"Front Line" | ||||
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Single by Stevie Wonder | ||||
from the album Stevie Wonder's Original Musiquarium I | ||||
B-side | "Front Line (Instrumental)" | |||
Released | 1983 | |||
Format | 45 rpm single | |||
Genre | R&B, soul | |||
Length | 5:54 | |||
Label | Tamla | |||
Songwriter(s) | Stevie Wonder | |||
Producer(s) | Stevie Wonder | |||
Stevie Wonder singles chronology | ||||
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"Front Line" is a 1983 song written and produced by American R&B singer and songwriter Stevie Wonder, off his greatest hits compilation "[[Stevie Wonder's Original Musiquarium I]]" (1982).
The song is sung from the perspective of a Vietnam War veteran. The protagonist tells the story of how he volunteered to go to Vietnam in 1964 at age sixteen, despite being raised to never kill anyone. After losing his leg, he is sent home with a Purple Heart. Now speaking about the present, he talks of how his niece is a prostitute, and his nephew is a drug addict, both of whom insist he has no right to tell them they are wrong in their ways. He reads in the newspaper that another war is on its way, and he remembers the 'many happy families that have been ruined.' The single slumped at No.94 in the UK and flopped elsewhere.