Break It Up (Foreigner song) explained

Break It Up
Cover:Break_It_Up_-_Foreigner.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Foreigner
Album:4
B-Side:Head Games (Live)
Released:[1]
Recorded:Early 1981
Genre:Hard rock
Length:4:11 (album version)
3:25 (single version)
Label:Atlantic
Prev Title:Waiting for a Girl Like You
Prev Year:1981
Next Title:Luanne
Next Year:1982

"Break It Up" was the fourth single taken from the album 4 by the band Foreigner. The song was written by Mick Jones and the first to feature a B-side that was not available on one of their albums, a live version of their hit, "Head Games."

Background

The song has a more melodic, slightly ballad-oriented sound mixed with their traditional hard rock. Rolling Stone contributor Kurt Loder described the song as a "classic cruncher."[2]

Cash Box called it "another dose of bluster from the band that, along with Queen, virtually created pomp rock" but said that there is "nothing here that the band hasn’t done before," specifically comparing it to "Cold as Ice."[3] Billboard described it as a "melodramatic mid tempo rocker forceful enough for the band's earliest AOR allies and melodic enough for pop formats."[4] PopMatters critic Evan Sawdey said that it "tries so hard to recreate the ornate nature of 'Cold As Ice' but ends up turning into AM meat-rock."[5]

Producer "Mutt" Lange wanted to use a click track for timing the drum part. Foreigner drummer Dennis Elliott got fed up about that so eventually he and Jones recorded the basic track themselves with Elliott on drums and Jones on piano. According to Jones "Then we turned round to ‘Mutt’ and said, ‘Okay? Happy now?!’ We wanted to prove the point that this band could play and keep time, too."[6]

Chart performance

"Break it Up" reached number 26 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100.[7] [8]

Cover versions

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Great Rock Discography. 1995 . 9780862415419 . Strong . Martin Charles .
  2. Foreigner: Mass-Appeal Rock in a Post-Golden Age. Loder, Kurt. Rolling Stone. October 15, 1981. 2018-05-04.
  3. Reviews. Cash Box. May 8, 1982. 2022-07-07. 8.
  4. Billboard. May 8, 1985. 67. Top Single Picks. 2022-07-29.
  5. Web site: Foreigner: The Complete Atlantic Studio Albums 1977-1991. Sawday, Evan. 2023-02-05. PopMatters. November 26, 2014.
  6. Web site: The Strange And True Story of Foreigner 4. Jeffries, Neil. Louder Sound. Classic Rock. 2022-06-17. July 2, 2016.
  7. Web site: Foreigner Hot 100. Billboard. 2020-06-08.
  8. Joel Whitburn's Top Pop Singles 1955-1990 -
  9. Web site: Starfire. Allmusic. 2022-06-17.