🎸 Nazareth – Big Dogz (2011)
📀 Album Overview
Big Dogz is the twenty-second studio album by Nazareth, released in 2011. It continues the late-career hard rock revival that began with The Newz (2008), focusing on a raw, guitar-driven sound with modern production clarity.
At this stage, the band was operating as a tight veteran unit, with guitarist Jimmy Murrison playing a central creative role in shaping the album’s direction.
🎵 Tracklist
- Big Dogz
- Claimed
- No Mean Monster
- When Jesus Comes to Save the World Again
- Radio
- Time and Tide
- Lifeboat
- The Toast
- Watch Your Back
- Butterfly
🎶 Music Genre
- Hard Rock
- Blues Rock
- Classic Rock
The album emphasizes guitar-heavy arrangements, bluesy foundations, and a straightforward rock approach, avoiding the synth-heavy aesthetics of earlier decades.
👥 Credits
Band Members:
- Dan McCafferty – vocals
- Jimmy Murrison – guitar
- Pete Agnew – bass
- Lee Agnew – drums
Production:
- Produced by Nazareth and band collaborators
- Recorded in Scotland
🎸 Musical Direction & Sound
Big Dogz delivers a stripped-down, blues-tinged hard rock sound:
- “Big Dogz” – heavy, riff-driven title track with classic rock swagger
- “No Mean Monster” – aggressive, tongue-in-cheek hard rock song
- “When Jesus Comes to Save the World Again” – darker, more reflective track with lyrical weight
- “Radio” – straightforward rock track with catchy structure
- “Butterfly” – softer, melodic closer providing contrast
The album focuses on live-band energy, guitar presence, and direct songwriting, reinforcing their veteran rock identity.
🤓 Fun Facts & Trivia
- The album continues the father-son rhythm section of Pete Agnew and Lee Agnew.
- It was one of the last albums released during the lifetime active period of original vocalist Dan McCafferty before his later health-related retirement.
- The band deliberately avoided overproduction, aiming for a more “live” studio feel.
- It reflects a late-career confidence rather than commercial reinvention.
🧠 Did You Know?
- Jimmy Murrison was effectively the main modern creative driver of Nazareth at this point.
- The album’s tone is significantly heavier than most of their 1980s output.
- It reflects the broader trend of legacy rock bands returning to roots-based recording in the 2000s–2010s.
- The band recorded it in Scotland with a focus on minimal studio embellishment.
- It stands as part of a late-career creative continuity following The Newz.

