Subject: mystery lyrics From: mkebenn Date: 27 Nov 00 - 04:44 PM Besides the ones in the Ian Tyson thread are any lines that you've sung wrong for years and when you got the right words ya' went DUH!!!!!!!!! My example from Roddy MCcorley sang "skull marked Ernest Bann" S/b "Stalwart, ernest band" ...Needed to hear The Clancys Mike Bennett |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 27 Nov 00 - 05:38 PM there's the classic "the bathroom's on the right" instead of "there's a dark moon on the rise" |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Kim C Date: 27 Nov 00 - 05:43 PM I dunno.... but I never, ever thought it was "scuse me while I kiss this guy." |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Matt_R Date: 27 Nov 00 - 05:46 PM That's "Bad Moon On The Rise." |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Mick Lowe Date: 27 Nov 00 - 05:53 PM I dunno about unwittingly perverting the course of song lyrics... but I can never hear a particular song without "adapting" it to my own perverse view of lifely.. Namely.."Something in the way she moves... makes me think she's got diarrhoea"... Mick |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Hollowfox Date: 27 Nov 00 - 05:57 PM And then there's that famous line from the first chorus of Pleasant and Delightful: "And the sharks they played melodeons/ At the bombing of the Hague." (Somebody was very tired...) |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: mkebenn Date: 27 Nov 00 - 06:30 PM Forgot to mention I sang the line before as "around him marked in grimolea" some kinda fabric I guess I thought..MB. |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,CraigS Date: 28 Nov 00 - 03:00 PM There's a line in Bohemian Rhapsody (queen) which sounds like "spare him his life for his pork sausages", but the prize has to go to Ashley Richards, England's premier pub singer, who always sings "I can see clearly now the rain has gone, I can see all testicles in my way". Incidentally, I have it on good authority that his wife often refers to "compensation" forming on the window panes! |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Magpie Date: 28 Nov 00 - 03:15 PM A thread very like this one was up about a year ago. I've searched, but unfortunately I can't find it. It was a gas. Someone then offered this gem: Amazing grapes, how sweet and round.... Cracked me up. I'll look a bit more, and try to find it. Magpie |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: mousethief Date: 28 Nov 00 - 03:27 PM These mishearings are called mondegreens, from the understandable mishearing of The Earl of Murray, "They have slain the Earl of Murray, and Lady Mondegreen." The word was coined by author Silvia Wright in 1954. I got the book "Scuse Me While I Kiss This Guy" as a gift, and found most of the alleged mondegreens in the book are too farfetched to be probable mishearings of the songs in question. But real, honest mondegreens can be a lot of fun. I mentioned one from my own childhood in an earlier thread: Up on the rooftop reindeers' paws... But perhaps the best comes from a mishearing of a newscast: Next, we'll hear from our meaty urologist. Alex
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Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: NightWing Date: 28 Nov 00 - 03:32 PM |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Steve Latimer Date: 28 Nov 00 - 04:28 PM Malachy McCourt's book "A Monk Swimming" is due to his childhood misunderstanding of the prayer Hail Mary. |
Subject: RE: BS: mystery lyrics From: Snuffy Date: 28 Nov 00 - 05:37 PM In "I Live Not Where I Love" (recorded by Steeleye etc) there is a line that goes: "My heart e'er fixed in your breast", but I still always hear it as: "My heart Airfixed in your breast." Airfix was the glue we used for assembling plastic models of planes, warships etc. A powerful image! Wassail! V |
Subject: RE: mystery lyrics From: Dave Hanson Date: 01 Sep 12 - 03:19 AM I loved Desmond Deckers, ' Oh oh me ears are alight ' Dave H |
Subject: RE: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,BobL Date: 01 Sep 12 - 03:20 AM What are you smoking and where can I get some? |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Acorn4 Date: 01 Sep 12 - 04:53 AM The "Centipede Song" "Liverpool town where I was born, Where there are no trees or centipedes" (scented breeze) |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,Keith Price Date: 01 Sep 12 - 05:20 AM I was once asked if I could play the Alpine Gondoliers ( McAlpines Fusiliers) genuine. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 01 Sep 12 - 05:38 AM It don't get any better than this!!!! Peter Kay |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Mark Clark Date: 01 Sep 12 - 03:10 PM Not a song, but I remember the old story about the Sunday School teacher asking her class to draw the Nativity scene. After giving them time to get well into their creations she walked around to see what they had drawn and perhaps offer suggestions. Young Johnny had completed a nice drawing with Mary and Joseph, a manger, some animals and shepherds but standing to one side of the scene was a strange looking fat man who seemed to have no part in the traditional story. "Who is that?" the teacher asked. "Oh, that's Round John Virgin." was Johnny's reply. - Mark |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,BobL Date: 01 Sep 12 - 04:37 PM Sorry Dave H, my earlier post was actually a response to some nonsense which has since been deleted. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Hesk Date: 01 Sep 12 - 05:03 PM This may not be the first time that I have mentioned "When Old Men Sing" as opposed to "When All Men Sing". I am not the only one to have made this mistake, and in some ways it can be most appropriate, in the early hours of the morning around a fire, or in a late night session! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,DrWord Date: 01 Sep 12 - 06:19 PM from the handwritten transcriptions in a collection found at the local Thrift store--scores of great 50's stuff--this line from San Antonio Rose: 'Twas there I found, beside the Ali Mode ... other misheard lyrics in this binder, but this one makes me smile. dennis |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Dave Hanson Date: 02 Sep 12 - 04:11 AM No offence taken BobL, I stopped smoking 22 years ago, only regret is not being able to smoke a joint again. Dave H |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Allan Conn Date: 02 Sep 12 - 04:42 AM I always thought Madonna's line in La Isla Bonita (spelling)which goes 'young girls with eyes like the desert' sounded like 'young girls with eyes like potatos'. Also I was genuinely surprised to see that Carly Simon sings 'some underworld spy or the wife of a good friend' in You're So Vain. I always thought it was 'someone who would steal all the wine from a good friend' which I think is a much better line! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 09 Sep 12 - 08:15 AM I was just looking at some clips on youtube of an Elvis tribute act that a friend of mine has posted. I was interested to see a song entitled "This Town". I have never heard Elvis sing a song called this so clicked on it. The song he sings is "I Just Can't Help Beleiving" with the chorus ; "This TIME the girl is gonna stay". Should I tell him? |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 09 Sep 12 - 08:50 AM I wondered for years as I was growing up why the Lord's Prayer always ended with "Our Men" pronounced "Are Men". Gloucestershire dialect maybe? Rog |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Ebbie Date: 09 Sep 12 - 01:05 PM I began life speaking German; I remember part of the transition from one language to the other. For instance, I remember lustily singing with my brother: "Rascue the PEAR asheen. Didn't know what 'rascue' was but I did know the fruit. (from a hymn called Rescue the Perishing) |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 09 Sep 12 - 02:55 PM Further to my post about the Elvis tribute, he's put another one up, this time it's "Evil Las Vegas". Is it a simple mistake or a profound comment on the world's gambling capital? We'll never know!!! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Jack's Rake Date: 09 Sep 12 - 03:07 PM Jack's Rake's bodhran player thought, for many of his early years, that the American word for traffic lights was "gestand". This was because "she stole her daddy's car and she drove it to the amber gestand now" He's from Fleetwood; fast food didn't reach there until this century. My own little puzzlement, at a similar age, was why, exactly, is there a war-zone on seventh avenue? "just a come on from the war-zone, Seventh Avenue. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: ChanteyLass Date: 09 Sep 12 - 09:45 PM At a folk festival in Rhode Island today, I heard a singer singing a song about fishing. It mentioned Kodiak. I have no idea what the title is or if the singer, a local man, wrote the song or covered it. At one point I heard him sing something that sounded like, "No more salmon next to me." I thought, "Huh?" The woman sitting next to me, another local singer, turned to me with a quizzical look and said, "No more salmon next to me?" in a way that implied it sounded strange to her, too. I was picturing someone on a boat with a bucket, barrel, or bin of salmon next to him. I mulled it over briefly, turned to my neighbor, and said, "No more salmon nets to mend." "Oh," she said. I hope I was right about that line. If anyone knows the song, let me know! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Ebbie Date: 10 Sep 12 - 01:32 AM Sounds like a reasonable line, although it's not a familiar line to me. I googled it and found nothing informative. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Bernard Date: 10 Sep 12 - 04:45 PM There's the song about the woman with a hairy tongue... 'And her hairy tongue over her shoulder Tied up with a black velvet band'! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Mr Happy Date: 11 Sep 12 - 06:10 AM Acorn, Thanks for the 'centipede'! I pinched it for my rendition yesterday & went down to guffaws! ***** Used to be a chap who sang in the local pubs & couldn't seem to understand the word 'souvenirs' He'd sing 'Tears for silver neers'! & 'Among my silver neers' Wonder what he thought 'neers' were? |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 07 Oct 12 - 12:31 PM Hehe! I just did a Google search for the chords to Rhinestone Cowboy (don't have a go at me I just happen to like it!). Anyway, the version I looked at gives the lyric to the last line of the chorus as "and WAFFLES coming over the 'phone" Pricless!! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 07 Oct 12 - 12:35 PM Priceless. (oops) |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Dave Hanson Date: 08 Oct 12 - 03:50 AM I often wonder where people get song lyrics from, a singer at my local session continually sings 2 songs wrong, in Hank Williams ' Your Cheatin Heart ' he always sings the line as " your cheering heart ' and in ' The Battle Of New Orleans ' he always sings " down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Medico " what on earth does it mean ? Of course no one tells him he's wrong, he's in his 70s and deaf as a post, which may explain things. Dave H |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Jenny S Date: 08 Oct 12 - 09:40 AM Do shepherds still wash their socks by night, I wonder? And will somebody please tell me what is this seedted stuff that's on the ground. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,Desi C Date: 10 Oct 12 - 07:13 AM I was learning the Carter Family's Wildwood Flower recently and the Line 'The pale and the leader have all flown away' Did some research and seems the song comes from 1840 (A.P carter claimed he wrote it but didn't) and the original line was 'the pale oleander' in fact it's a classic example of how a song can change over decades through misheard lyrics as several words and phrases in it have changed so much they now make little sense i.e 'twine with my mingles' should read 'twine with my ringlets' and several other examples |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: mayomick Date: 10 Oct 12 - 10:29 AM The mention of Rhinestone Cowboy reminds me of someone I knew who used to sing it as "nine stone cowboy" . We didn't have a clue in those days what a rhinestone cowboy was supposed to have been . I still don't come to think of it . for people in the US : nine stone = 126 pounds |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: PHJim Date: 10 Oct 12 - 10:52 AM GUEST:Desi C, Maybelle sings, "The pale and the leader and eyes look like blue." I've heard folks, trying to make some sense of the song sing, "The pale oleander and violets so blue." There is another verse that Maybelle sings as: I will dance, I will sing and my laugh shall be gay I will charm every heart, in his crown I will sway I woke from my dreaming, my idol was clay All portions of loving had all flown away I prefer: I will dance, I will sing and my laugh shall be gay I will charm every heart in the crowd I survey I woke from my dreaming, my idol was clay And my passion for loving had all flown away |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: PHJim Date: 10 Oct 12 - 10:56 AM Jerry Jeff sang,"And he spoke right out," in Mr. Bojangles. The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band misheard it as,"And the smoke ran out," and that's the way they recorded it. I heard them sing it live about7 or 8 years ago and they sang the lyrics the way Jerry Jeff wrote them. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: clueless don Date: 11 Oct 12 - 08:45 AM I encountered one recently. In the Buffalo Springfield song "For What It's Worth", I had always heard (admittedly ungrammatical) It starts when you're always at pray. Step out of line, the man come, and take you away. Apparently the actual line is "It starts when you're always afraid". Couldn't prove it by my ears. Don |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,leeneia Date: 11 Oct 12 - 11:23 AM I just heard "You're So Vain, I'll Bet You Think this Song is About You". I never have figured out what she's bellowing in the middle. Cows in the country! Cows in the country! or is it Clouds in the coffee! Clouds in the coffee! ======= How many years of my life will I have to listen to those tedious 70's songs? |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,highlandman at work Date: 11 Oct 12 - 12:06 PM Not a mondegreen, exactly, but as a young 'un growing up in the Northern US, I heard Mother Maybelle sing "twine with my mAngles"; it made no sense whatever but the association with hair, and having seen my Mom use the laundry iron to hand-press my sister's curly hair flat, it to this day brings up a horrifying mental image of a young girl running her hair through a mangle iron. -Glenn |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST Date: 11 Oct 12 - 02:02 PM The only man who could ever reach me Was the Domino's pizza man !!! |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,leeneia Date: 12 Oct 12 - 11:03 AM Something similar happened to my grandmother, highlandman. Her long hair got caught in the wringer of a washing machine. Not good, not good at all. On a happier note, if people got paid for theorizing, then 'Wildwood Flower' would be the basis for a small industry. However, I'm willing to accept that the line about 'mingle' was originally about ringlets. It makes sense. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: Genie Date: 04 Nov 13 - 05:29 AM "Hold me closer, Tony Danza. Count the head lice on the highway ... ." |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,Roger Date: 04 Nov 13 - 08:48 AM While shepherds washed their socks by night All seated round the tub The angel of the lord came down And taught them how to scrub. Used to drive our headmaster bonkers at the school carol concert!! Roger |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: GUEST,Vicki Kelsey Date: 04 Nov 13 - 11:49 PM Genie's "Count the head lice--" reminds me that when my 6 year old came home from school after a health scare, he told me quite seriously that the teacher said his Mom should inspect his hair for head lights. I can imagine him expecting that I would see tiny cars running around. |
Subject: RE: Mondegreens: mystery lyrics From: JohnInKansas Date: 01 Jan 14 - 01:29 PM In the "News" ... (?) 'I smell a Mexican monkey': Best misheard lyrics of 2013 Gael Fashingbauer Cooper TODAY 01 January 2014 We've all done it: Been cluelessly singing along to a song only to learn (maybe from a lyrics sheet, or maybe from a happily horrified friend) that we had the words all wrong. The most famous ones have passed into pop-culture lore. Round John Virgin.* There's a bathroom on the right.** Hold me closer, Tony Danza.*** * "Round yon virgin," from "Silent Night" ** "There's a bad moon on the rise," from Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Bad Moon Rising" *** "Hold me closer, tiny dancer," from Elton John's "Tiny Dancer" With some help from the great misheard lyrics sites Kiss This Guy and Am I Right?, these are our favorite misheard lyrics from 2013. "So we put our hands up, like we seen a damn ogre." — Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, "Can't Hold Us" Real lyric: "So we put our hands up, like the ceiling can't hold us." "All I wanted was to break your arms," — Miley Cyrus, "Wrecking Ball" Real lyric: "All I wanted was to break your walls." "I smell a Mexican monkey," — Daft Punk, "Get Lucky" Real lyrics: "I'm up all night to get lucky." "I'll be on my Slip-n-Slide," — Justin Timberlake, "Suit & Tie" Real lyrics: "I be on my suit and tie." "My friends in Iowa cracked the code," — Lorde, "Royals" Real lyrics: "My friends and I, we've cracked the code." "It feels like a perfect night to dress up like hamsters." — Taylor Swift, "22" Real lyrics: "It feels like a perfect night to dress up like hipsters." ***** We've done better at mudcat. Filtered for "Mondegreens" and going back a year gets four threads with better examples. This was the shortest recent thread. Several of the samples in the above article look like people worked very hard at trying to imagine something clever - with little success. For those interested in the media's rather lame fabrications the above article also gives links to two sites that claim to specialize in this sort of stuff. I didn't explre either of these, but others might be interested in knowing that they're out there. KissThisGuy Am I Right John |
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