A few days ago, people seemed interested in songs having to do
with literature and poetry. I came up with the following:
1. Wuthering Heights -- Kate Bush
2. James Joyce Is Fucking My Sister --Therapy?
3. Flannery O'Connor -- Killdozer
4. Killing An Arab --The Cure
5. Cemetary Gates -- The Smiths
6. To Sir With Love -- that cheeky british woman who sang it with Soul Asylum
on Unplugged.
7. Hey Jack Kerouac -- 10,000 Maniacs
8. My Baby Loves A Bunch of Authors -- Moxie Fruvus (probably the best
rhyme for Gabriel Garcia Marquez ever.)
If you have more, send 'em to me, as I am trying to compile a mix for my
fellow English majors.
Gabby
ho...@yang.earlham.edu
--
Overly longwinded and wordy signature.
U2, in its first three releases, made frequent biblical references,
the best known probably being "40" (psalm 40) from _War_.
any info on the artist would be appreciated
mike
...1980...when PIL were actually interesting
- Laurie Anderson - Gravity's Angel (Thomas Pynchon, "Gravity's
Rainbow")
- Material (Seven Souls) - William S. Burroughs reads from his novels.
- Lloyd Cole (Mainstream) - Mr. Malcontent, about the film "My
Beautiful Laundererette", quotes "Shall I part my hair behind?", a
reference to the poem by T.S. Eliot: "The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock". Lloyd Cole includes many literary references in his lyrics,
even referring to the exemplary poetry of Sean Penn.
- Enigma - "Principles of Lust" - readings from de Sade.
- Don Henley - "Driving With Your Eyes Closed" - "Some guys dig to
Rimbaud, some breathe to Baudelaire . . . "
- Peter Gabriel - "Mercy Street" - about poetess Ann(e?) Sexton.
- In The Nursery - "Red Harvest" - readings from literature.
- In The Nursery - "Meccano" - "Something was dead . . . and what was
dead . . . was hope." After Oscar Wilde, "Something was dead in each
of us . . . " etc.
Also, his song Rattlesnakes - he refers to Simone De Beauvoir and:
Are yoy Ready to be Heartbroken - refers to Norman Mailer
Speedboat - Leonard Cohen (I think)
______________________________________________________________________________
"Internet discussion is so vicious because the issues are so small".
(Kissenger - originally)
Chris Kubiak,
University of Waikato.
______________________________________________________________________________
I keep hearing about In The Nursery... do you happen to know if they got
their name from the Wire song?
Aaron Mandel
ama...@husc.harvard.edu
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"Ah," said Time, "There you overreach
me. I know nothing of poetry." - Ramayana
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>I keep hearing about In The Nursery... do you happen to know if they got
>their name from the Wire song?
Not to my knowledge. Great group, in any event; check 'em out.