Gang Of Four – Songs Of The Free (1982/2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 35:49 minutes | 1,33 GB | Genre: New Wave, Post-Punk
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Rhino – Warner Records
Songs of the Free is the third studio album by Gang of Four, released in 1982.
It is their first recording with Sara Lee as bassist, replacing Dave Allen. The album also marks a shift towards R&B or funk music, and away from the more abrasive elements in their earlier albums.
In 1996, Infinite Zero Archive/American Recordings label issued it on CD, with two bonus tracks, and with a slightly changed song order (swapping the positions of “Muscle for Brains” and “We Live as We Dream, Alone”), and mistitling “I Love a Man in a Uniform” as “I Love a Man in Uniform.” EMI reissued the album on CD in 2008 with the original song order and no bonus tracks.
Pitchfork listed Songs of the Free as 99th best album of the 1980s.[6] Rhino Records re-released Songs of the Free in limited edition of 6,250 on 180-gram blue, purple, and yellow splattered vinyl for Black Friday Record Store Day 2015.
Only within the context of Entertainment! and Solid Gold does Songs of the Free seem truly weak; otherwise, it has its merits and lasting value but doesn’t hold up in invention and influence like its predecessors. Clunky rhythms, lumpen tempos, and morbid existentialism dampen some the songs, making the record seem less assertive and defiant. Funk plays more of a definitive role here, defenestrating the frenetics that characterized the earlier records. With bassist Dave Allen out of the fold for Shriekback, the rhythmic chemistry isn’t what it used to be. Replacement Sara Lee is excellently skilled, but she doesn’t have the rapport with drummer Hugo Burnham that Allen had. There’s a certain dour moodiness apparent in the production, most obvious in Andy Gill’s guitar on “Call Me Up”; he’s less incisive, used more as an atmospheric and rhythmic device than for the dagger shots he provided before. “I Love a Man in a Uniform” wound up being the band’s most well-known song, which is something of a shame. Not weak in any manner, it’s just unfortunate that more exciting singles like “At Home He’s a Tourist” and “Damaged Goods” didn’t catch fire. Nonetheless, “Uniform” found its spot down on the disco floor; ironically, odds are pretty good that most didn’t realize the lyrical content of the song. With its chorus led by female singers, “Uniform” could be mistaken for something similar in subject to “It’s Raining Men.” Not the case, as the song is laden with just as much irony as Go4’s early album titles. Soldiers sexy! Rifles erotic! Amputations — well, the picture is clear. [Songs of the Free was reissued in 1995 on Warner subsidiary Infinite Zero/American, with a dub mix of “I Love a Man in Uniform.”] – Andy Kellman
Tracklist:
1-1. Gang Of Four – Call Me Up (03:36)
1-2. Gang Of Four – I Love a Man in a Uniform (04:07)
1-3. Gang Of Four – Muscle for Brains (03:16)
1-4. Gang Of Four – It Is Not Enough (03:28)
1-5. Gang Of Four – Life, It’s a Shame (04:08)
1-6. Gang Of Four – I Will Be a Good Boy (03:56)
1-7. Gang Of Four – The History of the World (04:39)
1-8. Gang Of Four – We Live as We Dream, Alone (03:39)
1-9. Gang Of Four – Of the Instant (04:57)