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Thread: Misheard prog lyrics

  1. #26
    Quote Originally Posted by pb2015 View Post
    The line from "Thick As A Brick" "he coughed up a tenner on a premium bond win." Not surprisingly this line was a bit strange to people in the Midwest like a friend of mine who misheard it as "coughed up his dinner."
    And, who outside the UK knew ERNIE was a computer? Not me.

  2. #27
    Quote Originally Posted by Jubal View Post
    Agreed.
    A nuclear device would definitely bring forth a new clear dawn (with everything cleared out of the way).
    The early 80's new wave band The Vapors had an album called New Clear Days. The cover artwork showed a image of a weather man standing in front of a map of the UK, with the image manipulated so that the rain clouds on the map appear to look like mushroom clouds (such as created by a nuclear explosion). Took me years to catch that pun.

  3. #28
    Member DrGoon's Avatar
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    I don't think anybody other than Steven Wilson knows for sure what he whispers at the start of the title track from Porcupine Tree's The Incident, but I've always heard "You get to mow this shit". I have a T-shirt that I made and wore to the RCMH show featuring a man mowing the lawn with a hand mower.

  4. #29
    Spock's Beard's Beware of Darkness cover: "Farts that linger" instead of "thoughts that linger." Seriously, it's almost like he did it on purpose.

  5. #30
    Quote Originally Posted by Sylvan View Post
    Spock's Beard's Beware of Darkness cover: "Farts that linger" instead of "thoughts that linger." Seriously, it's almost like he did it on purpose.
    LOL, yep - that's the first one that came to my mind.

  6. #31
    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    This reminds me, until a few years ago I thought the line in Aqualung was "coughing up pieces of his broken luck." (instead of broken lungs)
    Pretty sure it's "spitting out pieces of his broken luck"

  7. #32
    Quote Originally Posted by thos View Post
    Pretty sure it's "spitting out pieces of his broken luck"
    That's what was on the lyric sheet.

  8. #33
    Highly Evolved Orangutan JKL2000's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by thos View Post
    Pretty sure it's "spitting out pieces of his broken luck"
    If so, then I have it the wrong way round. Whichever it is, I heard the other.

  9. #34
    Studmuffin Scott Bails's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by miamiscot View Post
    "I'm the scab of the Earth" which, I guess, is really "Armies scatter the Earth."

    For years I thought Jon Anderson had a sense of humor.

    Not so.
    Quote Originally Posted by thos View Post
    It's actually "Armies gather near"
    I always thought it sounded more like he was saying "armies scatter the Earth." Anderson has odd pronunciations sometimes.

    Quote Originally Posted by flowerking View Post
    Karn Evil 9 3rd impression: Guardians of a nuclear dawn - I thought it was "a new clear dawn" until I saw the lyrics.
    Quote Originally Posted by thos View Post
    I seem to remember that on the original LP of Brian Salad Surgery, the lyrics read "new clear dawn" but Lake pronounces it more as "nuclear". I think that was a deliberate pun.
    Or, if you're George W. Bush, "nu-cue-lar."

    Quote Originally Posted by rdclark View Post
    "Go, Stanley Snail" rather than "gold stainless nail."

    The Keneally/Gilbert/D'Virgilio tribute act Stanley Snail is famously named after this misheard lyric from Siberian Khatru.
    First one I thought of.

    Quote Originally Posted by progfan915 View Post
    In Marillion's Sugar Mice, I always thought it was:

    "So if you want my address, it's number one at the end of the bar, where I sit with the broken angels, clutching at straws and nursing a scotch"

    The real lyrics of course, being "nursing our scars"

    ...

    I still like mine better!
    Definitely!!
    Music isn't about chops, or even about talent - it's about sound and the way that sound communicates to people. Mike Keneally

  10. #35
    Member lak611's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by thos View Post
    I seem to remember that on the original LP of Brian Salad Surgery, the lyrics read "new clear dawn" but Lake pronounces it more as "nuclear". I think that was a deliberate pun.
    Maybe Lake chewed gum during the studio recording too.
    Laura

  11. #36
    Member helicase's Avatar
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    Genesis - The Knife
    Gabriel sings: Martyrs of course to the freedom that I shall provide
    What I heard: Others of course share the freedom that I shall provide

  12. #37
    Highly Evolved Orangutan JKL2000's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by progfan915 View Post
    In Marillion's Sugar Mice, I always thought it was:

    "So if you want my address, it's number one at the end of the bar, where I sit with the broken angels, clutching at straws and nursing a scotch"

    The real lyrics of course, being "nursing our scars"

    ...

    I still like mine better!
    Not to nitpick, but to nitpick, I've been told a Scottish person would ever refer to Scotch whiskey as "Scotch." He'd just call it whiskey. Maybe DrGoon can confirm this for us.

    But I support your right to have heard "nursing a scotch!"

  13. #38
    Jazzbo manqué Mister Triscuits's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by thos View Post
    Pretty sure it's "spitting out pieces of his broken luck"
    It is. But the first time I heard the song on the radio, before the album was even released, I heard it as "Spitting out pieces of his throat and lung."
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  14. #39
    Member Socrates's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    Not to nitpick, but to nitpick, I've been told a Scottish person would ever refer to Scotch whiskey as "Scotch." He'd just call it whiskey. Maybe DrGoon can confirm this for us.

    But I support your right to have heard "nursing a scotch!"
    Nitpicking squared: that would be whisky in Scotland, not whiskey!

  15. #40
    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    Not to nitpick, but to nitpick, I've been told a Scottish person would ever refer to Scotch whiskey as "Scotch." He'd just call it whiskey. Maybe DrGoon can confirm this for us.

    But I support your right to have heard "nursing a scotch!"
    Oh yes, in my student days I actually got told off by a barman for asking for a 'Scotch' (and I am a Scot, shame on me).

  16. #41
    Member lak611's Avatar
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    ELP "Great Gates of Kiev":"Stir me in salty string and a bit of seed."

    Sent from my XT1575 using Tapatalk
    Last edited by lak611; 11-18-2016 at 08:30 PM.
    Laura

  17. #42
    Member DrGoon's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    Not to nitpick, but to nitpick, I've been told a Scottish person would ever refer to Scotch whiskey as "Scotch." He'd just call it whiskey. Maybe DrGoon can confirm this for us.
    It would usually be called whisky if you're ordering the 'well' (to use American vernacular). It's also called just by measure - a 'dram' or a 'nip'. If you're looking for a particular brand, you would use its name just as you would (for a 'call') in the US. If you go to The Pot Still in Glasgow you should probably explain what you like best and how much you're willing to pay, and have a pie and beans while you're at it.

  18. #43

    Laibach - "Geburt Einer Nation"

    Give me a light beer!

    Gibt mir ein Leitbild!


  19. #44
    I think the prog song that has generated the greatest plentitude of “mondegreens” has to be “Epic Forest” by Rare Bird:

    “Ooo-ooh, Veronica”
    “Ooo-ooh, the warriors”
    “Ooo-ooh, for Lorien”
    “Ooo-ooh, Ferrari land”
    “Ooo-ooh, my mommy lost”
    “Ooo-ooh, gourami love”
    “Ooo-ooh, tamale balls”

    Could someone please contact Steve Gould and have him set the record straight once and for all?
    Confirmed Bachelors: the dramedy hit of 1883...

  20. #45
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    Quote Originally Posted by Progbear View Post
    I think the prog song that has generated the greatest plentitude of “mondegreenshas to be “Epic Forest” by Rare Bird:

    ah, good to see the "correct" (or at least "most amusing") name being used.

  21. #46
    Member Dave the Brave's Avatar
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    Actually Scots don't mind saying scotch to describe the drink especially if out of the country.
    However they don't like being described as a Scotch person it should be Scot.

    DtB

  22. #47
    Highly Evolved Orangutan JKL2000's Avatar
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    In the Yes song "Leave It" I always hear "Hot damn, a diggety dog" instead of "Uptown they're digging it out."

  23. #48
    Quote Originally Posted by JKL2000 View Post
    In the Yes song "Leave It" I always hear "Hot damn, a diggety dog" instead of "Uptown they're digging it out."
    In "Love Will Find a Way" I hear "I eat at chez nous".


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  24. #49
    Studmuffin Scott Bails's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ProgArtist View Post
    In "Love Will Find a Way" I hear "I eat at chez nous".


    Probably because that's the actual lyric.
    Music isn't about chops, or even about talent - it's about sound and the way that sound communicates to people. Mike Keneally

  25. #50
    speaking of mis-heard (Tull-related) lyrics, it always sounded to me like Bowie was singing "Never thought Jethro Tull that fine" in Golden Years (which would be a rather rude thing to say ) when the actual lyric is: "Never look back, walk tall, act fine".
    "Wouldn't it be odd, if there really was a God, and he looked down on Earth and saw what we've done to her?" -- Adrian Belew ('Men In Helicopters')

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