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We were trying to forget.

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^ Ink, you have some great one-liners lately!

 

Thanks for the information about Ben Folds...I'll have to look into that.

Three Four!

 

Three Four!

 

Three Four!

 

Three Four!

 

All this energy callin' me,

Back where it comes from,

Its such a crude attitude,

Its back where it belongs.

 

All the little kids growin' up on the skids are goin',

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks,

Jumpin' Jane Jean is moonin' James Dean he's goin'

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks,

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks.

 

Momma knows but she dont care,

She's got her worries too,

Seven kids and a phony affair,

And the rent is due.

 

All the little chicks with the crimson lips go

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks

She 's livin' in sin with a safety pin goin'

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks,

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks.

 

I got some records from World War Two,

I Play 'em just like me grandad do,

He was a rocker and I am too ,

Oh, Cleveland Rocks, yeah Cleveland Rocks.

 

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks.

 

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks.

 

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks.

 

Cleveland Rocks, Cleveland Rocks, CLEVELAND ROCKS!

 

OHIO!

 

 

 

Can anyone explain this?  I mean, I've always thought those lyrics were astonishingly surreal for such a straight-ahead rock tune.  I actually really dig the song, but what the f*** do safety pins have to do with a goddamn thing?

^ You don't recall the punk rockers going around with safety pins in all their clothing (and piercings as well)?

No, actually I remember the 5th grade girls doing that.  And I probably wouldn't have described them as "living in sin with a safety pin."  And is that really what they're trying to evoke, this temporary odd fashion element from one branch of music?  Like, "livin' in the Keys, with patches on my knees, goin' Six Toes Rock, Six Toes Rock," trying to evoke Hemmingway...

One of my favorite pop songs from last summer:

 

Ohio (Come back to Texas) even though it tries to rhyme Cleveland and Leland...

by Bowling for Soup

I'm not a country fan nor am I a Carrie Underwood fan.  But I was watching American Idol the other night and she sang her newest single called:  "Jesus, Take the Wheel"

"Jesus Take The Wheel"

 

She was driving last Friday on her way to Cincinnati

On a snow white Christmas Eve

Going home to see her Mama and her Daddy with the baby in the backseat

Fifty miles to go and she was running low on faith and gasoline

It's been a long hard year

She had a lot on her mind and she didn't pay attention

She was going way to fast

Before she knew it she was spinning on a thin black sheet of glass

She saw both their lives flash before her eyes

She didn't even have time to cry

She was sooo scared

She threw her hands up in the air

 

Jesus take the wheel

Take it from my hands

Cause I can't do this on my own

I'm letting go

So give me one more chance

To save me from this road I'm on

Jesus take the wheel

 

It was still getting colder when she made it to the shoulder

And the car came to a stop

She cried when she saw that baby in the backseat sleeping like a rock

And for the first time in a long time

She bowed her head to pray

She said I'm sorry for the way

I've been living my life

I know I've got to change

So from now on tonight

 

Jesus take the wheel

Take it from my hands

Cause I can't do this on my own

I'm letting go

So give me one more chance

To save me from this road I'm on

 

Oh, Jesus take the wheel

Oh, I'm letting go

So give me one more chance

Save me from this road I'm on

From this road I'm on

Jesus take the wheel

Oh, take it, take it from me

Oh, why, oh

 

Here's another country song with an Ohio ref, by Tom T Hall:

 

The Rolling Mills of Middletown

 

The rolling mills of Middletown roll on roll on roll on

I knew him well old friend of mine from down kentucky way

We had some high good times my friend back in our younger days

I knew he shouldn't marry any woman quite that wild

Then later on I learned that she had been expectin' a child

He got his job at making steel and bought himself a home

Where the rolling mills of middletown roll on roll on roll on

 

Well there's money in those steel mills boys and he made quite a bit

He worked all night she shopped all day bought everything that fit

A helper on the bof three thousand degrees at a round

His wife was just about that hot in the bars in old middletown

Of course he was the last to know oh but listen to my song

While the rolling mills of Middletown roll on roll on roll on

 

[ guitar ]

 

One night the foreman on his turn said cool down no 2

And he told my friend to go on home as soon as he was through

He stopped into a little bar to have a good cold beer

His woman and some dayturn guy were dancing closely there

Oh I knew him well and in his mind there must have been a storm

While the rolling mills of Middletown roll on roll on roll on

 

They say he never spoke a word he just turned and walked away

And no one knows exactly what took place that fateful day

Some say they saw him near the tracks at furnace no 1

With heat so hot the hubs of hell would seem just barely warm

Well they never saw my friend again did he do something wrong

While the rolling mills of Middletown Ohio roll on roll on roll on

 

 

Willie Nelson....(Pancho and Lefty)

Livin on the road my friend, is gonna keep you free and clean

Now you wear your skin like iron

Your breath as hard as kerosene

You weren't your momma's only boy, but her favorite one it seems

She began to cry when you said goodbye

And sank into your dreams

Pancho was a bandit boy, his horse was fast as polished steel

He wore his gun outside his pants

For all the honest world to feel

Pancho met his match you know on the deserts down in Mexico

Nobody heard his dyin words, ah but that's the way it goes

 

All the Federales say, they could've had him any day

They only let him slip away, out of kindness I suppose

 

Lefty he can't sing the blues all night long like he used to

The dust that Pancho bit down south ended up in Lefty's mouth

The day they laid poor Pancho low, Lefty split for (Ohio)

Where he got the bread to go, there ain't nobody knows

 

All the Federales say, they could've had him any day

They only let him slip away out of kindness I suppose

 

The boys tell how old Pancho fell, and Lefty's livin in cheap hotels

The desert's quiet, (Cleveland's)cold

And so the story ends we're told

Pancho needs your prayers it's true, but save a few for Lefty too

He only did what he had to do, and now he's growing old

 

All the Federales say, they could've had him any day

They only let him go so long, out of kindness I suppose

 

A few gray Federales say, they could've had him any day

They only let him go so long, out of kindness I suppose

No, actually I remember the 5th grade girls doing that.  And I probably wouldn't have described them as "living in sin with a safety pin."  And is that really what they're trying to evoke, this temporary odd fashion element from one branch of music?  Like, "livin' in the Keys, with patches on my knees, goin' Six Toes Rock, Six Toes Rock," trying to evoke Hemmingway...

 

whats surreal or hemingway-esque about it? its a straight ahead description of 1979 when it was written (safety pins were the modern pop fashion of its era). this is no different than like ugg boots and ipods are today ---- and those are or will prob be referenced in a song today i would imagine.

 

if anything, at the time negative reviewers felt the 'cleveland rocks' song was mere pandering for sales by a fading old rocker. a jump the shark move.

 

 

"Way down in Athens County" by Jonathon Edwards!

Road Outside Columbus - O.A.R.

 

There's a road outside Columbus, Ohio.

Feels like I drove along for years.

this Midwest way of ease it surrounds us.

I can't deny the rhythm here.

And as I pull away from Riverside beside me,

That High Street never looked so good.

I miss my lady even though she often writes me.

She tells me takes of my neighborhood.

 

Surprise, Surprise, I traveled here.

Four hundred miles from where I'm known.

My friends are here.

A couple years I've spent, I found I have a second home.

 

As I'm blazing down my trail to education,

There's no bliss in ignorance for me.

I stop and stare, a breath of air might slow me down some.

But that's just fine with me.

 

Surprise, Surprise, I traveled here.

Four hundred miles from where I'm known.

My friends are here.

A couple years I've spent, I found I have a second home.

 

I never traveled far.

Two hundred miles to go.

That boulevard will take me home.

 

Surprise, Surprise, I traveled here.

Four hundred miles from where I'm known.

My friends are here.

A couple years I've spent, I found I have a second home.

Surprise, Surprise, I traveled here.

Four hundred miles from where I'm known.

My friends are here.

A couple years I've spent, I found I have a second home.

^That song reads like a parody of "The House of the Rising Sun" (most notably done by Eric Burden & the Animals)

I was going to mention Bowling for Soup and OAR but others beat me to it.  I love OAR's song, I just wish it went national.  The only thing that made it big by them was "Hey Girl". 

 

"Jack and Diane" by Bruce Springstine, I think it is him that sings it.  Anyway, it's to my understanding that the song was written about a couple from Ohio.  I was listening to the radio a couple of years ago when he was a guest on WNCI's Morning Zoo and someone called in saying that they were the child of the couple he wrote about and he confirmed it.  Thought that was cool.

 

 

^ I'm pretty sure Jack & Diane was by John Melencamp.  Unless Bruce Springsteen had another song entitled Jack & Diane.

thanks, like I said, I wasn't sure.  But you are right, John Melencamp is who sings it.

 

They are the same in my book.

Did we actually forget Four Dead in Ohio? Great song, too bad about the subject, however.

  • 1 year later...

Bump

one of my favourite tunes by one of the great American songwriters of the past half-century... Randy Newman... certainly not a pleasant song... it can be rather offensive... so moderate away if necessary...

 

 

Randy Newman - "Rednecks"

 

Last night I saw Lester Maddox on a TV show

With some smart-ass New York Jew

And the Jew laughed at Lester Maddox

And the audience laughed at Lester Maddox too

Well, he may be a fool but he's our fool

If they think they're better than him they're wrong

So I went to the park and I took some paper along

And that's where I made this song

 

We talk real funny down here

We drink too much and we laugh too loud

We're too dumb to make it in no Northern town

And we're keepin' the niggers down

 

We got no-necked oilmen from Texas

And good ol' boys from Tennessee

And colleges men from LSU

Went in dumb - come out dumb too

Hustlin' 'round Atlanta in their alligator shoes

Gettin' drunk every weekend at the barbecues

And they're keepin' the niggers down

 

CHORUS

We're rednecks, rednecks

And we don't know our ass from a hole in the ground

We're rednecks, we're rednecks

And we're keeping the niggers down

 

Now your northern nigger's a Negro

You see he's got his dignity

Down here we're too ignorant to realize

That the North has set the nigger free

 

Yes he's free to be put in a cage

In Harlem in New York City

And he's free to be put in a cage in the South-Side of Chicago

And the West-Side

And he's free to be put in a cage in Hough in Cleveland

And he's free to be put in a cage in East St. Louis

And he's free to be put in a cage in Fillmore in San Francisco

And he's free to be put in a cage in Roxbury in Boston

They're gatherin' 'em up from miles around

Keepin' the niggers down

 

CHORUS

from the latest Blue Nile record... lovely, delicate tune

 

The Blue Nile - "Because of Toledo"

 

Because of Toledo

I got sober and stayed clean

The pick ups in the wild prairies

The shadows dancing in between

Girl leans on the jukebox

In a pair of old blue jeans

Says I live here but I don't really live anywhere

 

Because of Toledo

Tuesday it's raining

And I'm pulling on my shoes

I guess I quit believing in

The early morning news

There's a boy orders coffee

And he settles down to think

How the women that you love sometimes

Are the water that you drink

Then another faded waitress dressed in pink

 

Cries for Toledo

 

The lipstick and the cocaine traces

One face in a thousand faces

I stumble through so many places

'Cause of Toledo

 

Yeah

Yeah yeah

(oh)Yeah

Yeah yeah

 

Because of Toledo

The highway looks so thin

I see another motel sign

Think of pulling in

Write your name upon the mirror there

The only secret that I know

But I guess that I'd be only chasing rainbows

Back to Toledo

I think I'll go

Wow, didn't know Randy Newman had a song like that.

 

Tool has a song called "Eleven" with a line that goes "Under a dead Ohio sky". Maynard, the singer, is from Ravenna.

  • 1 month later...

You might have heard T.I's new single out right now where he calls out Cincinnati in his lyrics.  I'm guessing it's in response to the shooting incident that followed a performance in Cincinnati after he 'made it rain' (tossing money in the air at a club or somewhere like that) at his performance and some locals took offense to it.

 

Do it like a ball playa, when you see me ballin

Stacks tall-ass ball playa from the stage to the air

Whether in Miami, Cincinnati or in Riverdale

Arizona, California, make it rain anywhere

Pullin out that pistol nigga who you think u finna scare?

20 rounds of missles have you pissin in your underwear

I tote a pound, 40 cal, so you better tone it down

I suggest you adjust the bass, except for when it going down

A-town, west side club, you should catch me,

Right up at the top where Big Kuntry, Dro & Mac be

Jackers lying say they caught me slipping how could that be

I'm something like a stalker I be everywhere the strap be

The trap be, jumping with that 100 dollar slab

If I wanted nigga I could get 100 on the tab

Sell em all double down Nigga do the math

Think I won't pull up in something With 200 on the dash

Those are some quality lyrics.

  • 3 years later...

I'd be surprised if this isn't a duplicate thread, but here goes...

 

Songs play a role in forming perceptions. Each state has a song. Some cities have songs written about them.

 

Based on the following two songs, which state would you choose: California or Ohio?

 

California:

 

Ohio:

Ohio-Over the Rhine

Good thread idea.

 

 

 

 

Dayton's own, the Ohio Players "O-H-I-O."

 

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Iggy Pop: Butt Town

 

How do you embed a video?

^ Just post a YouTube URL.

 

REM's "Cuyahoga"

 

R.E.M. - Cuyahoga

 

 

Randy Newman's "Burn On" - again about the Cuyahoga River and used as the intro to "Major League"

 

Randy Newman - Burn On (Berlin 1994)

 

 

Springstein's "Youngstown" - sorry for the poor video quality, but I had to post this edition since I WAS THERE!  Matter of fact, I believe I was standing under that tree you can see on the far right of this still-frame

 

 

 

The Pretenders' "My City Was Gone" - about Akron

 

The Pretenders - My City Was Gone

 

 

Bone-Thugs-N-Harmony's "Cleveland is the City"

 

 

 

Bone-Thugs-N-Harmony's "Thuggish Ruggish Bone"

 

Bone thugs-n-harmony - Thuggish Ruggish Bone

 

 

Jewel's "Cleveland"

 

Jewel - Cleveland

 

 

Scott Weiland's (formerly of Stone Temple Pilots) "Missing Cleveland"

 

 

 

Of course, we all know the "Heart of Rock'n'Roll is still Cleveland" ;)

 

 

 

Yes... there is a notable ommission and that was DEFINITELY INTENTIONAL

 

I couldn't find the Randy Newman original, but this is Harry Nilsson's cover of "Dayton, Ohio - 1903"

 

Umm...Hello! 

 

Dwight Yoakam - South of Cincinnati

This one blew me away...thought I knew all of the Cincinnati songs out there...and uh, the song is actually 3 minutes of club pop candy!  I love it.

 

Tila Tequila - Cincinnati

This is my favorite.  Babes in Toyland was basically a love poem to Cincinnati.  Favorite quote: "What are these Cincinnati's anyway?  Are they Italian cookies?"

 

 

Babes in Toyland - The Cincinnati Song

the amps - tipp city

 

the tragically hip - chagrin falls

Speaking of John Denver, here's a great song that happens to be about West Virginia:

 

  • 1 year later...

"Ohio All-Stars" by Hi-Tek ft. Cross, Showtime, Mann & Chipp The Rippa:

 

 

"Nati Streets" by Hi-Tek ft. Talib Kweli, Slim Thug, Snoop Dogg:

You see this album cover and know it's got to be good.

 

 

 

The video looks like the Backstreet Boys trying to imitate street cred, and he's not as good as Bone Thugs, but it's not a bad track at all and he's got a chance to break loose nationally.

 

Just stay off the tables at the mall, Mr. Baker.  :)

Carlos Jones is a reggae artist who plays live a lot around here.  This song, "Apartment Living", is an ode to his younger days when he lived on Coventry

 

 

 

 

Lady Gaga's 'You and I' Cleveland radio edit (the only one I am aware of she made for Ohio)

 

  • 3 weeks later...

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