[1][2] The song was also released in the United Kingdom as a single, but it did not chart.
[4] The lyrics assert the right of individuals to their own interpretation of the world regardless of how "Master Jack" presents it to them.
Upon release, the track was widely taken as a criticism of pro-apartheid propaganda promulgated by the white minority ruling party.
[5] In this context, the titular "Master Jack" could be interpreted as a reference to a leading politician, B. J. Vorster, who styled himself "John" Vorster and became prime minister of the apartheid regime in 1966.
As related by their female vocalist,[6] "In certain mines the foreman is called 'Master Jack', and the song tells the story of a labourer who works diligently for this master for years and years and then decides to go out on his own and exercise his desires and aspirations as an individual to be something other than a labourer."