This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 189.94.127.74(talk) at 15:20, 20 December 2023(added source for release date (Record Mirror) it was released on 30 January 1984 (Monday) and entered the UK charts on 11 February). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 15:20, 20 December 2023 by 189.94.127.74(talk)(added source for release date (Record Mirror) it was released on 30 January 1984 (Monday) and entered the UK charts on 11 February)
Of the title of the album and the title track, bassist Steve Dawson has said that "In England, there's a paper called the Daily Express, and on the logo at the top of the paper, there's a crusader, and there was a car made by Ford called a Cortina Crusader. That's what started it off. We just liked the name "Crusader". We didn't have any connotations of what it meant as far as history goes, but we just liked the name "Crusader", so we just wrote the lyrics to fit the title, really."[2]
Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic said that although by the time they released the album, "the band had obviously stopped leading the New Wave of British Heavy Metal with its aggressive, blue-collar biker anthems", the album "as a whole offers a slight improvement over the previous year's Power & the Glory from an overall songwriting perspective".[3] Canadian journalist Martin Popoff considered Saxon's turn to "a low-cal, kinder, gentler metal... a well-conceived experiment" and denied those who called Crusader "a failure" and "a bald-faced commercial maneuver", finding the album "refreshing if more than occasionally flawed."[4]
The album reached No. 1 in the metal charts in Sweden, France and Germany[citation needed]. It peaked at #18 in the UK Albums Chart.[5][6] It also charted in the U.S. Billboard chart.
Track listing
All tracks are written by Saxon, except where noted