mondegreens
Yeah, mondegreens. Thanks.
What song was it where he says “Did I forget to mention Memphis, home of Elvis and the ancient Greeks”
He also starts the the lyrics early with “My life is brilliant…” and then stops and waits for the intro to end and begins again. They just decided to leave it in.
Dude… Like, you just totally blew my mind. :eek:
I might forgive someone else, but not Mr. Born in the USA for this:
“I had a friend who was a big baseball player
Back in high school
He could throw that speedball by you
Make you look like a fool”
So pitchers throw drugs? Come on Bruce, watch a baseball game sometime. It’s FAST ball.
I’ve heard it refers to a) Steve Lillywhite, who produced the first, second, third, and fourteenth U2 albums (including compilations), or b) referencing the first testament, second book, third chapter, 14th verse, which is Exodus 3:14 - the verse with Moses talking with the burning bush.
Both sound pretty good to me.
Whatever the explanation, it still translates to “ones, two, three, fourteen”. Uno = one, unos = ones.
He sings “When at last I am given my due” (that is, once I’ve been given proper respect). It has nothing to do with money.
Listening to the Beatles’ Love last night, while detangling Michaela’s hair, I fastened my attention on the lyrics to “Lady Madonna”. There were several references to the notion of lots of children wondering what might be the source of their mother’s income.
Bzzzzt! Children never wonder about where their parents get the money to finance their lifestyle. In fact, they’re noted for not having a scintilla of curiosity about it.
“All My Love” actually has a number of notes that sound like flubs in the synth solo. I’m not sure if they’re meant to be played as “smudged” notes or not, but they sound unintentional to my ears.
Neil Diamond:
*Songs she sang to me
Songs she brang to me *
Ouch. That’s so inept it hurts.
The Beach Boys covered the Stevie Wonder song “I Was Made To Love Her”. The words that Stevie wrote go:
My papa disapproved, my mama blew her hood… - meaning his mom lost her head, blew her top, etc.
Carl Wilson turned that line into:
…my mama hoo her hood…
What? She “hoo” something? Are you freakin’ kidding me?
That last post reminds me of the Creedence Clearwater Revival version of Heard It Through The Grapevine.
Actual lyrics:
“people say believe half of what you see, son, and none of what you hear”
John Fogerty’s best guess:
“people say believe half of what you see, sunununa wutcha hee”
Also from CCR/Fogerty, the dreadful Sweet Hitchhiker, which for years I thought had to be Sweetie Cha High Ga, because that’s what he’s singing.
Are you sure it isn’t “my mama boo-hooed it”? That’s what I always thought, and it comes closer to a rhyme.
Sure it does.
OK, it’s off to one side of the Serengeti Plain, but if it was in the middle of the plain then it wouldn’t be a plain! Certainly you can see it from the Serengeti, although whether it “rises like Olympus” is a matter of personal taste.
Also from Cher, The Way of Love: she addresses the song to “you,” asking what “you” will do when “you” meet a boy who breaks up with “you” just the way that “you” said goodbye to Cher. Which means that either Cher lost her man to another man or Cher was dating a woman. Which is either a case of unclear grammar or a case of Cher being amazingly transgressive for the early 1970s.
For those of you who didn’t get this, Jesus refused to change stones into bread when the devil was tempting him.
How about that song You’re Beautiful? I don’t know who sings it (it’s a woman), but in the radio version it sounds like she starts singing a few beats too early, catches herself, and then starts again at the correct time. But I can clearly hear “My life is…” just before the lyrics properly start.
See post #84 in this thread. Not sure if I’m being whooshed, but it’s not a woman.
Oh, he reached for her hand and he slipped her the keys
Said "I’ve got no further use for these. - Richard Thompson
A Vincent Black Lightning didn’t have keys. It had a kick-start.