Gang of Four  emerged from the wreckage of punk rock in the early '80s with a sound  all their own. Characterized by blatantly political lyrics that were  chanted, sung, and yelled over spare, funky drumbeats and Andy  Gill's scratch-and-kill guitar, the Gang's particular brand of  angular dance punk was as refreshing as ice water in the face, and as  this collection shows, still holds up well almost 20 years later. Back  when the members of Rage  Against the Machine were still in grade school, Gang of Four's  explicit politics were something of a curiosity; the desultory feminism  of "It's Her Factory" and the pessimistic Marxist economic forecasting  of "Capital (It Fails Us Now)" were not exactly common lyrical conceits  in the immediate post-disco era. Those who know their Chinese history  will recognize the band's name, though whether it was meant ironically  or as a genuine tribute to the counterrevolutionist faction led by Lady  Mao is unclear. This generous best-of recaps some of the Gang's finest  moments, and will serve as a perfectly sufficient precis for all but  completist fans. Half of the Gang's first full-length album (cheerfully  titled Entertainment!  as in "guerrilla war struggle is the new entertainment") is here, and  so are some of the better tracks from their EPs. It also brings together  some of the brighter moments from the band's protracted decline into  synthesized dribble, such as the immortal "I Love a Man in a Uniform."  There are occasional disappointments (the studio version of "To Hell  With Poverty" was much better than the so-so live version included  here), but overall this is an excellent collection.AMG Review by  Rick Anderson
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