The song was released as a download on 14 May 2021. After its launch,
The Guardian reported on the song, questioning if we do indeed live in Orwellian times. Giving a negative answer to this question it goes on to say that "People who ought to know better, including people who once sang about how “libraries gave us power”, have long used the word Orwellian as shorthand for a bit like Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four”, finishing with "This is very much not the normal function of eponyms: after all, Orwell was not recommending that we adopt his Orwellian vision. It’s as if we were to use Shakespearean to mean “approving of rape, murder, and cannibalism”, simply because such things happen in Titus Andronicus. An Orwellian practice indeed". About the song
The Quietus stated that "it can be weaponised by the left and the righ", going further "taken in isolation – which is literally what happens when you release a single (especially an album's lead single) – it feels a little weak, a compromised response to extreme times. “It feels impossible to pick a side”, Wire writes (and Bradfield sings). Does it really, when the right are in the ascendancy? This equivocation smells like a cop-out. However, a reference to “the playing fields and exclusive clubs” does leave no doubt that the Manics have not forgotten who their real enemies are."
The Line of Best Fit wrote about the song: "Fingertips on the greater tonal range of a piano like on "Orwellian", where the almost gutsy succession of harmonies must have seen its birth on some ivory keys in some basement west of some big island in the North Sea." ==Personnel==