Lyrics meme
Dec. 16th, 2004 03:49 pmFrom
swisstone and various others:
- Get your playlist together, put it on random, and play!
- Pick your favorite lines from the first 25 songs that play!
- Post and let everyone you know guess what song the lines come from!
- Cross out the songs when someone guesses correctly!
The lyrics
It's wrong to wish on space hardware
zotz and
bibliogirlHe always beat me at Subutteo / Cos he flicked a kick and I didn't know
zotz,
bibliogirl and
flickgcPitsea, Thundersley, Hadleigh, Leigh-on-sea, Chalkwell, Prittlewell, Southend's the end of you
swisstoneThey smelled of pubs and Wormwood Scrubbs / And too many right wing meetings
zotzTake control of the population boom / It's in your living room / Keep a generation gap / Try wearing a cap
swisstoneHow can it be that we can say so much without words? / Bless you and bless me, bless the bees and the birds
zotz and
bibliogirlIt's a good thing you don't have bus fares / They would fall through a hole in your pocket / And you'd lose them when there's snow on the ground
bibliogirlI have every comfort and every sport / And my residence is at Hampton Court
john_callaghanNow I lay me down to sleep / I hear the sirens in the street / All the dreams are made of chrome / I have no way to get back home
killtestThere are people going to the stratosphere / Soldiers fighting with the Cong
killtestThere's brown bread, white bread, all sorts of wholemeal bread / It comes in funny packages with writing on the side
bibliogirl has half the answer, but
killtest named the band- My monster in black tights / You're everything a freak like I likes
Mother! I can never come home again, because I seem to have left an important part of my brain somewhere in a field in Hampshire
zotz,
bibliogirl and
flickgcThe question doesn't matter / The answer's always "aye" / The best view of all / Is where the land meets the sky
killtestGet a taste for home taping / Fetishists of map-making
bibliogirlEverybody wants a box of chocolates and a long-stemmed rose
zotz and
bibliogirlI wish today could be tomorrow / The night is dark, it just brings sorrow anyway
bibliogirlThe juice of the carrot, the smile of the parrot / A little drop of claret - anything that rocks
killtestUnderfoot the ground is patched / With climbing arms of ivy wrapped / Around the manzanita stark and shiny in the breeze
killtestFrom your ankle up I'd say you sure you are sweet / From that down there's just too much feet
iasBlack car drives through the town / Some guy from the top estate / Left a note for a local girl / And yet he had it all on a plate
killtestLong distance information, get me Jesus on the line / I need communion, confirmation, absolution for my crime
killtestFive years ago, I was a four stone apology / Today, I am two separate gorillas
swisstoneLet me hear your balalaikas ringing out / Come and keep your comrade warm
bibliogirl and
flickgcVoyez / Ces oiseaux blancs / Et ces maisons rouillees
killtest
Bugger.
Date: 2004-12-26 06:51 pm (UTC)9 - Tom Waits - A Sweet Little Bullet from a Pretty Blue Gun
10 - Velvet Underground - I'm Sticking With You (Fuh King Krist -NO-ONE!? got this?)
11 - Streetband - Toast; as I have already (almost) said elsewhere.
14 - The Proclaimers - The Joyful Kilmarnock Blues.
18 - ohforchristsakePLEASEtellmeyouwerejusthavinganoffdaywhenyoudidn'tknowthiswashisWONDERFULNESS) Ian Dury - Reasons To be Cheerful.
19. - Mister Jerry Garcia aka The Grateful Dead - Saint Stephen (but enough of Morrissey...)
21 - Inspiral Carpets - This is How It Feels.
22 - Wilson Pickett's finest hour, or to put it another way: Carter USM - Midnight On The Murder Mile.
25 - Hmmf! Soundtrack boy! (I had to look this one up, making me work today rassen frassen...) Charles Trenet - La Mer
Do you?
Re: Bugger.
Date: 2004-12-26 10:16 pm (UTC)Yep, right to all - I was pretty much expecting that you'd clean up all the ones that no-one else had (though you missed Monster in Black Tights by that radical politician, Screaming Lord Sutch). I am quite appalled that no-one got 18 - you only need to read the words aloud to hear the rhythmic genius of Lord Upminster. I wasn't expecting anyone but a diehard fan of gravel-gargling to get no. 9 (since it's not on Rain Dogs), and although no. 10 was used for a car advert last year, they always stopped just short of the bridge and that lyric.
No. 14 was intended for the various Scots who read this LJ (and who I assume are all too ashamed to admit that they listen to what I consider to be the finest rock'n'roll act to ever come from Scotland). No. 25 is a fave because of its use in the marvellous Funny Bones. I've other chansons in my music collection, but that's one that gets played more than most (there's only so much Piaf I can take at one sitting).
Re: Bugger.
Date: 2004-12-26 10:41 pm (UTC)Tom Waits was once asked if he protected his voice: "From what - vandals?"
SLS is a blind spot for me, I just had no idea who it was. I don't have anything of his - bar Jack The Ripper on an old videotape soewhere.
I find it hard to believe that of (especially) some of the people on your LJfriends list no-one spotted Ian Dury. He never needed an epitaph, or even a grave marker. He had Sex & Drugs And Rock & Roll, and when I had a turntable my copy of the original 7" got a workout. 'All my brain and body need.' Bless the hoary old bugger.
Not had a TV for close to two years now but the Velets track is purely deranged. I like the mad ones as much as the 'regular' songs. What was good about The VU was that you couldn't separate the two and imagine them by different acts. All their material was pure VU. Bonkers or forlorn.
I try not to think of Piaf when considering French music. It's the totality of cliche. So much more to choose from, contemporary or not. (Actually the last french music I listened to was actually Quebecois - La Volee D'Castors - so probably doesn't qualify) I shall investigate Trenet.
"I was pretty much expecting that you'd clean up all the ones that no-one else had" Christ, more than I did! I find this really quite disproportionately cheering. Thanks.
Re: Bugger.
Date: 2004-12-26 10:20 pm (UTC)btw, how's the new place? I know it's not in Dagenham, since you've said as much - whereabouts is it? (better than Dagenham doesn't exactly narrow things down in the South Essex/East London axis). Wherever, I hope it's an improvement, and that life chez vous settles down down to something approaching normality.
Re: Bugger.
Date: 2004-12-26 11:04 pm (UTC)Having worked myself into the ground the past week and a half it's habitable. And I am - this is ridiculous because I don't really have anything invested in this place - quietly optimistic that the house itself, as well as the relocation, represents a genuine new start for me. It's just a stepping stone that isn't actually inundated. Possibly a good sign?
Ah, define 'normality' ...and I'll probably be the control specimen that screws the results. But thank you, really, for the good wishes. I DO hope I get somewhere this year, too.
Happy New Year Nick, and to Issy too :o)