"Release the Pressure"
Single by Leftfield featuring Earl Sixteen
Released1992
Length8:08
LabelHard Hands
Songwriter(s)Neil Barnes, Paul Daley
Producer(s)Leftfield
Leftfield featuring Earl Sixteen singles chronology
"More Than I Know"
(1991)
"Release the Pressure"
(1992)
"Song of Life"
(1993)
Alternative Cover
"Release the Pressure"
Single by Leftfield
from the album Leftism
Released8 January 1996
RecordedRollover Studios, London
Length3:57
LabelHard Hands / Chrysalis
Songwriter(s)Neil Barnes, Paul Daley, Earl Daley, S. Cheshire
Producer(s)Leftfield
Leftfield singles chronology
"Afro-Left"
(1995)
"Release the Pressure"
(1996)
"Afrika Shox"
(1999)

"Release the Pressure" is the third single by the English electronic duo Leftfield and the first to involve Paul Daley with writing duties after he joined the group. The song was released exclusively on 12" in 1992. Unlike previous releases that had been released on the Outer Rhythm record label, Leftfield had now officially split from Outer Rhythm. Major labels had offered them deals but neither member wanted to give up creative control to any major company. They formed the Hard Hands record label with "Release the Pressure" being the label's first official release. The song featured reggae singer Earl Sixteen on vocals, with a lyric taken from his 1981 single "Trial and Crosses". "Release the Pressure" made the top 20 in the UK charts and featured at number one in the Melody Maker "Stone Free Chart of the Year". It was used in Telefónica O2 and O2 (UK) commercials during its first year.

Critical reception

In 1992, Melody Maker named the song "Single of the Week", writing that Earl Sixteen's "laid-back drawl weaves in and out of the slow, seductive groove and alternates with a beautiful Arabian keyboard melody. It works a perfect charm. The trance dance FX will have you levitating and, in such a vulnerable physical and mental state, the Andy Weatherall-esque drum rolls will catch you unawares every time."[1] A reviewer from Music Week gave the 1996 version three out of five, describing it as a "very commercial dub techno tune."[2]

Roger Morton from NME noted that it contains "a plea for 'peace and unity'", "that might sound hackneyed in other hand. But the stately euphoric rubberised techno dub of Barnes and Daley's sequencing easily holds the sentiments aloft."[3] Brad Beatnik from the RM Dance Update, gave it five out of five and named it Tune of the Week, declaring it as a "cool, soulful ragga-fuelled track". He concluded, "Once again, the production quality is superb and Leftfield provide plenty for the feet and the mind."[4]

Track listing

  • 12"
  1. "Release the Pressure" (The Vocal Mix) 8:08
  2. "Release the Pressure" (The Rough Dub) 8:40
  3. "Release the Pressure" (The Desert Edit) 5:02

1996 version

In 1996, an updated version of "Release the Pressure" was released as the eighth single under the Leftfield name. It was released on 12", CD and Cassette on 8 January 1996. It featured Earl Sixteen and Cheshire Cat on vocals with ad libs by Papa Dee. The song reached #13 in the UK charts. There were also four different remixes of the song with different ones as B-sides to the different format releases.

Track listing

  • 12"
  1. "Release the Pressure" - 3:57
  2. "Release the Pressure" (Release One) - 7:23
  3. "Release the Pressure" (Release Two) - 7:19
  4. "Release the Pressure" (Release Four) - 5:03
  • CD
  1. "Release the Pressure" - 3:57
  2. "Release the Pressure" (Release One) - 7:23
  3. "Release the Pressure" (Release Two) - 7:19
  4. "Release the Pressure" (Release Three) - 6:02
  5. "Release the Pressure" (Release Four) - 5:03
  • Cassette
  1. "Release the Pressure" - 3:57
  2. "Release the Pressure" (Release One) - 7:23
  3. "Release the Pressure" (Release Two) - 7:19

Charts

Chart (1992) Peak
position
UK Dance (Music Week)[5] 6
Chart (1996) Peak
position
UK Singles (OCC) 13

References

  1. "Singles". Melody Maker. 15 August 1992. p. 27. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  2. "Reviews: Singles" (PDF). Music Week. 6 January 1996. p. 16. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  3. Morton, Roger (28 January 1995). "Long Play". NME. p. 46. Retrieved 10 December 2023.
  4. Beatnik, Brad (9 December 1995). "Hot Vinyl: Tune of the Week" (PDF). Music Week, in Record Mirror (Dance Update Supplemental Insert). p. 9. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  5. "Top 60 Dance Singles" (PDF). Music Week. 15 August 1992. p. 22. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
  1. Release The Pressure, Leftfield Online, Retrieved on 5 November 2006
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