Foreigner – Urgent
Dolby Had A Demo Called Urges That Became Urgent
Released in July 1981, “Urgent” entered the Billboard Hot 100 at number 51 on the week ending July 4 and climbed to number four by late August, where it stayed for the entire month of September. The single also spent four weeks at number one on the Billboard Rock Tracks chart and hit number one in Canada. What makes this recording remarkable is that producer Mutt Lange heard Thomas Dolby’s demo tape with a song called Urges where he sang urges, urges, and asked permission to incorporate that vocal pattern. Months later, when Dolby heard the finished track, he raised his eyebrows slightly at urgent, urgent but felt glad to have influenced it. The 22-year-old unknown keyboard player used money from the sessions to fund his own music, eventually creating his massive 1982 hit She Blinded Me with Science.
The song spent 23 weeks on the Hot 100, with seven of those weeks in the top 10. It peaked at number four for four consecutive weeks, held from the top by Endless Love and others. The single became Foreigner’s second-bestselling hit after I Want to Know What Love Is, selling around two million copies worldwide. In Canada it claimed number one for two weeks in September 1981, while in Australia it reached number 24 but stayed in the top 50 for 24 weeks. Britain proved more resistant, with the song peaking at only number 54 initially, then number 45 during a 1982 rerelease after Waiting for a Girl Like You became a top 10 hit there. At a moment when the album 4 was spending 10 weeks at number one in America and selling six million copies, Urgent became the album’s calling card on rock radio despite Waiting for a Girl Like You ultimately selling more copies after its unprecedented 10-week run stuck at number two.
Mick Jones and Lou Gramm wrote the song, though it started without lyrics or structure. Jones had recorded an experimental instrumental riff on tape and was embarrassed when Mutt Lange insisted on hearing every idea, no matter how unfinished. Jones explained it was just something he was working on instrumentally, but Lange immediately recognized potential. The producer said it wasn’t an instrumental anymore and told Jones to develop it. Jones later described it as a hybrid, a quirky kind of rock and soul combination that represented the musical journey they were taking on 4. The band had just become a quartet after Ian McDonald and Al Greenwood left, and Jones played both lead and rhythm guitar including a line originally composed for McDonald. The lyric urgent suggests pressing desire, and Gramm’s vocal delivery simmers with restrained intensity rather than soaring like previous Foreigner ballads.
Recording took place at Electric Lady Studios in New York with Mutt Lange producing after his breakthrough work on AC/DC’s Back in Black. Lange and Jones were both perfectionists who locked horns frequently, sending the sessions over time and budget. Lange had heard Dolby’s demo tape when the young Englishman was busking in Paris avoiding a UK music lawyer’s bill he couldn’t afford. After flying Dolby to New York for a trial, they gave him Urgent as the first test track, and both Lange and Jones loved what he created. Lange was relentless with Dolby, making him play simple synth notes over and over until perfect. But when Junior Walker showed up, coincidentally performing in New York during their sessions, Lange used his first take and loved its raw rough edges. Mark Rivera, Foreigner’s regular touring saxophonist, played the rhythmic siren-like sax riff, while Walker delivered the iconic tenor solo. Rivera recorded at least 12 versions trying to get it right, but Walker nailed it immediately with Motown soul that elevated the entire track.
4 arrived on July 2, 1981, through Atlantic Records and became Foreigner’s commercial peak. The album hit number one for 10 weeks, reached number two in Canada, number five in the UK, and number four in Germany, establishing them as global superstars after years of being primarily an American act. Four singles dominated 1981 and 1982: Urgent peaked at number four, Waiting for a Girl Like You spent a record-breaking 10 weeks at number two, Juke Box Hero reached number 26, and Break It Up hit number 26. The album title referenced the quartet lineup, and the numerology continued: Urgent spent four weeks at number four and jumped from number eight to number four and back down, moving exactly four positions. Dolby’s contributions throughout the album were subtle but crucial, particularly his homemade Mellotron technique on Waiting for a Girl Like You that the bass player described as massage music before Lange and Jones overruled him and kept it.
The song achieved legendary status through constant MTV rotation and its distinctive saxophone work. Junior Walker’s solo became one of the most recognizable moments in 1980s rock, with Billboard later rating Urgent as Foreigner’s greatest song and praising both Dolby’s synthesizer and Walker’s sax while noting the track would have been killer even without the solo. Shannon covered it in 1985 with Atlantic distributing the single through Mirage Records. The song appeared in films and TV shows throughout the decades. When the documentary ZZ Top: That Little Ol’ Band from Texas caused renewed interest in classic rock in 2020, Urgent reentered the charts at number 14 on Hot Rock Songs with streaming up 13 percent. After bassist Dusty Hill died in July 2021, the track jumped to number two on Hard Rock Digital Song Sales as fans rediscovered Foreigner’s catalog.
Urgent represents the moment when Foreigner stopped being a straightforward arena rock band and became something more ambitious and eclectic. The collaboration between Mick Jones’ perfectionism, Mutt Lange’s refusal to accept anything less than excellence, Thomas Dolby’s willingness to experiment despite never spending more than 10 hours in a professional studio, and Junior Walker’s Motown soul created something that transcended all their individual contributions. The fact that the urgent, urgent hook came from Dolby’s urges, urges demo shows how accidents and inspirations merge in great recordings. Jones initially thought the riff was too embarrassing to share, Lange recognized its potential immediately, and together they created not just Foreigner’s greatest song but a track that defined how rock could incorporate soul and synthesizers without losing its edge. Sometimes the best art comes from unlikely combinations: a British perfectionist producer, an embarrassed riff, a busking keyboard player avoiding debt, and a Motown legend who happened to be in town.


![ZZ Top – Sharp Dressed Man (Official Music Video) [HD Remaster]](https://musicvideosclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/zz-top-sharp-dressed-man-officia-360x203.jpg)

![The Score – Revolution: Lyrics [Assassins Creed: Unity]](https://musicvideosclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/the-score-revolution-lyrics-assa-360x203.jpg)




















![Sister Sledge – Hes the Greatest Dancer (Official Music Video) [4K]](https://musicvideosclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/sister-sledge-hes-the-greatest-d-360x203.jpg)

























