The "strange facts" you know about songs thread.

Just learned this from Melissa Etheridge the other day:

The songs "Cover of the Rolling Stone" and "Sylvia's Mother," performed by Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show were both written by Shel Silverstein, better known for writing children's books.

Cheers.
 
Just learned this from Melissa Etheridge the other day:

The songs "Cover of the Rolling Stone" and "Sylvia's Mother," performed by Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show were both written by Shel Silverstein, better known for writing children's books.

Cheers.

That's cool. I had no idea. I love Sylvia's Mother.
 
In "Rev on the Red Line" by Foreigner, the line "runnin' all night on lake avenue" is reference to Lake Ave in Charlotte NY (pronounced sharlot and north of Rochester - on the lake). Lou Gramm (Grammatico) was/is from the area.

The lyrics to "Convoy" were originally part of an ad to sell bread - it became so popular people requested the sung from the ad be played on the radio. The person responsible for the song/ad was Chip Davis, who used the payroll to fund Mannheim Steamroller - I call it "from the ridiculous to the sublime"!!!!:goodvibes

there were rumors that Heart's lyrics to "Magic Man" were about a run in they had with Manson, but I have no idea if there is truth to that!

:wizard:
 
DH says that "Helter Skelter" was written about (or at least named after) a slide in a British amusement park.
 

I have two about John Denver's Rocky Mountain High. I'll put them in two parts. The first one is what he himself said about the song:In Denver's autobiography, he wrote: "I remember, almost to the moment, when that song started to take shape in my head. We were working on the next album and it was to be called Mother Nature's Son, after the the Beatles song, which I'd included. It was set for release in September. In mid August, Annie and I and some friends went up to Williams Lake to watch the first Perseid meteor showers. Imagine a moonless night in the Rockies in the dead of summer and you have it. I had insisted to everybody that it was going to be a glorious display. Spectacular, in fact.

The air was kind of hazy when we started out, but by ten p.m. it had grown clear. I had my guitar with me and a fishing rod. At some point, I went off in a raft to the middle of the lake, singing my heart out. It wasn't so much that I was singing to entertain anyone back on shore, but rather I was singing for the mountains and for the sky. Either my voice gave out or I got cold, but at any rate, I came in and found that everybody had kind of drifted off to their individual campsites to catnap. We were right below the tree line, just about ten thousand feet, and we hadn't seen too much activity in the sky yet. There was a stand of trees over by the lake, and about a dozen aspens scattered around. Around midnight, I had to get up to pee and stepped out into this open spot. It was dark over by those trees, darker than in the clearing. I looked over there and could see the shadow from the starlight. There was so much light from the stars in the sky that there was a noticeable difference between the clearing and everywhere else. The shadow of the starlight blew me away. Maybe it was the state I was in. I went back and lay down next to Annie in front of our tent, thinking everybody had gone to sleep, and thinking about how in nature all things, large and small, were interwoven, when swoosh, a meteor went smoking by. And from all over the campground came the awed responses "Do you see that?" It got bigger and bigger until the tail stretched out all the way across the sky and burned itself out. Everybody was awake, and it was raining fire in the sky.
 
Rocky Mountain High Part II
Some of the references in the lyrics:
"He was born in the summer of his 27th year" - John was 27 that summer.
"Coming home to a place he'd never been before" - He and Annie had just made Aspen home.
"And he lost a friend but kept his memory" - A good friend from Minnesota had come to visit and was killed riding John's motorcycle.
"Why they try to tear the mountains down to bring in a couple more" - This referred to the debate at that time about bringing the Olympics to Colorado.
 
not about a "song" but the original lead in Less Than Jake, they named the band that since his family dog was named Jake and he always felt his parents treated him less than Jake.....
 
The Kansas classic "Dust In The Wind" started out as a simple guitar "finger exercise".

The Bachman-Turner Overdrive tune "You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" has a unique background. It was never intended to be heard by the public. It was written as a joke by Randy Bachman for his brother Gary, who stuttered. (B-b-b-b-b-baby, you ain't s-s-s-s-seen nothing yet!") The band decided to use it as a "work tune" that had to be played over and over in order to get the studio equipment set up right and checked out before recording could begin in earnest. They didn't want to use one of the songs intended for their next album because they wanted those songs to sound "fresh" when recorded.

When they put the album together they still had some space left, and they decided to throw their "work tune" on it. To their dismay, it became an instant hit single.
 
'Woke up this morning' (Theme to the Sopranos) is by a British Group Alhabama 3 (AKA A3). The song is about Coldharbour Lane in Brixton, South London.

Andrew
 
It was actually used in a movie called "Ben" about a rat. This was the sequel to the rat-based movie "Willard." Not sure if Michael also had a rat named Ben, but that would be an interesting coincidence.

Cheers.

It was written about his pet rat. He had a "pet" rat when he was a kid, and his Dad killed it, so he dedicated the song to the rat. It was also used in the movie too, like you said! :goodvibes
 
The song 'Love Song' by Sarah Bareilles was written because the recording company told her that her album was missing a love song and she needed to put one on there before it was released. So that was what she wrote for them to complete the album.

If you listen to the lyrics, it really makes sense.
 
I have two about John Denver's Rocky Mountain High. I'll put them in two parts. The first one is what he himself said about the song:In Denver's autobiography, he wrote: "I remember, almost to the moment, when that song started to take shape in my head. We were working on the next album and it was to be called Mother Nature's Son, after the the Beatles song, which I'd included. It was set for release in September. In mid August, Annie and I and some friends went up to Williams Lake to watch the first Perseid meteor showers. Imagine a moonless night in the Rockies in the dead of summer and you have it. I had insisted to everybody that it was going to be a glorious display. Spectacular, in fact.

The air was kind of hazy when we started out, but by ten p.m. it had grown clear. I had my guitar with me and a fishing rod. At some point, I went off in a raft to the middle of the lake, singing my heart out. It wasn't so much that I was singing to entertain anyone back on shore, but rather I was singing for the mountains and for the sky. Either my voice gave out or I got cold, but at any rate, I came in and found that everybody had kind of drifted off to their individual campsites to catnap. We were right below the tree line, just about ten thousand feet, and we hadn't seen too much activity in the sky yet. There was a stand of trees over by the lake, and about a dozen aspens scattered around. Around midnight, I had to get up to pee and stepped out into this open spot. It was dark over by those trees, darker than in the clearing. I looked over there and could see the shadow from the starlight. There was so much light from the stars in the sky that there was a noticeable difference between the clearing and everywhere else. The shadow of the starlight blew me away. Maybe it was the state I was in. I went back and lay down next to Annie in front of our tent, thinking everybody had gone to sleep, and thinking about how in nature all things, large and small, were interwoven, when swoosh, a meteor went smoking by. And from all over the campground came the awed responses "Do you see that?" It got bigger and bigger until the tail stretched out all the way across the sky and burned itself out. Everybody was awake, and it was raining fire in the sky.


OOOOOHHHH!!! I love meeting other John Denver fans!!!

I loved that man. :love:
 
I had heard that the song "In A Gadda Da Vida" by Iron Butterfly was actually supposed to be "In the Garden of Eden". "In A Gadda Da Vida" was an alcohol slurred version of this title.
 
The entire Kate Bush Hounds of Love B Side was based on a poem called the Ninth Wave by Tennyson...

BTW, Hounds of Love is the most amazing Kate Bush album!
 
Since I'm watching a Neil Diamond concert right now (yes, I know I like weird music for a 32-year-old woman), I've got a fact about Cracklin' Rosie:
"Cracklin' Rosie" is a bottle of wine. Diamond got the idea for the song from a folk story of an Indian tribe in Northern Canada who had more men than women. He told David Wild at Rolling Stone: "On Saturday nights when they go out, the guys all get their girl; the guys without girls get a bottle of Cracklin' Rosie, that's their girl for the weekend."
 
This isn't really a strange fact, but it is kinda cool. There was an article in the newspaper recently about Lucy Vodden, the inspiration behind Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.

She has lupus and when Julian Lennon found out about it, he got in touch with her after not having seen her in years and sent her gardening supplies. It was a sweet story.

Here is the link if anyone is interested :)
 
Just learned this from Melissa Etheridge the other day:

The songs "Cover of the Rolling Stone" and "Sylvia's Mother," performed by Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show were both written by Shel Silverstein, better known for writing children's books.

Cheers.

Shel Silverstein wrote a lot of songs, including A Boy Named Sue (Johnny Cash) and The Unicorn (Irish Rovers). He is in the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.
 















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