I'll Set You Free
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“I'll Set You Free” | |||||
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British cover.
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Single by The Bangles from the album Everything |
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A-side | "I'll Set You Free" | ||||
B-side | "Watching the Sky" | ||||
Released | 1989 | ||||
Format | 7", 12", CD | ||||
Genre | Rock, pop | ||||
Length | 4:51 | ||||
Label | CBS Liberation |
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Writer(s) | David Eric Lowen Daniel Navarro Susanna Hoffs |
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Producer | Davitt Sigerson | ||||
The Bangles singles chronology | |||||
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Australian release | |||||
"I'll Set You Free" is a song by The Bangles. It first appeared on their third album Everything in 1988, and was later released as its fourth single in the United Kingdom, Australia and Austria in 1989.
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[edit] Credits
The song was composed by guitarist and vocalist Susanna Hoffs with David Eric Lowen and Daniel Navarro,[1] and produced by Davitt Sigerson.
The track was remixed by Bernard Edwards for release as a single, with additional engineering by Larry Alexander.[2] The album version of the song runs to 4 minutes 27 seconds, and the single mix lasts 24 seconds longer. As well as a thicker sound than the original recording, the single version has a more forceful introduction and a different lead vocal by Hoffs.
[edit] Single
In the UK its primary B-side was "Watching the Sky", another album track from Everything. The British 12" and CD singles also included a remix of "Walking Down Your Street" by David Kahne as a bonus track.[2] In Australia the song was backed by "Everything I Wanted"[3] — later released as a single in its own right in 1990[4] — and was housed in a different picture sleeve (see below).
Unlike the preceding three singles from Everything, all of which had reached the UK Top 40, "I'll Set You Free" only reached number 74 in the United Kingdom.[4] It was also a minor hit in Australia, reaching number 81. No promotional film was made for the single, as the band had all but broken up.
The single version of "I'll Set You Free" was included on Greatest Hits (1990) and Best of The Bangles (1999).
[edit] Reception
Writing in Rolling Stone in 1988, Jimmy Guterman wrote: "On numbers like "I'll Set You Free" and "Make a Play for Her Now", their harmonies are the clearest and most evocative they've ever been – their voices float, coalesce and soar".[5]
[edit] Notes
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