TRESPASS
''ONE OF THESE DAYS: THE TRESPASS ANTHOLOGY, DISC TWO''
AUGUST 31 2004
133:36
DISC ONE
1/One of These Days
Dave Crawte/3:43
2/Frogeye
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:07
3/Bombay Mix
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:33
4/Ace of Spades
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:57
5/8' Til 5'
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:45
6/Stormchild
Sutcliffe Jugend/5:14
7/Lightsmith
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/5:57
8/One of These Days/3:40
9/Change Your Mind/3:27
10/Visionary
Sutcliffe Jugend/5:09
11/Assassin
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/6:38
12/Live It Up
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:34
13/Jealousy
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:31
14/Bounty Hunter
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/5:07
15/Point of No Return
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:20
16/Vendetta
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:45
DISC TWO
1/Bright Lights
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:59
2/The Duel
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:22
3/Man and Machine
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:52
4/Life Beat
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:16
5/It's All Over
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:07
6/Make It Metal
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:27
7/Rockin' on the Radio
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:43
8/Midnight Hour
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:37
9/Long Way to Hollywood
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:10
10/Rockin' the Hard Way
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:10
11/Hot on Your Heels
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:12
12/One of These Days
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:54
13/Stormchild/5:26
14/Live It Up
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:43
15/Visionary
Sutcliffe Jugend/5:11
Dave Crawte /Bass, Guitar
Bob Irving /Bass
Chris Linscott /Bass
Steve Mills /Vocals
Richard Penny /Bass
Mark Sutcliffe /Guitar, Vocals
Paul Sutcliffe /Drums
Tony Wilson /Producer
REVIEW
by James Christopher Monger
Like fellow New Wave of British Heavy Metal acts Quartz and Stray, East Anglia's Trespass were an overnight success that tried valiantly to build a career out of one memorable hit. In 1979, the bluesy and intense "One of These Days" found the working-class quartet being compared to everyone from Deep Purple to Black Sabbath to Ten Years After, but instant fame mixed with the inexperience of youth can be a lethal cocktail, and the group soon found itself consumed by constant lineup changes and industry politics. Long sought after by fans and collectors, Trespass' signature tune and the numerous singles that followed it are finally available to the masses on Sanctuary Records' 33-track double-disc retrospective One of These Days: The Trespass Anthology. Featuring a BBC Radio One Friday Rock Show session from 1980, three versions of their "One of These Days" -- including the one recorded for EMI's Metal for Muthas, Vol. 2 collection -- and a myriad singles and demos, it's nothing if not thorough. However, while the songs themselves are competent, well played, and indicative of the grit of the era, there's nothing remarkable about them. Genre contemporaries like Motörhead, Judas Priest, and Iron Maiden were successful not only because they had a distinctive sound, but because they continued to develop it, while bands like Trespass -- understandably, considering their lack of major-label support -- opted to leave the boat unrocked.
BIOGRAPHY
by Doug Stone
Trespass is a lost metal artifact luckily preserved on the Metal for Muthas, Vol. II collection. Formed in Suffolk, England, by brothers Mark (guitar) and Paul (drums) Sutcliffe, the band toiled for three years before releasing "One of These Days" in 1979 on its own Trial label. An excellent cut recalling sinful Blue Öyster Cult, the song set Trespass on the crest of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal. Steve Mills (vocals), Cris Linscott (bass), and Dave Crawte (rhythm guitar) rounded out the band, who now brandished a powerful live prowess as well. However, second single "Jealousy" faded quickly. Robert Irving replaced Linscott, and Mark took the mic when Mills departed. Robert Eckland ultimately performed vox duties on an EP titled Bright Lights and the full-length Trespass in 1981. Around this time, Trespass landed two tracks on Metal for Muthas, Vol. II, a different recording of the debut single and "Storm Child." But the group never grabbed big label attention and disappeared. In 1988, the brothers resurfaced (with Crawte on bass) in Blue Bludd. Two Music for Nations recordings flopped, and this new incarnation shared the tragic fate of Trespass.
''ONE OF THESE DAYS: THE TRESPASS ANTHOLOGY, DISC TWO''
AUGUST 31 2004
133:36
DISC ONE
1/One of These Days
Dave Crawte/3:43
2/Frogeye
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:07
3/Bombay Mix
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:33
4/Ace of Spades
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:57
5/8' Til 5'
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:45
6/Stormchild
Sutcliffe Jugend/5:14
7/Lightsmith
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/5:57
8/One of These Days/3:40
9/Change Your Mind/3:27
10/Visionary
Sutcliffe Jugend/5:09
11/Assassin
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/6:38
12/Live It Up
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:34
13/Jealousy
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:31
14/Bounty Hunter
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/5:07
15/Point of No Return
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:20
16/Vendetta
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:45
DISC TWO
1/Bright Lights
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:59
2/The Duel
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:22
3/Man and Machine
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:52
4/Life Beat
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:16
5/It's All Over
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:07
6/Make It Metal
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:27
7/Rockin' on the Radio
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:43
8/Midnight Hour
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:37
9/Long Way to Hollywood
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:10
10/Rockin' the Hard Way
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:10
11/Hot on Your Heels
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/4:12
12/One of These Days
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:54
13/Stormchild/5:26
14/Live It Up
Dave Crawte / Sutcliffe Jugend/3:43
15/Visionary
Sutcliffe Jugend/5:11
Dave Crawte /Bass, Guitar
Bob Irving /Bass
Chris Linscott /Bass
Steve Mills /Vocals
Richard Penny /Bass
Mark Sutcliffe /Guitar, Vocals
Paul Sutcliffe /Drums
Tony Wilson /Producer
REVIEW
by James Christopher Monger
Like fellow New Wave of British Heavy Metal acts Quartz and Stray, East Anglia's Trespass were an overnight success that tried valiantly to build a career out of one memorable hit. In 1979, the bluesy and intense "One of These Days" found the working-class quartet being compared to everyone from Deep Purple to Black Sabbath to Ten Years After, but instant fame mixed with the inexperience of youth can be a lethal cocktail, and the group soon found itself consumed by constant lineup changes and industry politics. Long sought after by fans and collectors, Trespass' signature tune and the numerous singles that followed it are finally available to the masses on Sanctuary Records' 33-track double-disc retrospective One of These Days: The Trespass Anthology. Featuring a BBC Radio One Friday Rock Show session from 1980, three versions of their "One of These Days" -- including the one recorded for EMI's Metal for Muthas, Vol. 2 collection -- and a myriad singles and demos, it's nothing if not thorough. However, while the songs themselves are competent, well played, and indicative of the grit of the era, there's nothing remarkable about them. Genre contemporaries like Motörhead, Judas Priest, and Iron Maiden were successful not only because they had a distinctive sound, but because they continued to develop it, while bands like Trespass -- understandably, considering their lack of major-label support -- opted to leave the boat unrocked.
BIOGRAPHY
by Doug Stone
Trespass is a lost metal artifact luckily preserved on the Metal for Muthas, Vol. II collection. Formed in Suffolk, England, by brothers Mark (guitar) and Paul (drums) Sutcliffe, the band toiled for three years before releasing "One of These Days" in 1979 on its own Trial label. An excellent cut recalling sinful Blue Öyster Cult, the song set Trespass on the crest of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal. Steve Mills (vocals), Cris Linscott (bass), and Dave Crawte (rhythm guitar) rounded out the band, who now brandished a powerful live prowess as well. However, second single "Jealousy" faded quickly. Robert Irving replaced Linscott, and Mark took the mic when Mills departed. Robert Eckland ultimately performed vox duties on an EP titled Bright Lights and the full-length Trespass in 1981. Around this time, Trespass landed two tracks on Metal for Muthas, Vol. II, a different recording of the debut single and "Storm Child." But the group never grabbed big label attention and disappeared. In 1988, the brothers resurfaced (with Crawte on bass) in Blue Bludd. Two Music for Nations recordings flopped, and this new incarnation shared the tragic fate of Trespass.