![]() ![]() Richards was asked about the track in a 1981 Rolling Stone magazine interview where he admits the track relates to England and the "ugly politicians" who had caused the country to decline when the "money got tight". The lyrical irony and commentary on English society harks back to some of the group's more socially contentious songs of the sixties such as " Mother's Little Helper", " 19th Nervous Breakdown" and " Street Fighting Man". The song is one of the few times the band wrote an overtly political song, and it is notable that it was never released as a single in England, even though the band was touring Europe during the single's North American release. You know marrying money is a full time job/I don't need the aggravation/I'm a lazy slob. The lyrics lament an unemployed working-class Englishman who would rather bet the horses than try to marry into the upper class, the only way to get ahead in English society. In the sweet old country where I come from, Nobody ever works, Yeah nothing gets done/We hang fire, we hang fire. ![]() Written by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards, "Hang Fire" is a fast-paced, up-tempo rock and roll track, which belies the happy beat with sharp, satirical lyrics directed squarely at England's economic decline through the 1970s. " Hang Fire" is a song by the English rock and roll band the Rolling Stones from their 1981 album Tattoo You. ![]()
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