KeithE4 said:I think there's an old thread on this subject already, but...
"There's a bathroom on the right" - CCR Bad Moon Rising
"'Scuse me while I kiss this guy" - Jimi Hendrix Purple Haze
oldies76 said:Sometimes we hear songs and lyrics on the radio and occasionally they may sound differerent to our ears. Let's start with these:
Secret Agent Man - Secret Asian Man
On the Radio - On the Rideo (video)
Carefree Highway - Every Highway
KeithE4 said:I think there's an old thread on this subject already, but...
"There's a bathroom on the right" - CCR Bad Moon Rising
firepoint525 said:WAR, "Why Can't We Be Friends?" I always heard "like a pig eatin' grass, like a pig eatin' grass, like a pig eatin' grass." Hey, I was 11 years old at the time! ;D
firepoint525 said:WAR, "Why Can't We Be Friends?" I always heard "like a pig eatin' grass, like a pig eatin' grass, like a pig eatin' grass." Hey, I was 11 years old at the time! ;D
Actually, I thought he was saying "pop tart" there. But I'm from west Tennessee, where colas are called "Cokes," even if they're Pepsi! The concept of calling it a "pop" was foreign to me. Needless to say, the lyrics made no sense to me!Mediaace said:Jimmy Buffett - "Margaritaville" I would hear the line as"I blew up my flip-flop, stepped on a pop top. While my foot had to freeze all the way back home". (I was 7- years old when this timeless classic was released).
I could probably write a book about "Wildfire." Dave Barry did, well, sort of. In Dave Barry's Book of Bad Songs, he claims that someone wrote to him claiming that Wildfire died in a "killing frost." While Barry was correct in explaining that a "killing frost" merely ends the growing season, and is not enough to kill a horse, he missed the gender. The lyric was "she died one winter, when there came a killing frost." The horse, however, as we learned elsewhere in the song, was male. Apparently, it was the girl who died during the killing frost, leading me to believe that the killing frost was a coincidence, not the cause of her death. But in the next line, Murphey claimed that the horse was lost in a blizzard! How did we go from a killing frost to a blizzard in just one line? (Maybe it was her ghost who called out for "Wildfire" in the rest of the song. At least Wildfire wasn't "a horse with no name." ;D)CTListener said:And I heard a line in Michael Murphey's "Wildfire" as "Gonna leave South Boston behind" at the age of 19! The concept of "sod-bustin'" was foreign to this native Bostonian.
firepoint525 said:I could probably write a book about "Wildfire." Dave Barry did, well, sort of. In Dave Barry's Book of Bad Songs, he claims that someone wrote to him claiming that Wildfire died in a "killing frost." While Barry was correct in explaining that a "killing frost" merely ends the growing season, and is not enough to kill a horse, he missed the gender. The lyric was "she died one winter, when there came a killing frost." The horse, however, as we learned elsewhere in the song, was male. Apparently, it was the girl who died during the killing frost, leading me to believe that the killing frost was a coincidence, not the cause of her death. But in the next line, Murphey claimed that the horse was lost in a blizzard! How did we go from a killing frost to a blizzard in just one line? (Maybe it was her ghost who called out for "Wildfire" in the rest of the song. At least Wildfire wasn't "a horse with no name." ;D)CTListener said:And I heard a line in Michael Murphey's "Wildfire" as "Gonna leave South Boston behind" at the age of 19! The concept of "sod-bustin'" was foreign to this native Bostonian.
firepoint525 said:Actually, I thought he was saying "pop tart" there. But I'm from west Tennessee, where colas are called "Cokes," even if they're Pepsi! The concept of calling it a "pop" was foreign to me. Needless to say, the lyrics made no sense to me!Mediaace said:Jimmy Buffett - "Margaritaville" I would hear the line as"I blew up my flip-flop, stepped on a pop top. While my foot had to freeze all the way back home". (I was 7- years old when this timeless classic was released).
unitron said:firepoint525 said:Actually, I thought he was saying "pop tart" there. But I'm from west Tennessee, where colas are called "Cokes," even if they're Pepsi! The concept of calling it a "pop" was foreign to me. Needless to say, the lyrics made no sense to me!Mediaace said:Jimmy Buffett - "Margaritaville" I would hear the line as"I blew up my flip-flop, stepped on a pop top. While my foot had to freeze all the way back home". (I was 7- years old when this timeless classic was released).
I think pop, short for soda pop, is a northern thing, but Buffet's line had nothing to do with the beverage and everything to do with the container, i.e., a can for which one did not need a can opener or "church key".
I refer you to the country classic "Pop a top".
And it was "blew out my flip-flop, stepped on a pop top, cut my heel, had to cruise on back home"
CTListener said:firepoint525 said:Okay, I am probably overanalyzing this one, but maybe the ghost of that girl is speaking to him through that hoot owl. All I know is that if a hoot owl had howled outside someone's window for six nights in a row down in west Tennessee where I grew up, someone would have shot it by then! ;DCTListener said:And in the last verse, you have an ambiguous pronoun: "There's been a hoot owl howlin' outside my window now for six nights in a row / She's coming for me, I know, and on Wildfire we're both gonna go." That "she's" has nothing to refer to but the hoot owl. So does the singer ride off on the horse with the owl perched on his shoulder?
Interesting to note that Michael (Martin) Murphey, by then a country singer, won a grammy for "best new artist" in 1983 on the strength of his 1982 hit, "What's Forever For." Apparently, they had forgotten about "Wildfire" and a couple of other minor hits that he had had in the '70s. (He later went on to sing "western" music. He probably had that subgenre almost entirely to himself!)