of "
The Big Music", the title of which would define the Waterboys' early sound.
A Pagan Place expanded the Waterboys' treatment of spiritual themes beyond the
Christian beliefs of "December" from
The Waterboys. "A Church Not Made With Hands" is an ode to a woman who "is everywhere and no place / Her church not made with hands". Both "All the Things She Gave Me" and "The Thrill is Gone" discuss the end of a romantic relationship. "Rags" and "Somebody Might Wave Back" discuss despair and optimism in loneliness. Scott's songwriting has been criticized as being overly introspective, and all four tracks contain some element of self-reflection. Wallinger later chose "The Thrill Is Gone" as his favourite Waterboys track that he did not play on. "
The Big Music" was released as a single, and became a descriptor of the sound of the album, the preceding debut
The Waterboys and the following album
This Is the Sea. Waterboys chronicler Ian Abrahams described the song as the album's defining track, with New Musical Express' Andrew Collins stating, "What a concept and what an albatross. A lilting anthem with grand cymbal slashes, soulful backing... a lazy, meandering essay." For the Waterboys' gig at London's Town & Country Club in 1985, backing vocals to the song were provided by
Sinéad O'Connor, marking her first UK live appearance. Usage of the term "The Big Music" spread to include other bands with a similar sound. The single included "Bury My Heart" and "The Earth Only Endures". "Bury My Heart", a reference to "
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee", is described by Anderson as "a lament to the decimated
American Red Indians". The final track of the original release, "A Pagan Place", featuring a trumpet solo from Lorimer, is an ambiguous questioning of the process of Christianising a
Pagan culture. The song "Cathy", included on the album's re-issue, was originally a
Nikki Sudden song. Sudden writes about an evening in 1982 when he was staying in Scott's apartment: "Late that night – around midnight – Mike recorded a lead vocal to the backing track for my song, Cathy. We did a quick mix and that was that until twenty years ago [sic] when he includes the number on the reissue of his
A Pagan Place album". This 2002 reissue credits Sudden as the song's author. == Critical reception ==