T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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293.1 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Wed Dec 17 1986 08:08 | 27 |
| "Dancing in the Dark"
These lyrics are meaningless, though they go well together with
the music:
"Dancing in the dark ... 'til the tune ends. We're dancing in the
dark ... and it soon ends. We're waqltzing in the wonder of why
we're here. Time hurries by: we're here and gone. Looking for
the light of a new love, to brighten up the night, I've got you,
love. And we will face the music ... together ... dancing in the
dark."
As meaningless as "Chickory Chick" (below), but without its charm.
The lyrics of "Chickory Chick" are below. It makes a [_very little_]
sense if you recall that chickory is sometimes used in coffee, and
it's possible it refers to a restaurant waitress or economical
housewife or professional young woman:
"Chickory chick, cha-la, cha-la. Checkeraromi in a bananaica.
Wallaka wallaka, can't you see? Chickory chick is me."
Both songs were popular in the 1940s. So much for the good old
days.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
293.2 | Someone's gotta be pedantic... | PSTJTT::TABER | Who hates vice hates man | Wed Dec 17 1986 09:48 | 14 |
| I think that's "Chekalaronica in a banannica." In that case, I don't
believe the idea was to make any sense. 'Sort of like "Maresy Doats"
ecept there was an intention to fool people into thinking there were
serious words there.
Most songs don't hold up well under scrutiny of the written lyrics. Part
of the problem is that you don't get the phrasing, part is that you are
liberated from the requirement of keeping time with the (possibly
syncopated) beat. Lyrics are only the part of the score for a vocal
instrument. Analysing them completely out of context is like analysing
the cello part to a symphony. If you don't know the context in which
it's played, it makes no sense at all.
>>>==>PStJTT
|
293.3 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Dec 17 1986 10:12 | 9 |
| Re .1:
What is wrong with the first set of lyrics? It seems to make sense
when you realize the appropriate metaphors: Music is life, dancing is
living, dark is lack of something (knowledge? happiness?), and "here
and gone" is the shortness of life.
-- edp
|
293.4 | BOOM boom boom, BOOM boom boom! | APTECH::RSTONE | | Wed Dec 17 1986 10:18 | 19 |
| Being from an earlier generation, I have difficulty with some of
the currently popular "music" which consists of one single phrase
repeated ad-nauseum with an accompanying primitive percussion
beat. To make matters worse, these are frequently presented at
a decibel level well above that which can cause permanent damage to
one's hearing.
Unfortunately, little emphasis has been placed on the downstream
effects of loud rock music. Perhaps one day it will be treated
in the same category as loud industrial noise, asbestos, agent orange,
and chemical addictive agents.
Oh well, each generation must make it's own impact on our society.
Just think...those people who preached: "Never trust anyone over
30!" now fall into their own definition of those not to be trusted!
But alas, I ramble....maybe the next reply will take us back to
the topic!
|
293.5 | How About The National Anthem? | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Wed Dec 17 1986 10:54 | 8 |
| I always thought the lyrics to our very own Star Spangled Banner
were strange...then a couple of weeks ago on a sitcom, one of the
kids was assigned to translate the anthem into "english". It was
a running joke through the program, until the end when he burst
in and announced that the whole thing was one long question. Never
thought of it that way.
Sure wish we'd chosen America The Beautiful.
|
293.6 | o'er the ramparts we watched | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Dec 17 1986 12:20 | 27 |
| re .0:
"Live and Let Die"
...and in this ever changin' world in which we're livin'...
is how I interpreted the sounds so as to be almost grammatically
correct. (not saying that this is what Paul actually wrote down
on the sheets, I've never seen them)
re .5:
The Star Spangled Banner is actually several questions, I believe,
and very good questions at that.
I think it is a much better anthem than any of the other wimpy songs
that have been proposed.
What do you mean "translate it into 'english'"? Maybe some words
are obscure, like 'ramparts', but is all of it? If it is, I'll start
a Star Spangled Banner note.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
293.7 | What's obscure about ramparts? | ECLAIR::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IPG Reading-UK | Thu Dec 18 1986 08:15 | 1 |
| We have 'em all over the place here. :-)
|
293.8 | | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Thu Dec 18 1986 14:54 | 5 |
| I think that the gist of the problem is that not only does it contain
obscure words, it also has strange/antiquated diction. It does
sound like a good topic for another note...go ahead! Maybe the
base note should contain the correct text so we're all agreed on
what we're translating.
|
293.9 | Speaking of parts... | APTECH::RSTONE | | Fri Dec 19 1986 10:22 | 6 |
| Re: .7
We also have ramparts...along with eweparts and lambparts.
And little lamsie divey!
|
293.10 | It gets worse, not better... | KBOV07::TINIUS | Kaufbeuren, Germany | Tue Dec 23 1986 17:02 | 21 |
| Re .4
> Being from an earlier generation, I have difficulty with some of
> the currently popular "music" which consists of one single phrase
> repeated ad-nauseum with an accompanying primitive percussion
> beat. To make matters worse, these are frequently presented at
> a decibel level well above that which can cause permanent damage to
> one's hearing.
I love it! I don't know how old RSTONE is (I'm 36), but these are damn near
the exact sentiments my father expressed in 1964/65 when I started listening
to the Beatles and the Stones, and my father claims HIS father said the same
thing in the early Forties...
I wonder what J. S. Bach's father said when he (Johann) cranked the old organ
into overdrive?
Stephen
P. S. Don't ask *ME* what *I* think when my daughter starts up her Kool and
the Gang. "She's Fresh, So Fresh" Yuk!
|
293.11 | I've been around for awhile. | APTECH::RSTONE | | Wed Dec 24 1986 09:26 | 28 |
| Re: .10
> I love it! I don't know how old RSTONE is (I'm 36), but these are damn
> near the exact sentiments my father expressed in 1964/65 when I started
> listening to the Beatles and the Stones, and my father claims HIS
> father said the same thing in the early Forties...
Just for a frame of reference, I had finished college and a tour
of duty with the U.S. Army before Chubby Checkers promoted the Twist.
My wife and I were invited to be "chaperones" (remember that antiquated
concept) at my old fraternity house for the spring formal weekend,
and all they did was dance the twist. (From recent reports I get
the impression that they still do something along that line.)
As the DJ for our High School dances (they weren't even "hops" then),
I recall some of the popular favorites: Tennessee Waltz, Sparrow
in the Treetop, Blue Tango, In the Mood. The music was certainly
loud enough to dance to, but you could also hold a conversation
(without shouting) while you sat on the sidelines.
Incidently, in those days we had never heard of things like "pot",
"horse", "coke", etc. and were reasonably content to be ourselves.
Our role models were people like John Wayne, Doris Day, Mickey Rooney,
Bing Crosby, The Andrew Sisters, The Ink Spots, Cary Grant, Humphrey
Bogart, et al.
But enough nostalgia....I think you get the picture.
|
293.12 | Back to the topic... | KIRK::JOHNSON | I'm not a doctor, but I play 1 on TV | Wed Dec 24 1986 09:43 | 2 |
| "If you love somebody, set them free."
-Sting
|
293.13 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Wed Dec 24 1986 09:55 | 55 |
| Re .4:
> Being from an earlier generation, I have difficulty with some of
> the currently popular "music" which consists of one single phrase
> repeated ad-nauseum with an accompanying primitive percussion
> beat.
This may belong in the math conference, but in an April issue of a
journal of the ACM, Donald E. Knuth had an article on the complexity of
various songs. There was some accompanying material on something like
the length of the grammar that describes a song when it is a given
length.
For example, a normal complexity would be O(n). That is, if the song
is n units (words, lines, whatever you wish) in length, there is an
amount of material roughly proportional to n to memorize. In something
like Old MacDonald's Farm, you would have to memorize the basic
phrases, which are constant in length ("Old MacDonald had a farm", "on
that farm he had a/an *", "a/an * here, a/an * there", and so on), and
then some material which would increase as the song got longer. At
first, you might add "cow" and "moo" to your list of things to
memorize. Then you could add "pig" and "oink". To make the song n
units longer, you must memorize kn new words, where k is a fraction
because you get to reuse "on that farm he had a/an *" when you add
"cow" or "pig".
Knuth noted that there was an improvement on this complexity. There
are songs with complexity O(sqrt(n)). Adding a little bit of
memorization can make such songs longer. Knuth gave an example of a
Hebrew song, but "The Twelve Days of Christmas" may be more familiar.
Again, there is some basic material, such as "On the *th day of
Christmas, my true love gave to me". And again, to make the song
longer, you add material, such as "a partridge in a pear tree" or "two
turtle doves". But this song is better because when you add "two
turtle doves", you sing a phrase involving it AND the previous phrase
as well. Adding a bit of material makes the song longer by more than
just one phrase -- it makes the song longer in proportion to the total
amount of material you have ALREADY memorized. To make the song n
units long, you only need to add k sqrt(n) things to memorize.
Finally, Knuth noted that Kool and the Gang had achieved the ultimate
by writing songs with complexity O(1).
I thought that was hilarious. It probably helps if you have worked
with the O notation before. Complexity O(1) means the song can get as
long as you wish without any increase in memorization -- you just
repeat the words.
On the matter of the generation gap, can anybody provide a pointer to
the person who said a few thousand years ago that students were unruly,
disobedient, disrespectful of their teachers, and dressing in strange
ways?
-- edp
|
293.14 | Hahahahah!! | CSSE::CICCOLINI | | Wed Dec 24 1986 12:58 | 9 |
| #2 made me chuckle because I always called the song "Maresy Doats",
too! The actual words though, are:
Mares eat oats and does eat oats,
And little lambs eat ivy.
A kid'll eat ivy too, wouldn't you?
Still kinda dumb, though!
|
293.15 | Glad you asked | NEDVAX::MCKENDRY | Real-Time Charlie | Sat Dec 27 1986 22:47 | 15 |
| It's called "Mairzy Doats" on the label of the original record
and on the original sheet music.
The quote about the younger generation is due to Plato or someone
of that era. A good collection of familiar quotations ought to turn
it up; forgive me for not doing the requisite grunt work, but I'm
just back from a(n) horrific plane ride and have a bad headache.
My favorite dumb lyric?
"Underneath our feet the subway is a-rumblin',
Underground,
Underground."
-Tom Paxton
-John
|
293.16 | unm | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Mon Dec 29 1986 16:24 | 26 |
| Re .i5:
Yes. As originally sung, it should be:
Mairsey-doats and dosey-dotes
And liddle lamsey-divey;
A kiddly-divey-do, wouldn't you?
[whole thing repeated, then:]
If the words sound queer and jumbled to your ear,
A little bit jazzy and jivey, say:
Mares ... eat ... oats
And does ... eat ... oats
And little ... lambs eat ivy.
[they let you figure out the last line]
The quote re: the younger generation has been attributed to ancient
Greeks and Romans, and I've even seen an attribution back to ancient
Egypt, but haven't found verification of it.
...Blame it on Sokrates ... Plato did. :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
293.17 | Kids today (1969 style) | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | no, before they changed the water | Tue Dec 30 1986 10:26 | 10 |
| One of the "classic" heavy metal dirges of the late '60s was like
that too.
"Ina Gadda da Vida", by the Iron Butterfly, began life as "In the
Garden of Eden", but the singer was drunk when he showed up to record
it and they changed the song to fit the way came out.
The song, overall, was somewhere close to Knuth's ultimate simplicity.
Even the 10-minute-ish drum solo brought new meaning to the term
"redundant".
|
293.18 | Bad things never go away... | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Wed Jan 07 1987 09:04 | 3 |
| "I'm so glad I'm stuck with you"
- Huey Lewis and the News
|
293.19 | | HAYNES::CASWELL | | Wed Jan 07 1987 13:31 | 8 |
|
Re: "I'm so happy to be stuck with you"
(Maybe this should be in the misunderstood lyrics note :-)
The song is dumb, yes. But I think that maybe you misunderstand
the sentiment.
|
293.20 | RE 293.19 | EDEN::KLAES | Alchemists get the lead out. | Wed Jan 07 1987 13:46 | 5 |
| The woman in the video is a fox, however, and makes up for the
song. :^)
Larry
|
293.21 | | DECWET::MUSE | Bill Muse, DECwest Publications | Wed Jan 07 1987 21:22 | 19 |
| "We don't need no education." (Oh, I think they could stand a little.)
--Pink Floyd
Grammatically OK, but dumb:
"Put on your wig, woman; we're gonna shake and finger pop.
We're gonna pick tomatos. We're gonna smash potatos."
--Jr. Walker & the All Stars
"Swan, swan, hummingbird. Hurrah, we're all free now.
What noisy cats are we."
--R.E.M.
"Wrap your heel in bones of steel; turn the blade, a twist of color."
--R.E.M.
"I said na, na na na na, na na na na, na na na, na na na,
na na na na."
--the song "Land of a Thousand Dances"
|
293.22 | Favorite Dumb Song Title: | DECWET::MITCHELL | | Thu Jan 08 1987 20:16 | 5 |
| "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye"
John M.
|
293.23 | An A for sentiment, an F for grammar. | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Wed Jan 14 1987 12:45 | 2 |
| The new song from the TV show, _Family Ties_, includes
the line, "...you don't love me no more."
|
293.24 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | A disgrace to the forces of evil | Thu Jan 15 1987 06:23 | 19 |
| Dumb lyrics:
Scandal's "The Warrior": "You're eyes touch me physically..."
(Sounds kinky to me!)
Redundancy:
A lost song from the early 70's, "Neanderthal Man" by Hotlegs:
"I'm a Neanderthal man,
You're a Neanderthal girl.
We're all Neanderthal men
In our Neanderthal world."
(Repeated over and over and over again.)
--- jerry
|
293.25 | Jeff the Zappaholic | STOWMA::LANGE | | Fri Jan 16 1987 16:51 | 9 |
| I shouldn't say "dumb" because he's my !!musical!!,not lyrical
inspiration..
Frank Zappa "I'm So Cute" from the Shiek yer'bouti album
"A rehn ne na, a rehn ne na, a rehn ne na,a rehn na
A rehn ne na, a rehn ne na,a renda renda ra"
Jeff
|
293.26 | You left out hey, hey, hey <.21> | TOPDOC::JAMES | | Mon Jan 19 1987 12:55 | 9 |
| Not to play devil's advocate, but some lyrics, on the other hand,
are shear poetry. The words deliver a message in a fresh way. I
am thinking particularly of Sting, Queen, Pink Floyd. As was mentioned
in an earlier note, disentangling the lyrics from the music is like
unraveling a rope - you get two twisted strands with no useful purpose
and with less than half the strength (or meaning).
Stel
|
293.27 | Sting, stang, stung | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Think Spring | Mon Jan 19 1987 14:13 | 27 |
| .26>I am thinking particularly of Sting...
Oh yeah, you mean like:
I have come here seeking knowledge
Things they would not teach me of in college
It will turn your face to alabaster
When you find the servant is the master
.
.
.
<blah, blah, blah> tuition
<blah, blah, blah> fruition...
Sorry, but this song has always grated on my nerves. I suppose I should
give him credit for transcending the "yeah, yeah, yeah" rut, but this
sounds much too strained - like he's trying to rhyme at the expense of
meaning. (Especially the "tuition/fruition" line.)
My favorite, that says it all:
"And we got no class
And we got no principles
We can't even think up a word that rhymes...."
-- Sam
|
293.28 | "I got ewe, babe." | DECWET::MUSE | | Wed Jan 21 1987 21:27 | 6 |
| RE: .26
"shear poetry"? Like "wham, bam, thank you lamb"?
Sheri Lewis
|
293.29 | Tom Lehrer, again | VIDEO::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Wed Mar 02 1988 00:30 | 13 |
| While these lyrics are not dumb, they do bear repeating in this
note.
From Tom Lerher's "The Folk Song Army"
"The tune don't have to be clever,
"And it don't matter if you put a couple of extra syllables
into a line.
"It sounds more ethnic if it ain't good English,
"And it don't even gotta rhyme.
(Excuse me, 'rhyne.')
Steve
|
293.30 | words, not tune | DELNI::CANTOR | Dave C. | Thu Mar 03 1988 06:44 | 13 |
| Re .29
> "The tune don't have to be clever,
----
It's "The words don't have to be clever."
-----
Thanks for reminding me about this classic.
Ready. Aim. Sing.
Dave C.
|
293.31 | Courtesy of Billy Joel in 'Allentown' | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | ThatsNotPROBLEMsThatsLIFE! | Fri Dec 07 1990 15:25 | 4 |
| in which he decries the uselessness of the education he and his cohorts
got in school...
"...and our graduations hang on the wall..."
|
293.32 | Two more entries | MAST::FITZPATRICK | Me upon my pony on my boat. | Fri Feb 05 1993 10:26 | 18 |
| One of my current favorites in the dumb lyrics category:
"You are the wind beneath my wings"
Everybody knows that it's the wind *above* the wings that makes things
fly.
And another one:
When I was in college, some fraternity brothers were in a band
("The Back Bay Project" - they played in Boston and Cambridge around
1984-1986) that did a rendition of "Burnin' Down the House." They
added a last verse that went something like this:
Oh sh*t! I think we're out of lyrics.
We're f*cked! I guess it's time to end this.
-Tom
|
293.33 | | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Does 'balk' come from 'Balkan'? | Fri Feb 05 1993 10:44 | 4 |
| A lot of folks think it's "you are the wings beneath my feet..."
Ouch!!
|
293.34 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Fri Feb 05 1993 10:51 | 9 |
|
>> A lot of folks think it's "you are the wings beneath my feet..."
These people are really out of touch - sometimes referred
to as Hermes hermits.
Di
|
293.35 | (Mythological Humor) | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Does 'balk' come from 'Balkan'? | Fri Feb 05 1993 11:39 | 9 |
| No no Di, those are the people who think it's
"you are the wings BEHIND my feet..."
:-)
(incidentally, I think this entire string should be hermetically
(hermitically?
hermeneutically?)
sealed...)
|
293.36 | Hey, buddy, wanna lift? | AIMHI::TINIUS | It's always something. | Tue Apr 06 1993 10:37 | 15 |
| Re: .32
> Everybody knows that it's the wind *above* the wings that makes things
> fly.
Actually, the faster moving air above the wing results in lower pressure on
that surface. The higher pressure under the wing then forces the wing up, so,
indeed, the wind *beneath* the wing is what makes things fly. Unless, I guess,
you prefer to think of the lower pressure above as sucking the wing upward...
...I think not.
-stephen
P.S. Can you imagine Bette Midler singing "You are my Bernoulli effect..."?
|