"The Bottle" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson | ||||
from the album Winter in America | ||||
B-side | "The Bottle (Drunken mix)" | |||
Released | 1974 | |||
Format | 7" single, 12" single | |||
Recorded | October 15, 1973 D&B Sound (Silver Spring, Maryland) |
|||
Genre | Soul, jazz-funk | |||
Length | 5:14 | |||
Label | Strata-East | |||
Writer(s) | Gil Scott-Heron | |||
Producer(s) | Perpis-Fall Music | |||
Gil Scott-Heron chronology | ||||
|
"The Bottle" is a song by American soul artist Gil Scott-Heron and musician Brian Jackson, released in 1974 on Strata-East Records in the United States. It was later reissued during the mid-1980s on Champagne Records in the United Kingdom. "The Bottle" was written by Scott-Heron and produced by audio engineer Jose Williams, Jackson, and Scott-Heron. The song serves is a social commentary on alcohol abuse, and it features a Caribbean beat and notable flute solo by Jackson, with Scott-Heron playing keyboards.
The song was issued as the first and only single for Scott-Heron's and Jackson's album Winter in America (1974). It became an underground and cult hit upon its release, and the single peaked at number 15 on the R&B Singles Chart. Described by music critics as the album's best recording, the commercial success of "The Bottle" helped lead to Jackson's and Scott-Heron's next recording contract with Arista Records. Similar to other compositions by Scott-Heron, the song has been sampled extensively by hip hop artists.
"The Bottle" is a social commentary on alcohol abuse with a Caribbean beat. Scott-Heron wrote it after seeing men line up every day in front of a liquor store called the Log Cabin, bringing back their empty bottles to get a discount on their next purchase. Scott-Heron said of his inspiration for the song in an interview for Newsnight, "I discovered one of them was an ex-physician, who'd been busted for abortions on young girls. There was an air traffic controller in the military - one day he sent two jets crashing into a mountain. He left work that day and never went back."