Running 21:55, this was a band composition credited to Jon Anderson, Steve Howe, Patrick Moraz, Chris Squire and Alan White. Anderson wrote the lyrics to go along with the music. The song describes a battle, with a prelude, a charge, a moment of victory, and a peace. "It's about the tribalism between warring factions, and who is the dominant country, the dominant energy at that time," Anderson explained in a Songfacts interview. "It was at the end of the Vietnam War. We were learning about the unbelievable destruction that was done to the Vietnamese, and for what?"
The song was written with live performance in mind - the band admits that it didn't translate all that well to a recording. Jon Anderson mentioned it to Songfacts as one of his favorites to play live, and explained: "The record company didn't know what to do with it, but we did, because we were performing it on stage and that was our legacy, to be able to go on stage and perform this music that would never be heard on radio."
A variety of homemade sound effects were used on this song, which is something their keyboard player Patrick Moraz encouraged, as it was something he did with his band Refugee. According to drummer Alan White, many of the sounds were made with items they picked up at a junkyard.
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