Posted on 02/10/2012 5:39:54 AM PST by navysealdad
I always believed that the reference to Jack Flash sitting on the candlestick was about the gay tryst between Mick Jagger and David Bowie.
The song also started the Urban Legend that the name of the plane they were on was Miss American Pie.
—bflr-
LOL. LOL.
bookmarked
Note to Glenn: the marching band was the Vietnam war duh.
All I remember was how Don McLean set my little teenaged heart all a flutter.
Him, and Cat Stevens, but I am dating myself.
I tripped on a cloud and fell eight miles high
I tore my mind on a jagged sky
A clear reference to the LSD craze in the late Sixties and early Seventies. We all recognized it.
Also the 8 miles high and falling fast combined w falllout shelter is the mushroom cloud and fallout or fears thereof.
Well, yeah, but what about “Vincent?”
” Saw a short piece on Lennon a while back and he said sometimes the words dont mean anything.”
Lennon famously threw words together that sounded cool.
McCartney is an airhead that can put together a pretty turn of phrase.
To think we listened in rapt attention to the “Paul is dead” theorists. While the boys were laughing all the way to the bank.
Everybody was looking for a deeper meaning in those days.
It’s a short history of rock & roll’s downward trajectory and the effect that has had on our culture.
OK, but where does the flute fit in?
Cadence and rhyme.
Hard not to miss the “america is changing” aspect of the song
It was interesting to see how the pieces fit together
I think it is against Nuclear Weapons. If not, you can definitely fit it in.
I’ve been saying that for 30 years. Clap your hands and you just caused a catastrophic event in the tiny universe on your palm.
John Fogerty said he just liked to use strange lyrics.
Perhaps the "Byrds" refers to two of the most powerful Southern Democrats from the early 1930's to the early 1980's, Senator Harry F. Byrd (D-Va.) and his son, Harry, Jr., who succeeded him. Or perhaps it could refer to the liberal Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV), whose power and influence in the Senate moved Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) to call it "the Byrd Bath."
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