Friday, March 27, 2026

Free - Fire and Water - Side 1


01 - Fire And Water
02 - Oh I Wept
03 - Remember
04 - Heavy Load 

When Free entered the studio to work on their third record, everyone knew it was a real make-or-break moment. Despite the immense, raw talents of singer Paul Rodgers and guitarist Paul Kossoff, their first two albums had hardly made a dent either in America or in their native Great Britain.
The common perception was that they had potential, but they were just too green. Everything changed when Free dropped Fire and Water on June 26, 1970. The lead single “All Right Now” eventually made it all the way into the Top 5 on the charts. The spirit of the track, written by Rodgers and bassist Andy Fraser, actually came from another song by bluesman Freddie King titled “The Hunter” that Free included on their debut record Tons of Sobs in 1969.
“We wanted our entire set to be original music. This was how we'd become regarded as a serious band," Rodgers later told the Huffington Post. "But 'The Hunter' was a song we could never lose, because it had the right mood. 'They call me the hunter, a pretty young girl like you is my only game.' So light and easy.
"So, okay, we can't drop that song," he added, "but what we can also do is write one that's inspired by that song. With the same lightness of touch, lyrically. You know, 'pulling chicks, and yay! everything's cool.' And that's where 'All Right Now' was born out of, really."
But the album wasn't simply a vehicle for that hit song. Fire and Water is a tight, eclectic record filled with balls-out rockers like the title track, funky blues pieces like “Mr. Big,” as well as sultry ballads like “Don’t Say You Love Me” and “Oh I Wept.”
The rhythm section, with Fraser on bass and Simon Kirke on drums, are as tight as can be, but it's the vocal flourishes of Rodgers – along with the Kossoff’s signature guitar vibrato – that really set the music apart from what anyone else was doing at the time.
In keeping, Fire and Water became their highest-charting record in both the U.K. and America. Free suddenly found itself standing near the top of the rock 'n' roll universe. A star-making turn in front of 600,000 people just a few months later at the Isle of Wight Festival all but cemented that position.
Just about a year after releasing Fire and Water, however, Free decided to call it a day. Their follow-up record Highway and the single “The Stealer” performed disappointingly, and Kossoff’s addiction made it difficult for the band to carry on.
"That was a monster hit for us, and it was a bit of a double-edged sword, really," Kirke later said of Fire and Water. "We became our own worst enemies, I believe. We sort of crumbled under the pressure. There was no letup from that crazy merry-go-round."  From: https://ultimateclassicrock.com/free-fire-and-water/