Dead Song Lyrics Essay, Research Paper
Who can say where the prose comes from that flow from the pens of the author s of the Grateful Dead s lyrics? Careful listening reveals a strong tendency toward the ancient form of the nursery rhyme. From Robert Hunter s first lyric for the band Alligator (Hunter 6), in which he echoes Old King Cole (Gould 143), to John Perry Barlow s Throwing Stones ( Dodd ), nursery rhymes have provided both text and rhythm, and seem to fit well into the playful sound of the Dead.
The rhythm of nursery rhyme presents itself in many of today s popular songs. St. Stephen , Ramble on Rose , and Ripple are three Greatful Dead songs that are perfect examples. In Hunter s book, A Box of Rain, the original lyrics to “St. Stephen” are listed (195). Simply reading these lyrics puts one in the mind of a nursery rhyme. The are short and simple. The lyrics tell a short story, and they also rhyme.
“St. Stephen”
Saint Stephen with a rose/In and out of the garden he goes
Country garland in the wind and the rain/Wherever he goes
the people all complain
Stephen prosper in his time/Well he may and he may
Decline/Did it matter? Does it now?/ Stephen would answer
if he only knew how
Wishing well with a golden bell/Bucket hanging clear to
Hell/Hell halfway twixt now and then/Stephen fill it up and
lower down/And lower down again
Ladyfinger dipped in moonlight/Writing What for?
across the morning sky/Sunlight splatters dawn with
answers/Darkness shrugs and bids the day good-bye
Speeding arrow, sharp and narrow/What a lot of fleeting
matters you have spurned/Several seasons with their
treasons/Wrap the babe in scarlet covers, call it your own
Did he doubt or did he try?/Answers a plenty in the bye
and bye/Talk about your plenty, talk about your ills
One man gathers what another man spills
Saint Stephen will remain/All he s lost he shall regain
Seashore washed in the suds and the foam/Been here so
long he s got to calling it home
“Ramble on Rose” is another example of Hunter’s use of nursery rhyme rhythm.
Ramble on Rose
Just like Jack the Ripper/Just like Mojo Hand/Just like Billy
Sunday/In a shotgun ragtime band/Just like New York City
Just like Jericho/Pace the halls and climb the walls/Get out
when they say blow
Did you say your name was/Ramblin Rose?/Ramble on,
Baby/Settle down easy/Ramble on, Rose
Just like Jack and Jill/ Mama told the sailor/One hear up
and one cool down/Leave nothing for the tailor/Just like
Jack and Jill/My papa told the jailer/ One go up and one
come down/Do yourself a favor
Chorus
I m gonna sing you a hundred verses in ragtime/I know this
song it ain t never gonna end/I m gonna march you up and
down the local county line/Take you to the leader of the
band
Just like Crazy Otto/Just like Wolfman Jack/ Sitting plush
with a royal flush/Aces back to back
Just like Mary Shelley/Just like Frankenstein /Clank your
chains and count your change/Try to walk the line
Chorus
Good-bye, Mama and Papa/Good-bye, Jack and Jill/ The
grass ain t greener, the wine ain t sweeter/Either side of
the hill (Hunter 174-175)
Nursery rhymes have appeared in the lyrics of popular song long before the Grateful Dead. “Mairzy Doats” is an example from the 1930′; “Good Golly Miss Molly” is another example (Dodd). Doubtless there are tens, if not hundreds more such examples. And the trend continues to the present, having been used since by the Beatles quite often. Probably most noticeably in the “Abbey Road” chant “one two three four five six seven, all good children go to heaven” (Dodd).
Hunter’s first lyric ever written for the Grateful Dead, “Alligator”, has a distinct feel for the nursery rhyme ” Old King Cole”. The Grateful Dead’s 1968 album Anthem of the Sun includes the tract “Alligator”- Sleepy alligator in the noonday sun/Sleepin’ by the river just like he usually done/Call for his whiskey/He can call for his tea/Call all he wanta but he/Can’t call me (Hunter 6), which to compare, “Old King Cole”- Old King Cole/Was a merry old soul,/ And a merry old soul was he;/He called for his pipe
The tract “Scarlet Begonias”, from the 1974 album “From the Mars Hotel”, has two references to separate nursery rhymes. “As I was walking ’round Grosvenor Square ” (Hunter 197) which to compare to “As I was a-walking on Westminster Bridge, ” (Gould 276) from Mother Goose’s Riddle’s and Tongue Twisters. The second reference in “Scarlet Begonias”, ” She had rings on her finger’s and bells on her shoes/I knew without asking she was into the blues ” ( Hunter 197), can be compared to one of Mother Goose’s Lullabies, “Ride a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,/To see a fine lady upon a white horse;/Rings on her fingers and bells on her toes,/And she shall have music wherever she goes” (Gould 247). “Throwing Stones”, a song written by yet another author of Grateful Dead songs, John Perry Barlow, also has two references to separate nursery rhymes. ” Heartless powers try to tell us/What to think/If the spirit’s sleeping./Then the flesh is ink ” (Dodd), which can be compared to “If all the world were paper,/And all the sea were ink,/If all the trees were bread and cheese,/What should we have to drink? (Opie, 436). Perhaps one of the best known nursery rhymes, “Ring-a-ring-a-roses”, makes an appearance in Barlow’s “Throwing Stones”. ” There’s a fear down here we can’t forget./Hasn’t got a name just yet./Always awake, always around,/Singing ashes, ashes, all fall down./Ashes, ashes, all fall down “(Dodd).
Another popular nursery rhyme “Jack and Jill”, is referred to in “Ramble on Rose”.
The tract from the Europe ‘72 album goes like this; ” Just like Jack and Jill/mama told the sailor/One heat up and one cool down/Leave nothin’ for the tailor/Just like Jack and Jill/My papa told the jailer/One go up and one come down/Do yourself a favor ” (Hunter 174-175).
Hunter’s “Althea” makes a obscure reference to that familiar rhyme for the days of the week. From “Althea”; ” You may be Saturday’s child all grown/moving with a pinch of grace “(Hunter 8). From Mother Goose’s Charms, ” Saturday’s child works hard for his living ” (Gould 218). A rhyme from The Pretty Songs of Tommy Thumb;
“When I was a little boy/My mammy kept me in,/Now I am a great boy/I’m fit to serve the king; “, can be compared to, “When I was a young man,/I needed good luck./But I’m a little bit older now/And I know my stuff ” (Dodd) from “Sing My Blues Away”.
“The Eleven” is perhaps the most obvious effort of Hunter’s that can be directly linked to a nursery rhyme.
“The Eleven”
” 8-sided whispering hallelujah hatrack/7 faced marble
eye transitory dream doll/6 proud walkers on jingle-bell
rainbow/5 men writing in fingers of gold/4 men tracking the
great white sperm whale/3 girls wait in a foreign dominion/
Ride in the whale belly/Fade away in moonlight/Sink
Beneath the waters/to the coral sand below/Now is the
Time of returning” (Hunter 70).
From The Annotated Mother Goose, “A Gaping Wide-Mouthed Waddling Frog”;
” 8 joiners in joiner’s hall,/working with their tools and
all;/7 lobsters in a dish,/as fresh as any heart could wish;/
6 beetles against a wall,/Close by an old woman’s apple-
stall;/5 puppies by our dog Ball,/Who daily for their
breakfast call;/4 horses stuck in a bog,/3 monkeys tied to
a clog,/2 pudding ends would choke a dog/with a gaping
wide-mouthed waddling frog ” (Gould 262).
For those of us who listen to these song lyrics we have to wonder, Do the writer’s do this intentionally? Or, perhaps is in the subconscious, from years of hearing these rhymes. Do our minds, maybe, just think this way? It’s doubtful, but one thing is certain, it makes for interesting listening.
50c
Dodd, David. The Annotate Grateful Dead Lyrics. Santa Cruz: Music Dept.,
University of California at Santa Cruz, 1997-98
Gould, William S. Baring and Ceil Baring. The Annotated Mother Goose New York:
Potter, 1962.
Hunter, Robert. A Box of Rain New York: Penguin Books, 1990.
Opie, Iona and Peter. The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes