Under The Sky', a gorgeous acoustic strummer that showcases the beautiful harmony work between the two sisters. A must for any fan of well-crafted, wonderfully performed music.\n\nHalf.co
EXTD=m Details \nProducer: Richie Zito \n\nAlbum Notes\nSensing that they had perhaps gone overboard in sweetening their sound with too many synthesizers on their past two hit albums, 1985's HEART and 1987's BAD ANIMALS, Heart attempted a return to basic
EXTD=s for their first '90s release, BRIGADE. While not as raw and straight-ahead as early classics such as DREAMBOAT ANNIE, it was another release worthy of chart success and fit perfectly into the rock radio climate of the time. Like all of Heart's pas
EXTD=t records, BRIGADE's track list is a blend of both ballads ("Secret," "I Don't Want to Need You") and rockers ("Wild Child," "The Night").\n\nIndustry Reviews\n3 Stars - Good
EXTT0=
EXTT1=
EXTT2=
EXTT3=
EXTT4=
EXTT5=
EXTT6=
EXTT7=
EXTT8=
EXTT9=
EXTT10=
EXTT11=
EXTT12=
PLAYORDER=
