"To Cut a Long Story Short" | ||||
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Single by Spandau Ballet | ||||
from the album Journeys to Glory | ||||
B-side | "To Cut a Long Story Short" (instrumental) | |||
Released | 3 November 1980 | |||
Format | 7", 12" | |||
Genre | New wave, Synthpop | |||
Length |
3:20 (single version) 6:04 (12-inch version) |
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Label | Chrysalis | |||
Songwriter(s) | Gary Kemp | |||
Producer(s) | Richard James Burgess | |||
Spandau Ballet singles chronology | ||||
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"To Cut a Long Story Short" is a 1980 song by Spandau Ballet. It was their first single and reached number 5 on the UK Singles Chart. It appeared on the album Journeys to Glory.
Allmusic described the single as minimalist "spiky synth pop" with a style reminiscent of early Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark material, and featuring a "dirty, overdriven synth sound and a stomping Gary Glitter-like backbeat". Though largely forgotten today, due to Spandau Ballet's later change in style towards a slick, soul-pop (which occurred around 1983), the reviewer considers that it might fairly be considered "a minor lost classic of the early-'80s U.K. synth pop scene".
The song has been speculated to be about a veteran, perhaps of Vietnam, who is drafted and suffers from PTSD; the lyrics are told from the man's point of view as a boy being drafted, how he gets no answers as to why he must join the war. "To Cut a Long Story Short" was Vince Clarke's inspiration to write Depeche Mode's "Just Can't Get Enough", to which the keyboard style bears a certain similarity.
The signature riff from "To Cut a Long Story Short" is used as a sample looping throughout the Freestylers track "In Love with You" on their album Adventures in Freestyle.