The album features several of the band's most enduring songs, often played at their live shows: : One of the band's most recognizable hits.
Mother Earth bleedin', who will stop the flow? Same old system that enslave the soul If you love the water, if you love the air Then you got to stand, show them we still care Not a left or right—it's a human fight Turn off the greed, turn on the light earth crisis steel pulse
Decades later, the "crisis" the band sang about feels more relevant than ever. Steel Pulse didn't just make a reggae album; they made a survival manual for the modern world. The album features several of the band's most
References to tanker spills (e.g., Exxon Valdez was 1989, but Torrey Canyon 1967 and Amoco Cadiz 1978 were fresh memories). Steel Pulse didn't just make a reggae album;
The "solid story" behind Steel Pulse’s 1984 album is one of heavy political stakes, creative transitions, and an unexpected legacy that bridged the gap between British reggae and American hardcore punk. The Global Narrative
The title track and album cover address the tensions between world powers, specifically referencing the United States and the Soviet Union through lyrics about the "eagle and the bear". Ecological and Moral Decay: Songs like "Wild Goose Chase"