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Yeah, though it's definitely not the KS version.
That song is used in a lot of adverts over here, particularly car ones for some reason. It's being used in a car advert at the moment in the UK (I think it's the Deep Purple one they're using, although I didn't listen that closely.) Joe South must be a very rich man by now... "I have waited to be here Now I feel you, feel you near Take me home" |
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Talking of Joe South, It'd be cool to hear KS try his best-known song one-day:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5znh58WITU8 It'd suit Crispian's voice, and the lyric seems to be pretty much in sync with their worldview. They have two Daniel Johnston songs in their repetoire, so I don't see why they can't have a couple of Joe South ones too... "I have waited to be here Now I feel you, feel you near Take me home" |
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Crazy!!
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Yeah, that one's good too. It's kind of ironic that he wrote all these well-observed, insightful songs about humanity, and yet the one that KS should decide to pick from his back catalogue is actually dumbly sexist, if you look at it from a lyrical point-of-view (though it's undeniably catchy, having said that.) But it doesn't really do the guy's songwriting much justice. "I have waited to be here Now I feel you, feel you near Take me home" |
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Hush's lyrics are sexist?
__________________________________________________________________ I'm an A1 major-league sociopath http://www.gorillaz-unofficial.com http://www.myspace.com/gorillaz http://www.kulashaker.net |
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Well I don't see myself as being particularly PC, but ths isn't exactly enlightened, is it: "Got a certain little girl that's on my mind Good gosh o' mine, she looks so fine She's the best girl that I've ever had And sometimes she shows me she feels so bad" "Little girl" instead of "woman", not to mention the concept of relationship-as-ownership. But I'm not saying it's any worse than a million other songs of its era. Just that it sticks out when you put alongside some of his other lyrics. "I have waited to be here Now I feel you, feel you near Take me home" |
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Isn't 'little girl' a term of endearment primarily, like 'baby', etc? I would say such words are still okay today and not offensive. Even sweet still, perhaps. I can appreciate maybe part of the reason they originally arose might have been to do with seeing women as subordinate, but surely they've lost those connotations today. (even some women call their boyfriends etc 'boy', 'baby' etc now).
I think the same reasoning would apply to 'had' (used freely today, by women and men, usually devoid of ownership associations except perhaps positive ones of closeness and attachment). Anyway, just another view! __________________________________________________________________ I'm an A1 major-league sociopath http://www.gorillaz-unofficial.com http://www.myspace.com/gorillaz http://www.kulashaker.net |
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Well, the problem with going down this route is that I'll end up making statements about what women find offensive, and the presumption in that is just as offensive in its own way. Women don't need men to speak on their behalf about what they should or shouldn't find offensive... but having said that I'll completely ignore it anyway and say that I think a lot of women would be offended to be referred to as "little girl." And remember that in the context of the song he's not saying it to her, he's using that term to describe her to a (presumably male) third party i.e. "she's my little girl" And to me that's rather more offensive. I should add though that Crispian has made some comments about women in past interviews that suggests that he takes a somewhat-less-than-modern outlook on the topic (I'm choosing my words tactfully here.) See the NME articles I scanned recently for one or two examples. So I'm sure he'd have a different take on these lyrics. "I have waited to be here Now I feel you, feel you near Take me home" |
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"You treat me like a woman when I feel like a man"
Nuff said |
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Isn't that just a metaphor for saying "you treat me as something I am fundamentally not". I agree it's a clumsy phrase. But in the context of the song, with the the guy offering him all the materialistic things, the meaning is clear. __________________________________________________________________ I'm an A1 major-league sociopath http://www.gorillaz-unofficial.com http://www.myspace.com/gorillaz http://www.kulashaker.net |
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Or (playing devil's advocate here) "you treat me as something fundamentally inferior to what I am." Truth is, I've never found that line particularly clear in its meaning, although I suppose it's logical to interpret it to be about not fitting in, since the rest of the song is clearly about a search for spirituality in a materialistic world. "I have waited to be here Now I feel you, feel you near Take me home" |
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