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It always seems when this subject is brought up, I know I have a few misheard lyrics of my own, but I just can't come up with them at the time. Well, I remembered one.
Just until probably last year, in "The Beat Goes On" lyrics, "Grandmas sit in chairs and reminisce..." I heard, "Grandma sits in chair and grandma knits..."
To this day, I have a difficult time singing the correct lyrics.
Last edited by It's me Karen (June 29, 2019 10:24 am)
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I think it has happened to all of us at least once. It took me about 30 years before I figured out the 4 Tops were singing "If I could have you to call my very own" in their song "Something About You".
I would guess the most discussed misheard lyric was Jimi Hendrix "excuse my while I kiss this guy" instead of "...kiss the sky"
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The one that always immediately comes to mind for me is the line "you and me endlessly" in The Rascals song Groovin', which is sung in a way that makes it sound like "you and me and Leslie". Up until I saw this mentioned on the old board, I was still thinking that it was Leslie, and for me it was one of pop music's enduring mysteries as to why there was suddenly a third person mentioned in this song.
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In concert, Peter Noone tells the story of fans requesting "A Must To Avoid" but calling it "A Muscular Boy".
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There's a pork chop on the corner in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania.
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A favourite of my father's was Reverend Blue Jeans ... when Forever In Blue Jeans came on the radio, he liked to sing at least the first instance of the title that way.
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Thought of another:
In "Green Green Grass Of Home" by Tom Jones, in the speaking part that is:
For there's a guard and there's a sad old padre...
I heard:
For there's a dawn and there's a shadow portrait...
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And then there's "Secret Asian Man".
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My daughter corrected me a couple of months ago on Can't You Hear Me Knocking by the Stones
I thought the first verse was "Yeah you got satin shoes , yeah you got NASTY boots" when it's PLASTIC boots. embarrassed.
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In 10cc's song "I'm Not In Love", the whispered voice says:
Be quiet. Big boys don't cry. Big boys don't cry...
Well, I heard:
Be quiet. Requesting quad. Requesting quad...
In my defense, that was the time when quad speakers were becoming popular. I thought this band was pulling us into the future of electronics.
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It's me Karen wrote:
It always seems when this subject is brought up, I know I have a few misheard lyrics of my own, but I just can't come up with them at the time. Well, I remembered one.
Just until probably last year, in "The Beat Goes On" lyrics, "Grandmas sit in chairs and reminisce..." I heard, "Grandma sits in chair and grandma knits..."
To this day, I have a difficult time singing the correct lyrics.
Same here. My mind deals with this by picturing a grandma sitting, knitting, and reminiscing all at the same time.
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I don't know how many remember this spot from the 80s, but it's the quintessential example of misheard lyrics. (And it also happens to feature one of my all time favourite oldies, Israelites by Desmond Dekker & The Aces, a 1969 #1.
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aflem wrote:
I don't know how many remember this spot from the 80s, but it's the quintessential example of misheard lyrics. (And it also happens to feature one of my all time favourite oldies, Israelites by Desmond Dekker & The Aces, a 1969 #1.
That's great! My husband sings something like,"Get up in the morning, waiting for breakfast..."
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A classic that I can't get out of my mind: Manfred Mann/Bruce Springsteen's hit, "Blinded By The Light." It's one of those that I kept thinking,"One of these days I have to look those lyrics up because it can't be what I think it is": Springsteen wrote: "...cut loose like a deuce..." referencing a hot rod deuce coupe, which is one of Springsteen's real loves - racing cars. BUT Manfred Mann changed some of the lyrics including those, changing them to: "...revved up like a deuce..." That's when the famous mondegreen developed and was commonly misheard as "...wrapped up like a douche..." That has always been my very loose, misconstrued interpretation until I looked it up tonight. My reference: Wikipedia.
Last edited by Little Rich (August 30, 2019 12:23 am)
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maybe we need to run the tape again, more slowly? who knows, you might be right.
it's worth pointing out that there have been numerous examples, primarily in the 50's and 60's i believe, where artists or their record companies incorrectly, occasionally on purpose but mostly due to confused secretaries and the like, provided publishing companies lyrics which did not jibe with what was on the wax.
what you think you heard sometimes might be what it is. in my opinion typewritten transcripts of a lyric should never be replaced by a reasonable quality headphone check, which will usually reveal the truth. or, now and again, further muddy the water...
Last edited by gopher (August 30, 2019 2:57 am)
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Little Rich wrote:
A classic that I can't get out of my mind: Manfred Mann/Bruce Springsteen's hit, "Blinded By The Light." It's one of those that I kept thinking,"One of these days I have to look those lyrics up because it can't be what I think it is": Springsteen wrote: "...cut loose like a deuce..." referencing a hot rod deuce coupe, which is one of Springsteen's real loves - racing cars. BUT Manfred Mann changed some of the lyrics including those, changing them to: "...revved up like a deuce..." That's when the famous mondegreen developed and was commonly misheard as "...wrapped up like a douche..." That has always been my very loose, misconstrued interpretation until I looked it up tonight. My reference: Wikipedia.
Speaking of Manfred Mann, on Friday I happen to hear “Do Wah Diddy,” the group’s first and perhaps greatest oldie. When I was a kid, I was always confused by it because, although it was clearly a love song, at one point I thought the lyrics were:
“Well, I’m hurt
She’s mad
Wedding bells are going to chime.”
Of course, it was “I’m hers, she’s mine,” but that’s not what I heard. I could never figure out why they were going to get married if they hated each other so much.
By the way, I’d nominate “Do Wah Diddy” as possibly the greatest singalong song ever in Top 40 history. I’ll never forget sitting in a meeting at work one day in the 80s, nearly 20 years after it was released, when the tune suddenly popped into my head and I just started saying, “There she was just a-walking down the street, singing…”
At which point I stopped, and everyone else in the room instantly quit talking and filled in the blank, as if they couldn’t stop themselves. Now that’s a powerful song.
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The lyrics for House of Blue Lights contain the phrases:
There's fryers and broilers and Detroit barbecue ribs
But the treat of the treats
Is when they serve you all those fine eight beats
But I always heard the last three words as: FINE AGED BEEF.
You can imagine what my favorite protein is....
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The lyrics in Sweet Emotion by Aerosmith are:
When I pulled into town in a police car
Your daddy said I took it just a little too far
I heard:
When I pulled into town in a police car
You danced your turkey just a little too far.
I know, I know...I have no idea what that means, but that's what I heard.
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I just found this out.
In "Daddy's Home" by Shep and the Limelites, the lyric goes:
"Your best friend wrote and told me..."
I heard:
"Your best friend, Robin told me..."
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I like it. The Batman producers should have asked Shep to appear on the show and sing it that way.
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