After a six month breather, Duran follow in the footsteps of Shirley Bassey and Sheena Easton with a James Bond theme. Co-written by themselves and John Barry, the collaboration is obvious. This contains all Duran's stock ingredients - frenzied guitar and bass, but Bond-ised with tell-tale, dramatic bursts of brass. The dull drumbeat smacks of The Power Station... I Say it's time Simon Le Bon's vocals were laid to rest. (Ro Newton, No 1, May 11, 1985)
The lyrics to this are connected to the Bond film this forms the theme to, I presume, as they are a little oblique. Musically, it's also full of Bond allusions - full of seas of strings and brass stabs. Quite stunning production. Producer Bernard Edwards seems to have superceded Nile Rodgers in every direction. Takes a long time to get to the hook, but very interesting. (Stephen 'Tin Tin' Duffy, Smash Hits, May 8, 1985)
Those expecting a load of old Thunderballs will be surprised at this grower. Simon Le Bond - licensed to thrill - does his Bryan Ferry/David Sylvian impression on the best Bond theme since Carly Simon's "Nobody Does It Better". (Mike Gardner, Record Mirror, May 11, 1985)
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