what's your favourite all time pun?
- EvilBastard
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From Marian (version): "Save me from the grave"
"I won't go down in history, but I probably will go down on your sister."
Hank Moody
Hank Moody
Perhaps when Dylan wrote it but Von's is still just a misquote.million voices wrote:I know I'm a bit late but couldn't the pun be that he is stuck (ie can't move) when the actual home is described as mobile?
And if I can get my pedant hat on, the line is "Stuck inside of Memphis with the mobile home" while the Dylan song is actually Stuck Inside of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again and is from the album Blonde On Blonde.
Aaaand breathe...
- EvilBastard
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Lets take this a little further.
Ok, so this could be a reference to Dylan's lyric. But wouldn't that be a little easy? I mean, we know that 's never shied away from repurposing other peoples' material, so that could be the de facto go-to when analysing this.
But...
Maybe he's stuck inside of Memphis with a Mobile home, as in Mobile Alabama. He's in one state with a residence from another - the feeling of being disconnected, in the wrong place, with the wrong thing. Could this be an allusion to his state of mind while recording the album? His original band is gone, he's shacked up with someone that he knows isn't right for him (and who snarfs all the donuts) - this is uncomfortable for him. He feels displaced.
Further, to get from Mobile to Memphis you take US-45 and I-55. Together they sum to 100. Not very far from "As I ride down the highway 101". Maybe this is his way of trying to reconnect with a time and place where he was comfortable, with things he knew.
The reference to Memphis could also have deeper connotations. In ancient Egypt Memphis was an industrial and commercial hub before falling into ruin. Perhaps his use of it alluded to Leeds, which suffered a similar demise. It was also the site of a significant necropolis - felt that after the original band broke up the Sisters had been mummified, preserved, unchanging, or he felt that people wanted them to be. Or perhaps he's saying that the band will live forever through him, the Pharaoh-figure, the living god (there is certainly a degree of megalomania to his personality).
Maybe...
Ok, so this could be a reference to Dylan's lyric. But wouldn't that be a little easy? I mean, we know that 's never shied away from repurposing other peoples' material, so that could be the de facto go-to when analysing this.
But...
Maybe he's stuck inside of Memphis with a Mobile home, as in Mobile Alabama. He's in one state with a residence from another - the feeling of being disconnected, in the wrong place, with the wrong thing. Could this be an allusion to his state of mind while recording the album? His original band is gone, he's shacked up with someone that he knows isn't right for him (and who snarfs all the donuts) - this is uncomfortable for him. He feels displaced.
Further, to get from Mobile to Memphis you take US-45 and I-55. Together they sum to 100. Not very far from "As I ride down the highway 101". Maybe this is his way of trying to reconnect with a time and place where he was comfortable, with things he knew.
The reference to Memphis could also have deeper connotations. In ancient Egypt Memphis was an industrial and commercial hub before falling into ruin. Perhaps his use of it alluded to Leeds, which suffered a similar demise. It was also the site of a significant necropolis - felt that after the original band broke up the Sisters had been mummified, preserved, unchanging, or he felt that people wanted them to be. Or perhaps he's saying that the band will live forever through him, the Pharaoh-figure, the living god (there is certainly a degree of megalomania to his personality).
Maybe...
"I won't go down in history, but I probably will go down on your sister."
Hank Moody
Hank Moody
- million voices
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...or maybe he got the idea from "Still Life in Mobile Homes" by Japan
He was listening to Sylvian not Dylan
He was listening to Sylvian not Dylan
Well you must know something
'Cos we're dying of admiration here
Mastering obscure alternatives
'Cos we're dying of admiration here
Mastering obscure alternatives
Are you David Icke?EvilBastard wrote:Lets take this a little further.
Ok, so this could be a reference to Dylan's lyric. But wouldn't that be a little easy? I mean, we know that 's never shied away from repurposing other peoples' material, so that could be the de facto go-to when analysing this.
But...
Maybe he's stuck inside of Memphis with a Mobile home, as in Mobile Alabama. He's in one state with a residence from another - the feeling of being disconnected, in the wrong place, with the wrong thing. Could this be an allusion to his state of mind while recording the album? His original band is gone, he's shacked up with someone that he knows isn't right for him (and who snarfs all the donuts) - this is uncomfortable for him. He feels displaced.
Further, to get from Mobile to Memphis you take US-45 and I-55. Together they sum to 100. Not very far from "As I ride down the highway 101". Maybe this is his way of trying to reconnect with a time and place where he was comfortable, with things he knew.
The reference to Memphis could also have deeper connotations. In ancient Egypt Memphis was an industrial and commercial hub before falling into ruin. Perhaps his use of it alluded to Leeds, which suffered a similar demise. It was also the site of a significant necropolis - felt that after the original band broke up the Sisters had been mummified, preserved, unchanging, or he felt that people wanted them to be. Or perhaps he's saying that the band will live forever through him, the Pharaoh-figure, the living god (there is certainly a degree of megalomania to his personality).
Maybe...
- EvilBastard
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No, but I play one on TV.stufarq wrote:Are you David Icke?
"I won't go down in history, but I probably will go down on your sister."
Hank Moody
Hank Moody
- Nikolas Vitus Lagartija
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stufarq wrote:Are you David Icke?EvilBastard wrote:Lets take this a little further.
Ok, so this could be a reference to Dylan's lyric. But wouldn't that be a little easy? I mean, we know that 's never shied away from repurposing other peoples' material, so that could be the de facto go-to when analysing this.
But...
Maybe he's stuck inside of Memphis with a Mobile home, as in Mobile Alabama. He's in one state with a residence from another - the feeling of being disconnected, in the wrong place, with the wrong thing. Could this be an allusion to his state of mind while recording the album? His original band is gone, he's shacked up with someone that he knows isn't right for him (and who snarfs all the donuts) - this is uncomfortable for him. He feels displaced.
Further, to get from Mobile to Memphis you take US-45 and I-55. Together they sum to 100. Not very far from "As I ride down the highway 101". Maybe this is his way of trying to reconnect with a time and place where he was comfortable, with things he knew.
The reference to Memphis could also have deeper connotations. In ancient Egypt Memphis was an industrial and commercial hub before falling into ruin. Perhaps his use of it alluded to Leeds, which suffered a similar demise. It was also the site of a significant necropolis - felt that after the original band broke up the Sisters had been mummified, preserved, unchanging, or he felt that people wanted them to be. Or perhaps he's saying that the band will live forever through him, the Pharaoh-figure, the living god (there is certainly a degree of megalomania to his personality).
Maybe...
- blackandgold65
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echo these.nick the stripper wrote:
"Twenty five whores in the room next door, Twenty five floors and I need more" - Vision Thing(possibly the best opening lyrics to an album EVER)
"Get real, get another"
"I can love my fellow man, but I'm damned if I'll love yours"
Vision Thing "25 whores etc" produced an extremely rousing Waynes World/Bohemian Rhap style moment a few years back @ Reading Services whilst filling up with petrol I recall. Good call! That's what subwoofers are for.
on that note, might as well add in this for good measure
"I think insipid music is very dangerous. It's a narcotic for the nation as you very well know."
- blackandgold65
- Gonzoid Amphetamine Filth
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no, no, no not good.... great.
"I think insipid music is very dangerous. It's a narcotic for the nation as you very well know."
- Nikolas Vitus Lagartija
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Back on the original topic (albeit a mere decade or so late) my current favourite Von pun is "Watch the body hit the phials/files". A cancer for anyone's education.
- Being645
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It is a good one for sure. One of my alltime favourites isChaotican wrote:I read this whole thread just to validate that someone already said, "carrion child, prey for me."
Really? No one?
Blizzard King
Bring it on home
Joh, of course, Love ... ...
- Nikolas Vitus Lagartija
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Starring Sid James and Joan Sims as the parents presumably, with Charles Hawtrey as the child.Chaotican wrote:"carrion child"
Hello @jimgogan & welcome to
The Sisterhood : Gifl, well the gifl
Gift in german means poison
Gift is swedish mean to marry, "gifta sig"
But you knew all this, didn't you?
Gift in german means poison
Gift is swedish mean to marry, "gifta sig"
But you knew all this, didn't you?
"Different colours, different shades
Over each mistakes were made
I took the blame"
~ Ian Curtis
Over each mistakes were made
I took the blame"
~ Ian Curtis