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Big Audio Dynamite
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F-Punk
7/13/2005, AMG

For his first album for Radioactive, Mick Jones changed the name of his group back to Big Audio Dynamite and delivered F-Punk. While the name was a retreat back to the BAD's...  more >

Planet Bad Greatest Hits
7/13/2005, AMG

Culling together tracks chosen from a decade's (and seven albums') worth of material, Planet BAD serves as a focused, well-chosen compilation of Mick Jones' post-Clash...  more >

Megatop Phoenix
7/13/2005, AMG

On Megatop Phoenix, Jones delves even further into a dance-influenced, cut-and-paste approach to pop music that manages to capture all of the inventiveness of late-'80s...  more >

No. 10 Upping Street
1/1/1986, LAUNCH, Brett Milano

The reunion with Joe Strummer didn't quite work, but "C'mon Every Beatbox" stands as the last great Strummer/Jones composition....  more >

No. 10 Upping Street
7/13/2005, AMG

Temporarily reuniting with his former Clash partner Joe Strummer (who co-produced this album and co-wrote five songs), Mick Jones expands on the formula of the debut with...  more >

This Is Big Audio Dynamite
7/13/2005, AMG

Since Mick Jones was the more melodic, pop force in the Clash, it was a surprise that the band he formed after being kicked out of that group was such an unusual mix of...  more >

Tighten Up, Volume '88
7/13/2005, AMG

Mick Jones tightens the rather free-form structures of the previous B.A.D. albums on Tighten Up, Vol. '88. While he was aiming for a greater commercial success, the result...  more >

Super Hits
7/13/2005, AMG

Like many conceptual bands, Big Audio Dynamite were primarily an album-based group, turning out records that had a consistent sound and theme. The problem was, Mick Jones...  more >