The first four years of
Billy Bragg's recording career (1982 to 1986) were a blur of record releases that established the froggy-voiced "Bard from Barking" as perhaps the most powerful and engaging political songwriter to emerge since the "folk scare" of the 1960s. From 1988 on, however,
Bragg had the difficult task of living up to his own legacy, and that proved to be no small task; as he stylistically outgrew the rough electric guitar and vocal textures of
Brewing Up with Billy Bragg and
Life's a Riot with Spy vs. Spy,
Bragg didn't display the same immediate skill at "proper" record-making and took his time growing comfortable with the craft of the studio, and while he never ran out of things to write and sing about, as the 1980s faded into the 1990s his songs lost a certain amount of the sharp wit and keen focus that was second nature on his early records. (It also became clear the material was coming a lot more slowly, to boot.) This period of
Bragg's career is documented on
Volume 2, the second box set compiled from
Bragg's back catalog, featuring expanded versions of four albums: 1988's
Workers Playtime, 1991's
Don't Try This at Home, 1996's
William Bloke, and 2002's
England, Half English. While none of these albums can be called bad, very little of what's featured on this set matches the consistent quality of the records compiled on the similar
Volume 1 box, and even the best of the records featured here (
Don't Try This at Home) falls slightly short of the wit and fire of
Bragg's salad days. That said, while one has to pick and choose to find the pearls on
Volume 2, they are certainly there, and
Bragg has been generous with the bonus material on this set. Each album is accompanied by a bonus disc of demos, outtakes, single sides, and the like, and each is full of pleasant surprises for the completist (though they never quite equal the quality of the original albums) and offer an interesting look at how these albums came together.
Volume 2 also comes with a book featuring song lyrics, credits, and an essay from
Bragg's longtime manager,
Peter Jenner, as well as a DVD that includes a show by
Bragg and his band the Red Stars taped for the BBC at London's Town and Country Club in late 1991, as well as highlights from a spring 2006 gig in
Bragg's hometown of Barking, Essex, with
Bragg joined by former
Faces keyboard man
Ian McLagan. Each of the expanded albums included in
Volume 2 has also been released individually, and some fans may prefer to pick and choose rather than buy the entire set, but as a whole,
Volume 2 documents
Billy Bragg as he struggles to balance musical and emotional maturity with the passion of his political ideals; the results may not be as engaging as
Volume 1, but there's still a fascinating story to be found in this collection.