Formed in 1977 by Leeds University students
Jon King (vocals),
Andy Gill (guitar),
Dave Allen (bass), and
Hugo Burnham (drums),
Gang of Four (along with
the Fall,
Mekons, and
Liliput) produced some of the most exhilarating and lasting music of the early English post-punk era of 1978-1983. Fueled by the fury of punk rock and radical political theory,
Gang of Four successfully welded the two in an inspired display of polemics and music that addressed the vagaries of life in the modern world (including love and romance) as matters of political inquiry. Despite the fact that this sounds rife with the potential for being long on rhetoric and short on groove, such was not the case. What made
Gang of Four's polemical clang'n'roll so compelling was that it worked as harsh, bracing, and ultimately liberating rock & roll. With
Allen and
Burnham combining as a formidable and frequently very funky rhythm section,
Gill didn't play guitar as much as emit thick wads of semi-tuneful distortion, while
King "sang" in a dry, declamatory fashion similar to that of
the Fall's
Mark E. Smith. The rhythms were stripped down and jagged; at times
Gill would dispense with guitar solos entirely and "play" non-solos, which were (surprise!) silence. Song titles sounded like the titles of radical political essays: "At Home He's a Tourist," "Damaged Goods," "It's Her Factory," "Anthrax," "To Hell with Poverty," all of it openly challenging the audience's preconceived notions about rock music, performance, the cult of celebrity, and the nature of politics. And in doing so,
GOF conveyed rage, confusion, and loss of identity as well as any band of their time.
After three consecutive sensational albums, as well as a handful of EPs and singles,
Allen left in 1982 to form the more danceable and less overtly political
Shriekback, while
Gill,
King, and
Burnham recorded the misguided "radical soul/R&B" record
Hard with veteran American producers
Ron and
Howard Albert (who'd previously worked with Stephen Stills'
Manassas and
Firefall). A near total disaster,
Hard signaled that the end was nigh.
Gill and
King, who by this point had final say-so on the band's musical and political direction, sacked
Burnham, and the now "Gang of Two" released a so-so live album (
At the Palace) and called it quits in 1984. But legends die hard, and
Gang of Four experienced a mini-renaissance in the early '90s with the release of two excellent collections (
A Brief History of the Twentieth Century and
The Peel Sessions Album).
Gill and
King put together a new
Gang of Four and released the tepid but not disgraceful
Mall in 1991. Another reunion, from 1995, yielded
Shrinkwrapped. Three years later, a double-disc compilation -- 100 Flowers Bloom -- surfaced on Rhino, and the original lineup reconvened in 2004 to tour extensively and release 2005's Return the Gift, featuring re-recordings of their early material.
Gill and
King continued with a new rhythm section and released 2011's Content with financial support from their fans. They have always remained, to the ears of those opened wide by punk rock, an extremely important band.
–
John Dougan, Rovi