Puneet Varma (Editor)

Get 'Em Out by Friday

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Released
  
6 October 1972

Length
  
8:37

Recorded
  
August 1972

Genre
  
Progressive rock, avant-garde

"Get ’Em Out by Friday"(3)
  
Can-Utility and the Coastliners(4)

"Get 'Em Out by Friday" is a rock epic on the 1972 album Foxtrot by British progressive rock band Genesis, lasting eight and a half minutes. It also appears on their 1973 live album. The lyrics were written by lead singer Peter Gabriel.

Contents

Overview

The song takes the form of a futuristic play set initially in the present but ending in 2012. Like "Harold the Barrel" and "The Fountain of Salmacis" from their previous album Nursery Cryme, the song's lyrics are split between different characters, with lead singer Peter Gabriel often adapting a different vocal style to each character.

The song uses elements of reality and science fiction as a means of social criticism on the corporate greed and oppression of the UK's private landlords in the 1960s and 1970s, epitomised by Peter Rachman who used "winkling" (a mixture of threats and inducements) to remove tenants on low rents from properties and enable their profitable reletting or redevelopment. Social commentary was an evident theme throughout Genesis's early work, especially in their following album, Selling England by the Pound (1973).

Plot

The play contains three main characters:

  • John Pebble: A business man of Styx Enterprises. Near the end of the song, he has been knighted and works for United Blacksprings International.
  • Mark Hall (also known as "The Winkler"): A man who works for Styx Enterprises and has the task of evicting tenants.
  • Mrs Barrow: a tenant in a house in Harlow, purchased by Pebble.
  • The song starts with a fast-paced refrain of Pebble ordering Hall to "Get 'em out by Friday". In the following verse, the Winkler tells a disbelieving Mrs Barrow that a firm of men has purchased her property and that she has been evicted. She refuses to leave, so Pebble raises the rent on the property. In lieu of this, the Winkler offers £400 for Mrs Barrow to move; she does, albeit grudgingly. Shortly after Mrs Barrow moves in, however, Pebble again raises the rent.

    A slow instrumental indicates a passage of time, taking the story to the year 2012. At this time, Genetic Control has announced that they are restricting the height of all humans to four feet. This piece of news is then discussed in a pub by a man named "Joe Everybody," who reveals the reason behind the restriction: so that Genetic Control, who has recently bought some properties, will be able to accommodate twice as many people in the same tower block.

    The penultimate verse is that of Pebble, now knighted, repeating the process for another set of properties. The last verse is a "Memo from Satin Peter",:

    Reception

    Both the song and its accompanying album were generally well-received; Rutherford commented that the lyrics were the best that Gabriel had written while AllMusic cited the song as "the truest sign Genesis has grown muscle without abandoning the whimsy".

    In the late seventies, "Get 'Em Out by Friday" was adapted into a comic by French cartoonist Jean Solé. The lyrics were translated (with many errors) by newswriter Alain Dister, and the art includes some additional drawings by famous cartoonist Gotlib. This adaptation was published in the comic magazine Fluide Glacial.

    Personnel

  • Peter Gabriel – lead vocals, flute, oboe, bass drum, tambourine
  • Tony Banks – Hammond organ, distorted Hohner Pianet electric piano, mellotron, 12-string acoustic guitar
  • Steve Hackett – electric and 12-string acoustic guitars
  • Mike Rutherford – bass guitar, Dewtron "Mister Bassman" bass pedal synthesizer
  • Phil Collins – drums
  • References

    Get 'Em Out by Friday Wikipedia


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