Man, the phrase Death Cab for Cutie was driving me absolutely batshit. Where have I heard it before? Why did I know it?! What the hell was going on?!
Then it struck me like lightning! It was on The Magical Mystery Tour. Paul was a big fan of the Bonzo Dogs…and they played at the end when the stripper was doing her thing.
That had nothing to do with America, but I just know how much gex gex loves everything to be linked back to the Beatles somehow.
No, but if it has survived the test of time, then it’s * beloved * dreck. Sure, it’s easy to posture and claim that you’re intellectually above listening to it, but there’s some reason it’s still played. In the case of Horse with No Name, I’m gonna speculate that it’s the very inaneness of the lyrics (along with a catchy tune) that give it its longevity. The lyrics challenge you to come up with some sort of interpretation that doesn’t involve prior brain damage in the lyricist.
If I want to find a monumental collection of stuck-on-themselves stuffed shirts, I’ll know where to go. You people make the dorm “wisdom” of decades past actually seem deep and thought-provoking.
So some pop songs aren’t up to the highest standards of e e cummings’s work, so what? Get over it.
I’ll take “Those lyrics were written by someone who had a motorcycle accident compounded with serious LSD use” for a hundred, Bob!
Sorry, Jim, it’s actually “Those lyrics were created by someone who hit himself on the head with a ball peen hammer every hour, on the hour, as part of an obscure religious cult.”
I live in Los Angeles and I’ve driven down Ventura Highway, where in fact it is not uncommon to see alligator lizards in the air. They get lifted up in major storms then rain back down on the San Fernando Valley. It happens all the time. Paul Thomas Anderson addressed one such occurence in Magnolia except, for the purposes of the film, he decided to change the alligator lizards to frogs because he thought more people would be familiar with frogs.
Anyway, if you’ve ever had to clean these fuckers off your windshield you’d agree that they warrant a lyric in a pop song every once in a while.
Dewey Bunnell, the song’s vocalist and writer, has said that the lyric “alligator lizards in the air” in the song is a reference to the shapes of clouds in the sky he saw in 1963 while his family was driving down the coast from Vandenberg Air Force Base near Lompoc, California where they had a flat tire. While his father changed the tire, he and his brother stood by the side of the road and watched the clouds and saw a road sign for “Ventura”.
You can google Alligator Lizards, which are common in California and have an “S” shape.
Purple Rain:
n. A restless feeling. A non-descript feeling of boredom, restlessness and confinement. A feeling one has when wanting to escape from responsibility (chiefly emotional) by travelling. Sometimes synonymous with ‘wanderlust.’ The desire to travel in order to escape an emotional commitment.
“Waiting for the early train, Sorry boy, but I’ve been hit by purple rain.” -America (Ventura Highway).
Lyrics
Chewing on a piece of grass
Walking down the road
Tell me, how long you gonna stay here, Joe?
Some people say this town don’t look good in snow
You don’t care, I know
Ventura Highway in the sunshine
Where the days are longer
The nights are stronger than moonshine
You’re gonna go I know
‘Cause the free wind is blowin’ through your hair
And the days surround your daylight there
Seasons crying no despair
Alligator lizards in the air, in the air
Did di di di dit …
Wishin’ on a falling star
Waitin’ for the early train
Sorry boy, but I’ve been hit by purple rain
Aw, come on, Joe, you can always
Change your name
Thanks a lot, son, just the same
Ventura Highway in the sunshine
Where the days are longer
The nights are stronger than moonshine
You’re gonna go I know
‘Cause the free wind is blowin’ through your hair
And the days surround your daylight there
Seasons crying no despair
Alligator lizards in the air, in the air
Did di di di dit …