5 Famous Hidden Song Meanings

Transcription

5 Famous Hidden Song Meanings
5 Famous Hidden Song Meanings (That Are Total B.S.)
By Chris S. October 05, 2011 1,868,574 views
Because songwriters worry more about catchy rhymes than deep meaning, song
lyrics can be more abstract and esoteric than Jackson Pollock farting chalk dust
into a napkin. The problem is that some fans swear that every nonsensical song
has some deeper interpretation just waiting to be decoded. That's why so many
classic songs have mythical (and often dark and disturbing) alternate meanings
that fans insist are true.
They're almost always wrong. For instance ...
#5. "Hotel California" -- It's About Satanism, Right?
Whether you know "Hotel California" as "that weird Eagles song" or "that weird
devil-worshiping song" probably depends on how religious your parents were.
When "Hotel California" was released in 1976, everyone heard it but no one really
knew what it meant. The lyrics talked about trying to "Kill the beast" and "Stab it
with their steely knives," and included the ominous line, "You can check out
anytime you like but you can never leave." Honestly, it kind of sounds like they're
singing about using the reference section in a library full of giant monsters, since
those are the books you can technically check out but aren't permitted to remove
from the building.
Getty
"Lookin' it up in the local libraaaary!"
That was when someone noticed something odd about the album cover, which
features a picture of the band in some luxury hotel courtyard with crowds of
people in the background. Above the crowd, looking out from a balcony on the
upper left, is a shape whose face you can't fully see, but vaguely looks bald,
goateed and threatening.
It Will Pass
"Hey, sorry everyone, but is the ice machine down there?"
Naturally, people came to the conclusion that the figure on the balcony was none
other than Anton LaVey, founder of the Church of Satan, author of The Satanic
Bible and proud parent of a son that he freaking named Satan.
He even had "Anton + Satan = BFFs" tattooed above his ass.
Now that Anton LaVey was found, the lyrics seemed to make sense: "The Beast,"
"You can never leave" "This could be heaven or this could be hell." "Hotel
California" is a song about Anton LaVey converting people to his church of
Satanism, from which they could "never leave." The "truth" about the song
persists to this day, found in Internet forums, an old issue of The Milwaukee
Sentinel and the nothing-if-not-reputable website Jesus Is Savior.
Getty
They're on to your globe-spanning Satanist conspiracy, Eagles.
Actually ...
"Hotel California" has pretty much nothing to do with Satanism. The Eagles have
admitted it was a way of speaking out against the greed and hedonism of the music
industry in the 1970s (i.e., the drugs, money and women they themselves were
drowning in). The photographer responsible for the album cover said the picture
expressed "faded loss of innocence and decadence," which is pretentious-speak for
"a bunch of assholes standing in a lobby."
"What about the face in the window?" you say. "I heard somewhere they didn't
even know it was there. Maybe it wasn't Anton LaVey, but really ... a ghost."
Unfortunately not. As Snopes points out:
"The shadowy figure was a woman hired for the photo shoot."
centrosangiorgio.com
That is kind of a lot of hair for a bald man.
Yep. The person mistaken for a bald, goatee-sporting antichrist was, in fact, just
some lady who had nothing to do with anything and wouldn't even have been
memorable were it not for the poor lighting of the photograph and the bafflingly
deliberate decision to separate her from the rest of the group, presumably because
she showed up late for the shoot and/or got Don Henley's name wrong.
#4. Isn't "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" About an Acid Trip?
Mention the Beatles song "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" to a group of people
and inevitably one of them will start talking about LSD. And, in fact, we're
wagering that most of the people in our readership who know the song only know
it as "That song that's secretly about doing acid." After all, it's coded right there in
the title, right? Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.
In 1967, John Lennon alone accounted for nearly 40 percent of the world's LSD
consumption.
And then you get lyrics like this:
"Follow her down to a bridge by a fountain/ Where rocking horse people eat
marshmallow pies/ Everyone smiles as you drift past the flowers/ That grow so
incredibly high."
Getty
So incredibly high.
Clearly it's alluding to an acid trip. And this isn't exactly a stretch: The Beatles,
remember, were a band that wrote songs about an octopus inviting people to the
seabed to visit his garden, people who believe they are Arctic blueberry animals
and general dick-twisting insanity.
Really, we're not sure that
most of what the Beatles did wasn't about goddamned acid.
Actually ...
Shockingly, "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds" is about a girl called Lucy, in the
sky, with some diamonds. See, John Lennon's son Julian drew a picture of his best
friend Lucy surrounded by diamonds in the sky, and John liked it enough to name
the song after it.
Wonderlane
Although to be fair, the kid was clearly on acid when he drew it.
The Beatles freely admit to using drugs as inspiration for songs, and odds are LSD
was one of them. But as for this particular song being a metaphor for the drug
itself? Sorry, but no. John Lennon said, "It was purely unconscious that it came
out to be LSD. Until someone pointed it out, I never even thought of it. I mean,
who would ever bother to look at initials of a title? It's not an acid song."
This didn't stop the BBC from banning the song, which, considering they were OK
with a song about a child who murdered the fuck out of everyone around him with
a goddamn hammer, seems a little hypocritical.
Getty
Don't worry, folks. "I Am the Walrus" is still definitely about drugs. All the drugs.
#3. "Puff the Magic Dragon" Is Totally About Smoking Pot ...
Hopefully, you don't need to be told anything about "Puff the Magic Dragon" by
Peter, Paul and Mary, but if you do, please click the link. Even for a children's
song, it seems overly bizarre and surreal, so of course it wasn't long after its
release in the early 1960s when people started trying to dissect the lyrics:
"Puff the magic dragon lived by the sea/ And frolicked in the autumn mist in a
land called Honah Lee/ Little Jackie Paper loved that rascal Puff/ And brought him
strings and sealing wax and other fancy stuff."
People don't hug like that sober.
Remember, this was the '60s, a time when pretty much everyone was smoking
weed. So with "Puff the Magic Dragon," aside from the obvious "chasing the
dragon" metaphor, people figured that's what the song was about. "Puff," i.e., to
smoke, "dragon," as in "draggin[g]" or "to take a drag" and "autumn mist" being
the fog of pot smoke.
"Little Jackie Paper," the little rascal he was, was obviously a reference to rolling
papers. Sealing wax, fancy stuff -- bongs, clearly. People have managed to find
meaning in pretty much every line in the song, and we must admit, it seems pretty
convincing. And it makes sense that a folk rock trio like Peter, Paul and Mary
would aim a song at the rapidly growing hippie movement.
BassPlyr23
Here they are in 2006, looking more like math teachers than doobed-up radicals.
Actually ...
We're sorry to drag you down to earth like this, but "Puff the Magic Dragon's"
writers never intended any hidden meanings. In fact, they were pretty upset about
the rumors, claiming the song was about:
"... a loss of innocence and having to face an adult world ... I find the fact that
people interpret it as a drug song annoying. It would be insidious to propagandize
about drugs in a song for little kids."
Getty
But what about their 1970 hit, "Hops the Frothy, Full-Bodied Llama"?
"I can assure you, it's a song about innocence lost ... What kind of mean-spirited
SOB would write a children's song with a covert drug message?"
Mary goes on to say that if there were drugs to be mentioned, they'd be mentioned
up front:
"Believe me, if he wanted to write a song about marijuana, he would have written
a song about marijuana."
Peter, Paul & Mary
We look forward to hearing from Peter, Paul and Peter's bong soon.
Actually kind of hard to argue with that.
#2. The "Horse" in "Horse With No Name" HAS to be Heroin ...
Even if you've only heard this song once, chances are you know the chorus by
heart:
"I've been through the desert on a horse with no name/ It felt good to be out of the
rain/ In the desert you can't remember your name/ 'Cause there ain't no one for to
give you no pain."
Getty
"My name is Chuck, CHUCK dammit! Nobody fucking listens."
Ridiculous grammar aside, obviously this means something, because nobody
writes that kind of line unless there's some deeper meaning behind it. And "horse"
is a pretty old and well known slang term for heroin, so naturally that's what a
bunch of people figured the song was about. Back in the '70s the song was even
banned from several radio stations because of its supposed drug reference.
The most common beliefs are that the band (America) is either singing about
doing heroin (hallucinations) or about the effects of heroin withdrawal ("After two
days in the desert sun/ My skin began to turn red"). Honestly, it all fits together
nicely if you think about it: The desert symbolizes the effects of the withdrawal,
the horse symbolizes the heroin and the ocean/river at the end symbolizes the
clarity of rehabilitation. Perhaps America are skilled wordsmiths that deserve
more credit. After all, it's not like their band name is trite and obvious.
AMERICAAAAA!
Actually ...
This couldn't be more pulled from the ass if it were literally torn from the anus of a
donkey. Let's save time here by going straight to Dewey Bunnell, the man who
actually wrote the song:
"I wanted to capture the imagery of the desert, because I was sitting in this room in
England, and it was rainy."
Getty
"I fingerpainted this desert and then I wrote a song about it."
"I had spent a good deal of time poking around in the high desert with my brother
when we lived [in California]. And we'd drive through Arizona and New Mexico.
I loved the cactus and the heat. I was trying to capture the sights and sounds of the
desert, and there was an environmental message at the end. But ... I see now that
this anonymous horse was a vehicle to get me away from all the confusion and
chaos of life to a peaceful, quiet place."
So, back when he was a kid, Dewey was playing around in the desert, found it
interesting and years later wrote a song about it with a message about the
environment. No heroin-induced hallucinations or allegorical desert, but real,
actual desert.
Getty
Dewey Bunnell, human cipher.
#1. But "Turning Japanese" Is Definitely About Masturbation,
Right, Guys?
English band the Vapors released a song in 1980 called "Turning Japanese," much
to the chagrin of the current status quo. You see, in addition to being vaguely
racist, "turning Japanese" is a slang phrase for masturbation, specifically referring
to how one's eyes become screwed up and narrow at the climax of a particularly
feverish hand shandy. Now this could easily be a coincidence in name, but listen
to the lyrics (or read them, your choice):
"I've got your picture of me and you/ You wrote 'I love you' I wrote 'me too'/ I sit
there staring and there's nothing else to do."
Getty
Not pictured: Jergen's.
So he has a picture of his girlfriend and finds he has "nothing else to do."
"I've got your picture, I've got your picture/ I'd like a million of you all round my
cell/ I want a doctor to take your picture/ So I can look at you from inside as well."
Getty
We're still not seeing the Japanese.
He mentions a cell, so this must mean he's in prison. Also, he seems to want an Xray of her, for some reason. Or photos from her colonoscopy.
"No sex, no drugs, no wine, no women/ No fun, no sin, no you, no wonder it's
dark/ Everyone around me is a total stranger/ Everyone avoids me like a cyclone
ranger/ That's why I'm turning Japanese/ I think I'm turning Japanese/ I really
think so."
Getty
The Vapors, demonstrating every stage of the mullet life cycle.
It would seem that this trail of lyrical bread crumbs leads to but one place:
Fistopolis. Population: This guy's wiener. Just take a look at the people
interviewed in this video, at about 2 minutes 20 seconds. It's a pretty popular
interpretation, and any sites mentioning the song on the Internet eventually come
to the same conclusion.
Actually ...
We really wanted this one to be true, but the only thing this song has in common
with spanking it in a darkened room is that it's about feelings of shame and
loneliness. If you watch the end of that video linked above, the band finally tells
us what it's really about:
Hint: Nothing Japanese.
"The Americans seemed to think it was written about that. That it was an English
phrase about masturbation. It wasn't. The song was a love song about someone
who had lost their girlfriend and was going slowly crazy -- turning Japanese is just
all the cliches of our angst... turning into something you never expected to."
So no, the Vapors' song isn't about dick-whittling (masturbation/penis joke quota
met). It's simply about a man who has taped hundreds of pictures of a woman he's
obsessed with around his tiny room as he plots to see her insides, and whose
emotions can apparently transform him into a Japanese man like the Incredible
Hulk.
Getty
As illustrated here.
See? It makes perfect sense.
For more misconstrued meanings, check out 6 Pieces of Music That Mean The
Opposite of What You Think and 8 Romantic Songs You Didn't Know Were
About Rape.
And stop by LinkSTORM to discover the true meaning of "Wonderwall."
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