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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heavenly return to form.
After two ground breaking platinum albums in the early 80's, Heaven 17 lost it only to be over taken by former bandmates The Human League. So it's a wonderful surprise to find that Ware, Marsh and Craig have come up with a modern classic. This is the album that should have followed on from The Luxury Gap. Bigger Than America cannot be described as a simple retro step...
Published on April 4, 2000 by orac_uk

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3 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars It Sucks
After reading the reviews here, I bought this album. After discovering that the disc itself is unplayable on an Apple computer (some sort of rubbish copy protection in the disc) I managed to hear it on a car stereo. Apart from 2 really good songs, this album is dated and awful. Instead of sticking to the Heaven 17 sound, they have tried to emulate every crappy house/dance...
Published on November 2, 2005 by Former DM Fan


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heavenly return to form., April 4, 2000
By 
orac_uk (bracknell, berkshire United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bigger Than America (Audio CD)
After two ground breaking platinum albums in the early 80's, Heaven 17 lost it only to be over taken by former bandmates The Human League. So it's a wonderful surprise to find that Ware, Marsh and Craig have come up with a modern classic. This is the album that should have followed on from The Luxury Gap. Bigger Than America cannot be described as a simple retro step back to the electro early eighties. It's a skilful mix of modern electronica with those warm analogue synth sounds which they helped pioneer. Some of the sounds on this album could have come from their time with the Human League. But what really sets this album apart from the others is the strong collection of songs, which all have that Heaven 17 trademark of melodic perfection. Martyn Ware does a good job on the production of this album with the inclusion of modern dance beats and crystal clear vocals from the superb Glenn Gregory. Highlights include the album opener Dive and the haunting Do I Believe and there are no filler tracks on Bigger Than America. Strongly recommended if you loved their debut album Penthouse & Pavement.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Contemporary Classic, December 17, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Bigger Than America (Audio CD)
Usually with your favorite bands, there is no comparison to the first few albums. Especially with 80's bands, those first few are often their best work, plus your nostalgia and loyalty often make it difficult to truly appreciate later work. However, with "Bigger Than America", I can honestly say that this is my favorite Heaven 17 album. I've had it for almost two years now and it has rarely left my CD player for the shelf. The textures, lyrics, melodies, and harmonies of almost every song are a credit to the staying power of the three members of the group. From the sultry way Martyn Ware says "Dive" on the opening number to the dance songs of "We Blame Love" and "Freak" to the chilling lyrics of "Bigger Than America"...I could list every song and compliment the songwriting and vocal talent of the band. I swear you will not be disappointed with this album. I can only hope they will continue in this vein for another record....
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Heaven 17's Best Album?, June 16, 2005
By 
BeautifulMutant "BeautifulMutant" (St. Petersburg, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bigger Than America (Audio CD)
Lead singer Glenn Gregory helped Martin Fry relaunch ABC's first album in about 6 years back in 1997 with very mixed results. Maybe he saved all the good stuff for this record.
Gone is the crappy, fake soul of their last release "Teddy Bear, Duke and Psycho." Back is their smart, socially danceable commentaries sounding much like their best work on their first two albums. This time they've taken aim at the good old USA. Songs like "Bigger Than America," and "The Big Dipper" very coyly stab at America's genitalia with lyrics such as:
"The King of Hollywood is dead / I don't care what the President said / I don't believe in anything I've read / the Big Dipper's coming down / New York's a shanty town / The distant sound is L.A. burning down."

Other highlights include the Fascist Groove Thing-like rhythm of "Designing Heaven," the atmospheric opening track "Dive," the disco pomp of "We Blame Love" and the industrial tinged "Freak."

Heaven 17 have managed to transcend the new wave slump that have claimed the life of many a new wave comeback albums (See Modern English's last abomination, parts of A Flock of Seagulls and the Human League's as well) by incorporating smart lyrics, beats, and lots of analog synth sounds. Eight years is a long time between records. Are they still relevant? Do you even care? About the only thing that's changed about the band are their hair and waist lines. (Glenn Gregory now looks almost exactly like the Peter Barrett of Midnight Oil). If you say that good new wave synthpop is gone, pick it up and be pleasantly surprised.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A "defective" must-have for fans., August 6, 2011
By 
1FrSF "JRW" (Palm Springs, California USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Bigger Than America (Audio CD)
This disk is a nightmare. The music is some of the best made by Heaven 17 but the disk will not rip and therefore cannot be played on an mp3 player. I value the ability to save a disk on my hard drive and play it using Media Player or Roxio but this disk will not "allow" that. So with that it is hard to fall in love with music that you are forced to listen to on an actual disk player. I assume a download does not have this problem but I purchased a hard-copy disk because I am old and that is what I do. So untill the factory-made disk I have is lost or damaged I will try to listen to this in my car and make the best of the experience. As for the music itself anyone who loves Heaven 17 should own this especially those who favor the 1983 album The Luxury Gap.
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3 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars It Sucks, November 2, 2005
This review is from: Bigger Than America (Audio CD)
After reading the reviews here, I bought this album. After discovering that the disc itself is unplayable on an Apple computer (some sort of rubbish copy protection in the disc) I managed to hear it on a car stereo. Apart from 2 really good songs, this album is dated and awful. Instead of sticking to the Heaven 17 sound, they have tried to emulate every crappy house/dance style of that 1996/1997 era. It sounds like a cheap rubbish Corona album or something of that ilk. Oh dear, I'm VERY disappointed. The thing about these 80's bands who were pioneers once, is that they no longer are the trend setters or the ground breakers. They are mearly emulating old garbage.
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Bigger Than America
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