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Misheard lyrics: Songs in the key of slur

Posted: Tuesday, September 25, 2007 5:00 AM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
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It seems that it's easy to mishear a lyric in almost any song out there. But some songs, and some singers, show up much more than others. Here are some of the songs that just come out as one big mumble. Call them songs in the key of slur, or maybe nominees for the misheard lyrics hall of fame.

"In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida," Iron Butterfly.
Yes, it's 17 minutes long. And yes, the lyrics are really pretty simple once you know it's either "In the Garden of Eden" or "In the Garden of Venus," according to whichever story you buy into. And how awesome was "The Simpsons" episode where Bart has the elderly church organist play it (till she passes out!) under the guise of it being a hymn called "In the Garden of Eden" by "I. Ron Butterfly"?

"Louie, Louie," the Kingsmen.
Oh, the endless naughty lyrics that were associated with this so-simple tune. Snopes.com has both the real lyrics and a version of the dirty ones (warning, don't click if you don't want to read the fake sexual lyrics). And yes, the FBI actually wasted years investigating the lyrics, because apparently there weren't enough real crimes to keep their attention back in the 1960s.

"Smells Like Teen Spirit," Nirvana.
Kurt Cobain could be difficult to understand on his best days. But "Teen Spirit" is probably the song that most people get wrong. The title was sparked when Kathleen Hanna of Bikini Kill wrote "Kurt smells like Teen Spirit" on a wall, referring to Teen Spirit deodorant. And as for the lyrics, well, I don't think I understood them until I heard the Tori Amos cover.

On the misheard-lyrics site AmIRight.com, "Teen Spirit" has the second-largest number of misheard lyrics submitted, behind only "Blinded by the Light." And I'd say it might have some of the funniest ones ever. Here we are now, in containers! A mosquito, ate my Cheetos! Amaretto, in a needle! I'm with Kato, in a Beetle!

Weird Al Yankovic smartly skewered how slurry the song is with his parody, "Smells Like Nirvana." Two classic moments include "It's hard to bargle nawdle zouss / With all these marbles in my mouth," and "The lyric sheet's so hard to find / What are the words? Oh, never mind." Truly a misheard-lyric classic.

Other songs are confusing because the lyrics come out rapid-fire and are often pretty random. On that list, I'd include:

"We Didn't Start the Fire," Billy Joel.
Like all list songs, "Fire" trips listeners up with its sheer torrent of names and phrases, especially when the age groups singing it aren't familiar with topics such as Dien Bien Phu and children of Thalidomide. A few choice mishearings include: "Chocolate in the sewers" ("Trouble in the Suez"), "Gretchen's in Afghanistan" ("Russians in Afghanistan"), and "British beat Romania" ("British Beatlemania").

"It's the End of the World as We Know it," REM.
Sometimes it's the listy part of the song that trips people up ("Lenny Bruce in birthday pants," instead of "Lenny Bruce and Lester Bangs"), sometimes it's just the chorus ("It's the end of the world, Eskimo it!").

"Born to Run," Bruce Springsteen.
Truly a classic, but it's got some awesomely misunderstood lines. "Wrap your hands 'round my INCHES?" "The highway's jammed with broken GYROS?" "CHUMPS like us, baby we were born to run?"

Plenty of other songs are just made for tripping us up. "I Am the Walrus," and "Stairway to Heaven" come to mind right away. You can still share any misheard lyrics in the comments, but especially note any songs that seem to be written in the key of slur.

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When I was growing up, "After Midnight" was "Captain Midnight", "Draggin' the Line" was "Chuggin' Around" and the chorus for Englishman in New York was "I'm an eagle alien..."
"Don't wanna be no..BOB SEEGER. Don't wanna sing no BOB SONG".  John Mellenkamp, Pop Singer.
My mother wouldn't let us listen to The Clash because of  "that horribly dirty song, 'F*** the Casbah'!"  Nothing we could say could convince her that it was "Rock the Casbah"!
Neil Diamond's "Forever in Eugene" ("Forever in Blue Jeans")
Instead of "one more song about moving along the highway" I heard "one long summer I was cruising along the highway."
Instead of "one more song about moving along the highway" I heard "one long summer I was cruising along the highway."
The Verve Pipe's "The Freshman" has a part we used to mishear as "For the life of me/I cannot believe we'd/Ever dye forty cents/We were merely freshmen."

We couldn't figure out why they were talking of dying money, so we ended up looking at the lyrics.  Ahh... "die for these sins"... that makes more sense!
Hey Aimie, there actually was a song called "Bomb Iran", a parody of "Barbara Ann", performed by Vince Vance & the Valients in response to the hostages taken in Carter's administration.
Growing up I frequently sang my heart out to "Dixie Dandelion" (Dixieland Delight by Alabama). Now my daughter carries on the tradition with her rendition of "Miss Kiss" (This Kiss by Faith Hill)
For me Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac is the Queen of slurs...none of her songs ever make sense...can make out about every other word....dont' get me wrong..I love her but what the hell is she saying?
When Kenny Rogers' "Lucille" came out, my young daughter went around singing "Four hundred children and a crop in the field."  She was in her twenties before she learned that it was four HUNGRY children.
Back after high school, a friend confused New Order "State of the Nation" with "Snake in my Basement", still sing it to this day
My dad would turn off the radio when the Oak Ridge Boys sang "Elvira." He thought they were singing "Hell-fire-a!"
I so agree with Beach Boys Barbara Ann,  I thought it was bob, bob, bob, bob, bob, or ran
It's funny how hard it is to ever hear the correct wording once your brain has latched onto a particular interpretation. For years I knew it made no sense and could not possibly be right, but I heard a line in Fleetwood Mac's "Dreams" that went "When the landlord shaves you clean you'll know." (When the rain washes you clean you'll know.) Oops!
Sorry, John Doe in Seattle, but it IS Lester Bangs!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lester_bangs
Louie Louie is alive and well in Tampa.  Whenever Martin St. Louis (French Canadian, pronounced Louie)of the Lightning (NHL) scores the PA system cranks up those organ chords and blasts out the Kingsmen until the game starts again.  I've heard about Louie Louie marathons--this might qualify, he scored nearly 50 goals last season.
The comment about "Venus" reminded me of the fact that I thought for sure the lyrics were "I'm your penis. I'm the fire at your vagina." LOL
For years I heard (Pink Floyd)"docks of hazard in the classroom" instead of "dark sarcasm"...

I thought they were just using a metaphor! Just being clever and artistic!
My wife thought the the chorus from the song "Voices Carry" by Til Tuesday singer Aimee Mann went "Hush, Hush, don't go downtown, it's so scary" insead of "Hush, hush, keep it down, down, voices carry"
I realize that I am late to this party, but something happened this week and I immediately thought of Gael and the whole Test Patern gang. On this week's episode of 'The Singing Bee' I found out that I have been singing a song wrong for about 25 years.

In the chorus of "Whip It" by Devo, the correct lyrics are:

now whip it
into shape
shape it up
get straight
go forward
move ahead
try to detect it
it's not too late
to whip it
whip it good

Since the song came out, I've been singing, "tatoo detective" instead of "try to detect it." My wife was horribly amused.

I guess I've been whipped good.
Not that long ago, I suddenly misheard part of Squeeze's "Pulling Mussels From a Shell" as "Maid Marion showing her tits for free" instead of "Maid Marion on her gentle feet."  Oddly enough, my husband heard the garbled version at the same time I did.
I'm with Kathy from Kentucky. I thought the same about Lonely No More. My husband's friend loved an old Clapton classic so much, he used it as a term of endearment for his girlfriend.  You know, the classic: Bayba. It was not until recently he learned it was Layla. I giggle everytime.
The misheard lyric that makes me laugh every time is from "I Try" by Macy Gray.  I will always hear "I blow bubbles when you are not here" instead of "My world crumbles when you are not here."
I still head Neil Diamond's "Reverend in Blue Jeans" as "Rebel in Blue Jeans".  Not as funny or as obscene as others, but I didn't know I was wrong until I actually SAW the lyrics on this site.
OK, this isn't a misheard singer per se, and it's not my mis-hearing, but here goes.  Pete Townshend's "Give Blood" includes a background clip of an old man saying, "We're heading for the day of reckoning. I'm tellin' ya! Its all building up to something, something that can only be redeemed with fire!"  Seems perfectly understandable to me.

But when I've looked online for lyrics to the song, I find these mis-hearings: "Where heading for the day of reckoning," "Where heading for the day of blessings," "Something that can be repeated with fire," "Something that's opening beginning with fire."
I still hear "pay for that chrysler" instead of "paperback writer".  Beatles
My favorites are:

Layla - you dropped me on my teeth.
Layla - let's bake a garland wreath.

And the best is from Led Zep from Houses of the Holy: "Why you toothless skinny bastard!  Are you dizzy when you're stoned?
Amy, in NE, I think in Pink Houses it is "I can remember when you could stop a clock."  Meaning, I assume that she used to be real good looking, but now she's old.
Stevie Nicks' culinary demand in "Gold Dust Woman":

"Pick up the pizzas & go home"

I was touring with a local bar act running lights and they were doing a cover of The Rolling Stones "Beast of Burden" and my girl friend leaned over to me and said "I swear those words were 'I'll never be your Easter Bunny'".  After I picked myself up off of the floor the band played it that way every show from then on.
Amy...it's "I remember when you could stop a clock."  A reference to beauty.
My favorite has to be Rolling Stone's "Your pizza's burning"...

Hey wait....
"Reminds me of my mother, who was horrified by the shocking 'I'm your penis, I'm the fire of your desire...'"

Omigod! I used to sing the same thing!  Who knew Venus was a goddess?
Oh Oh OH!  How about Paul McCartney singing "Everytime you go away, you take a piece of meat with you." (Everytime you go away you take a piece of me with you.)
Am I the only one who thought Elton John was singing how "Daniel is driving tonight on a plane" instead of "Daniel is traveling tonight on a plane?"  I know it doesn't make sense, but I coulda sworn growing up it was the former.

Likewise, "Oh, God he looks like Daniel" (as in "I think God looks like Daniel") instead of "Oh, God, it looks like Daniel"
I don't remember the song title, but as a kid I sang "tonight I need your sweet caress, hold me in the dog mess" instead of "darkness"
Hold me closer, Tony Danza...

Actually makes more sense than Hold me closer, Tiny Dancer
I worked in a music store for years and my fav was the guy asking me for in the garden of eden, yes it really happened to me . Luckily I knew what he was talking about even before they came put with books on this subject....In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida," Iron Butterfly. I was proud of myself for knowing... all my employees were ten years younger then me, they would have had no clue....I guess passing the dutchie worked for something!
Okay, a friend of mine's husband used to sing this incorrectly and unfortunately, I can never listen to this song again without hearing his misquoted lyrics.  The song is Caught Up In You by .38 Special.  The correct chorus is:  So caught up in you, Little girl, That I never wanna get myself free, And baby its true...(which I never really understood until my daughter showed me the correct lyrics on Letssingit.com)  Well, he would always sing that last verse as "Ain't Bea its true"!  Now who would have thought .38 Special were Andy Griffith fans??
"Pink Houses" by John Mellencamp still has me confused.  Is he saying "Hey darlin', I remember when you could starve a flower" or "I remember when you could start a fire"?  

Seriously, what is it?  It just doesn't make sense.

I think it's "I remember when you could stop a clock," but I could be wrong.

How about Steve Perry's "Oh Sherry", the first line: "Cinnamon Gum!"
Amy from NE:

"Hey, darling, I remember when you could stop a clock."
Another Jaggerism..  when I was young and geographically ignorant, I heard the first line of the second verse of Sympathy For The Devil as "I hung around saying, 'beat a bird'" ("I hung around St. Petersburg").
Or the Scorpions --

"Here I am... raunchy like a hurricane..."
My favorite misheard line is in Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World":

"Bright blessed days, and the dogs say goodnight".
("...and the dark sacred night")
There is this old John Fogerty song that I think is called 'The Old Man', but there is a line in the song that says:

'The old man is down the road'

But I vould have sworn that he said:

'The old maid is on a roll'
OK, here's two that drove my musical younger sister, Bridget, crazy.
"Just like the one we love... singin' ooo-baby-oo-baby-oo." by Stevie Nicks. (I think it was supposed to be "One winged Dove" I think.
Also, "I was working as waitress in a cocktail- lounge or bar or club. I always got it wrong. That really has more to do with memory but it was hilarious when my sister would wait for me to get the lyrics wrong then flip out and scream at me for ruining the music. ...One ton tomatoe,---I eat a one ton tomaaaaa-toe, la,la,la,la,la, I think I hear my sister screaming!
help me out please!1 in "i want you" by savage garden, what is the woamn saying in the bridge portion towards the end of the song?  what i get from it is pretty inappropriate, last 5 words "go for it go ahead"?  she says it twice......
I have a copy of the clean words to Louie Louie, sent to me by a radio station when the controversy began about a million years ago. I still remember most of the dirty ones too. They all fit.

Check out the Beach Boys singing "God Only Knows." Paul McCartney once said this was the best song ever written. I don't know if Carl or Brian is singing the lead but it CLEARLY says "God only knows what I'd be without CHEW" . The word "you" in a lot of songs is slurred as "chew," but on this Beach Boys song it really stands out so bad that you'd think the producer or someone would say "what the hell are you singing.? It's THAT obvious, over and over again. I can't listen to it without laughing.
The lyric is "Only the lonely can play." by The Motels.  My 10 year old niece sang "Only the lonely get laid."


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