"Rat Race" is a critique on how privileged students "would spend three years pissing it up in college, knowing full well that Daddy would get them a good job when they left no matter what",[4] "while ordinary kids have nothing to look forward to".[5]Linton Kwesi Johnson's "Me Wan' Fi Go Rave" was taken as a musical starting point and keyboardist Jerry Dammers added a plucked piano intro inspired by John Barry (possibly from "A Man Alone" from the soundtrack to the film The Ipcress File).[4][6]
Reception
Reviewing the song for Record Mirror, Daniela Soave wrote "The group with the Midas touch and my most favourite of the 2 Tone movement. Needless to say they've come up with another winner although this one isn't as obvious as their previous offerings. It sports a fine mysterious keyboard refrain at the beginning which keeps popping up through the song, rather like a Dashiel Hammit novel would make you feel. The more I listen to it the more I love It. The best since 'Gangsters'.[7]
The song was written by Golding, Staples and Panter (credited as Sir Horace Gentleman) in about ten minutes during a rehearsal session.[4] Inspiration for the title and chorus comes from the Baker Desmond and the Clarendonians' song "Rude Boy Gone a Jail".[8]
The song has been released with several variations of spelling. It was originally released as "Rude Buoys Outa Jail" on the majority of the single versions, but has also been spelled "Rude Boys Outa Jail" and "Rude Buoys Outta Jail". The first 100,000 copies of the More Specials album in the UK included a bonus single with a different version of this song called "Rude Boys Outa Jail (Version)" credited to 'Neville Staple AKA Judge Roughneck'.[9]