🎸 Nazareth – 2XS (1982)
📀 Album Overview
2XS is the thirteenth studio album by Nazareth, released in 1982. The album continues the band’s early-80s direction, leaning heavily into a polished AOR and pop rock sound, while still retaining traces of their hard rock origins.
With slick production and an emphasis on radio-friendly songwriting, 2XS reflects Nazareth’s effort to stay relevant in a rapidly changing musical landscape dominated by melodic rock and MTV-era aesthetics.
🎵 Tracklist
- Love Leads to Madness
- Boys in the Band
- You Love Another
- Gatecrash
- Games
- Back to the Trenches
- Dream On
- Lonely in the Night
- Preservation
- Take the Rap
🎶 Music Genre
- AOR (Album-Oriented Rock)
- Pop Rock
- Hard Rock (elements)
The album is defined by clean production, melodic hooks, synthesizer accents, and a strong focus on accessibility.
👥 Credits
Band Members:
- Dan McCafferty – vocals
- Manny Charlton – guitar
- Pete Agnew – bass
- Darryl Sweet – drums
Production:
- Produced by Jeff Baxter
- Recorded in the Bahamas
🎸 Musical Direction & Sound
2XS highlights a fully realized AOR direction, focusing on melody and radio appeal:
- “Love Leads to Madness” – standout hit with a catchy chorus and polished sound
- “Dream On” – melodic, mid-tempo track with emotional tone
- “Lonely in the Night” – atmospheric song with strong vocal delivery
- “Games” – upbeat track with pop-rock sensibility
- “Back to the Trenches” – one of the heavier tracks, recalling their earlier style
The album balances commercial accessibility with occasional nods to their hard rock roots.
🤓 Fun Facts & Trivia
- “Love Leads to Madness” became one of Nazareth’s most successful singles of the 1980s.
- The album was recorded in the Bahamas, contributing to its polished and relaxed production style.
- It represents the peak of Nazareth’s AOR phase.
- The band incorporated more synthesizers and modern production techniques.
🧠Did You Know?
- Dan McCafferty adapted his vocal style to suit the smoother, melodic direction of the album.
- Producer Jeff Baxter helped shape the band’s transition into AOR.
- The album title “2XS” plays on the phrase “too excess,” reflecting themes of lifestyle and excess.
- The band aimed to appeal to a broader international audience during this period.
- It remains one of their most commercially accessible releases.
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