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"Set Me Free" | ||||
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Single by the Kinks | ||||
from the album Kinda Kinks (US edition) | ||||
B-side | "I Need You" | |||
Released | 21 May 1965 | |||
Recorded | 13–14 April 1965[1] | |||
Studio | Pye, London | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 2:12 | |||
Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) | Ray Davies | |||
Producer(s) | Shel Talmy | |||
The Kinks UK singles chronology | ||||
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The Kinks US singles chronology | ||||
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"Set Me Free" is a song by Ray Davies, released first by the Kinks in 1965. Along with "Tired of Waiting for You", it is one of band's first attempts at a softer, more introspective sound. The song's B-side, "I Need You", makes prominent use of powerchords in the style of the Kinks' early, "raunchy" sound. "Set Me Free" was heard in the Ken Loach-directed Up the Junction, a BBC Wednesday Play which aired in November 1965; this marked the first appearance of a Kinks song on a film or TV soundtrack.
Billboard said of the single that "hot on the heels of [the Kinks'] 'Tired of Waiting for You' smash comes this down home blues rhythm material with a good teen lyric."[3] Cash Box described it as "a snappy tune that’s taken for an engaging disk ride."[4]