"Free Hand" is the title track from the album of the same name. The Free Hand album is the most successful one for the band, being the only one to show up on the Billboard album charts at #48, and the only one of theirs to chart in Britain. Free Hand was their first Chrysalis label release and their seventh album.
Incidentally, Gentle Giant got introduced to Chrysalis while touring with Jethro Tull. Keyboardist Kerry Minnear reportedly referred to Jethro Tull as the only friends they made on the road. It makes sense that these two bands would get along.
In our interview with Derek and Ray Shulman of Gentle Giant, Derek refers to this song as an example of why he feels that Gentle Giant writes "pieces of music" instead of songs. Ray goes on to say, "The way we composed, I'd write a part, and then Kerry (Minnear) would write a part, and we'd write them individually. And then Derek would supply lyrics and help with the vocal line, etcetera, and then go back to Kerry, who'd arrange some vocal parts, and then come back to me to do different arrangements. So they were all kind of mixed up that way."
As the liner notes say, this song was "a defiant parting shot at WWA, and an expression of the optimism which swept through the band once their problems were resolved." The WWA here is Phonogram subsidiary World Wide Artists, not to be confused with that wrestling thing. Our apologies if you briefly pictured the Shulman brothers pile-driving each other.
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