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The Hard Way (The Kinks song)

"The Hard Way"
No More Looking Back Single.jpg
Single by The Kinks
from the album Schoolboys in Disgrace
A-side "No More Looking Back" (UK)
"I'm in Disgrace" (US)
Released January 23, 1976 (UK)
Format 12" single 45 RPM
Recorded September 22, 1975 at Konk Studios, London
Length 2:35
Label RCA
Songwriter(s) Ray Davies
Producer(s) Ray Davies
The Kinks singles chronology
"String Module Error: Match not found" / "The Hard Way"
(String Module Error: Match not found)
"No More Looking Back" / "String Module Error: Match not found"
(1976)
"Sleepwalker"
(1977)
"You Can't Stop the Music"
(UK, 1975)
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"I'm in Disgrace"/
"The Hard Way"
(US, 1976)
"No More Looking Back"/
"Jack the Idiot Dunce",
"The Hard Way"
(UK, 1976)
"Sleepwalker"
(1977)

"The Hard Way" is a song written by Ray Davies and first released by The Kinks on their 1976 album Schoolboys in Disgrace. It was also released on The Kinks live album One for the Road and on several greatest hits collections.The Knack covered the song on their 1980 album ...But the Little Girls Understand.

The lyrics of "The Hard Way" were inspired by a real life incident that happened to Dave Davies, Ray's brother and The Kinks' guitarist. In the incident, Dave Davies was caned and expelled from William Grimshaw Secondary Modern School after cutting class and having sex with a classmate. On Schoolboys in Disgrace, a three song sequence beginning with "I'm in Disgrace," continuing through "Headmaster" and concluding with "The Hard Way" covers a similar event in the life of the song's narrator Flash. "I'm in Disgrace" covers Flash's feelings about getting his girlfriend pregnant and in "Headmaster" Flash confesses his misdeeds to the headmaster and asks for mercy.

In "The Hard Way," the headmaster responds to the plea in the previous song. He berates and browbeats Flash. He starts by singing that "Boys like you were born to waste," later singing that he is not fit to be anything more than a street sweeper.Allmusic critic Richard Gilliam sees the headmaster as a bigot who "believes that punishment and destruction of self-image are important elements in learning." Author Thomas Kitts perceives a "psychosexual enjoyment" in the headmaster's words. Some of the lyrics, including the title, can be taken as double entendres.

The music of the song is driven by a Dave Davies' power chord guitar riff, reminiscent of older Kinks songs such as "All Day and All of the Night" and "You Really Got Me." Kitts believes that Davies' guitar part "mirrors the headmaster's sexual aggression." Gilliam describes the percussion beat as "harsh." Gilliam believes that opening riffs of "The Hard Way" were an influence on the sound of Devo.


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