Gang of Four (band)

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Gang of Four
Gang of Four performing in Bergen, Norway in 2007
Gang of Four performing in Bergen, Norway in 2007
Background information
Origin Leeds, England
Genre(s) Post-punk, New Wave
Years active 1977–present
Label(s) V2 Records
EMI
Warner Bros. Records
PVC/Jem
Fast Product
Website Official site
Members
Jon King (Vocals/Melodica)
Andy Gill
Dave Allen (Bass Guitar) (first two albums)
Hugo Burnham (Drums/Vocals) (first three albums)
Former members
Sara Lee (Bass Guitar) (replaced Dave Allen)

Gang of Four is an English post-punk group from Leeds. Original personnel were singer Jon King, guitarist Andy Gill, bass guitarist Dave Allen and drummer Hugo Burnham. They were fully active from 1977 to 1984, and then re-emerged twice in the 1990s with King and Gill. In 2004, the original line-up reunited.

They play a stripped-down mix of punk rock, with strong elements of funk music, minimalism and dub reggae and an emphasis on the social and political ills in society. Gang of Four's later albums (Songs of the Free and Hard) found them softening some of their more jarring qualities, and drifting towards dance-funk and disco. Their début album, Entertainment!, ranked at #490 in Rolling Stone's The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

Contents

Gill and King, the creative forces in the band, brought together an eclectic array of influences, ranging from the neo-Marxist Frankfurt School of social criticism to the increasingly clear trans-Atlantic punk consensus. In fact the term "Gang of Four" refers to the "big four" Structuralist theorists: Claude Lévi-Strauss, Michel Foucault, Roland Barthes, and Jacques Lacan, not to be confused with the Maoist Gang of Four in China.

Their musical work was heavily influenced by a university-funded trip to New York, where they saw Television and the Ramones at CBGB's.

Gill's unique guitar sound had a forebear in the playing of Wilko Johnson, the frenetic guitarist with archetypal British pub rockers Dr. Feelgood. Gill's skeletal, staccato, aggressive guitar has proved an enduring influence in turn.[citation needed] Jon King's threatening on-stage dancing, while equally idiosyncratic, has proved less easy to imitate. Paul Morley described the band's music as "a kind of demented funk, incredibly white but also, because of political commitment and defiant sloganeering, very dark, and ultimately as close to the depraved edge of the blues and Hendrix." Critic Greil Marcus[1] found his first viewing of the group's performance so shattering that he left after their set rather than risk having the impact of the deeply political Gang of Four's songs dampened by the pop-punk of Buzzcocks

The Gang's debut single, Damaged Goods b/w Love Like Anthrax & Armalite Rifle, was recorded in June 1978 and released on December 10, 1978 on Edinburgh's Fast Product label. It was produced by the Gang and Fast Product honcho Bob Last. It was a No.1 indie chart hit and John Peel radio show favourite. This led to two outstanding Peel radio sessions, which, with their incendiary live performances, propelled the band to International attention and sold out shows across Europe and North America. They were then signed by EMI records. The group's début single with this label, "At Home He's a Tourist", charted in the British Top 40 in 1979. Invited to appear on top rated BBC music program Top of the Pops, the band walked off the show when the BBC told them that they must sing "packets" instead of "rubbers" as per the lyrics of the song, as the original was too subversive for this TV slot. The single was then banned by BBC Radio & TV, which lost the band support at record label EMI, who began to push another band instead - Duran Duran. A later single, "I Love a Man in a Uniform", was banned by the BBC during the Falklands war in 1982.

Critic Stewart Mason has called Love Like Anthrax not only the group's "most notorious song" but also "one of the most unique and interesting songs of its time". [1] It's also a good example of Gang of Four's social perspective: after a minute-long, droning, feedback-laced guitar intro, the rhythm section sets up a funky, churning beat, and the guitar drops out entirely. In one stereo channel, King sings a "post-punk anti-love song", comparing himself to a beetle trapped on its back ("and there's no way for me to get up") and equating love with "a case of anthrax, and that's some thing I don't want to catch." Meanwhile, in the other stereo channel (and slightly less prominent in the mix), Gill reads a deadpan monograph about public perception of love, and the prevalence of love songs in popular music: "Love crops up quite a lot as something to sing about, 'cause most groups make most of their songs about falling in love, or how happy they are to be in love, and you occasionally wonder why these groups do sing about it all the time." The simultaneous vocals are rather disorienting, especially when Gill pauses in his examination of love songs to echo a few of King's sung lines.

According to critic Paul Morley; "The Gang spliced the ferocious precision of Dr. Feelgood's working-class blues with the testing avant-garde intrigue of Henry Cow. Wilfully avoiding structural obviousness, melodic prettiness and harmonic corniness, the gang's music was studded with awkward holes and sharp corners"

A troubled American tour saw the departure of Allen (who later co-founded Shriekback, Low Pop Suicide and The Elastic Purejoy); he was replaced briefly by Buster Jones (who never recorded with the group), then by Sara Lee, who later joined the B-52's. A year later Burnham left the band after the release of Songs of the Free.

Like the Velvet Underground before them, the influence of Gang of Four on later musicians is far greater than their original record sales might suggest. Their angular, slashing attack and liberal use of dissonance had a significant influence on their post-punk contemporaries in the States. Gang of Four went on to influence a number of successful funk-tinged alternative rock acts throughout the 80s and 90s, although few of their followers were as arty or political. Michael "Flea" Balzary of the Red Hot Chili Peppers has stated Gang of Four were the single most important influential on his band's early music. Andy Kellman, writing in Allmusic, has even argued that Gang of Four's "germs of influence" can be found in many rapcore and nu-metal groups "not in touch with their ancestry enough to realize it." [2] While many musicians have been inspired by the band's groundbreaking punk-funk musical style, they have rarely embraced the Situationist inspired socio-political observations within Jon King's lyrics.

Recently the band has enjoyed a resurgence in popularity, initially due to emergence of new post-punk influenced bands such as The Rapture, Liars and Radio 4 and then the rise of Franz Ferdinand and Bloc Party, which led to the renewed patronage of the NME. The original Burnham/Allen/Gill/King lineup reformed in November 2004. In October 2005, Gang of Four released a new LP featuring new recordings of songs from the albums Entertainment!, Solid Gold and Songs of the Free entitled Return the Gift, along with an album's worth of remixes.

  • Mutant Pop (Fast Product \ PVC/Jem 1980) includes the Gang's first Fast Product single.
  • Live at KEXP, Volume II (2006)
  • A brief history of the twentieth century,(Warner Bros. 1990)

Year Title Chart positions Album
US Modern Rock Billboard Club Play UK Singles Chart
1978 Damaged Goods
b/w Love Like Anthrax & Armalite Rifle
1979 At Home Hes A Tourist - - 58 Entertainment
1979 Damaged Goods/I Find That Essence Rare - 39 - Entertainment
1981 What All We Want - 30 - Solid Gold
1982 To Hell With Poverty! - 38 - Another Day/Another Dollar EP
1982 Love A Man In Uniform - 27 65 Songs of the Free
1983 Is it Love? - 9 88
1990 To Hell With Poverty! - - 100 Another Day/Another Dollar EP
1991 Don't Fix What Ain't Broke 14 - - Mall

  1. ^ see the notes for A Brief History of the 20th Century

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