LEGEND Your Song of the Day

  • To unlock all of features of Rams On Demand please take a brief moment to register. Registering is not only quick and easy, it also allows you access to additional features such as live chat, private messaging, and a host of other apps exclusive to Rams On Demand.

IowaRam

Rams On Demand Sponsor
Rams On Demand Sponsor
Joined
Nov 11, 2014
Messages
6,388
Name
Iowa

Prime Time

PT
Moderator
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
20,922
Name
Peter
This song is from 1962. Love the voice and the cool piano in the background. But if this song were released today it would cause controversy. "I want a brave man, I want a cave man" and "Let me know that you're the boss" would not go over well in our pc society which wants men to act more like women. Btw the kazoo solo in the middle was really uncalled for, lol.
*******************************************************************************************

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wcLXs3Np93s


http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=24549

  • What a strange, strange little hit. This was Joanie Sommers' only entry on the Billboard Top 40, and it is notable as a historic piece, if nothing else. Such dark lyrics set to such a cheerful tune wouldn't come along again until Steely Dan formed.

    This song tends to make us cringe now because social standards have changed so much. These days, feminists would be picketing the record studio for such a song. While you will notice that the lyrics do not invoke actual domestic violence, it's heavily implied that things may go farther than "the biggest lecture I ever had." Still, this is the person expressing what they want - is she wrong in asking for it? Indeed, she's deliberately emotionally abusing "Johnny" in order to provoke him.

  • Should we rush in with therapists and medications to treat the dysfunctional people? Should we threaten Johnny with anger management classes and a restraining order if he lays a hand on her? Or should we just leave the enigmatic couple to their little games if that's what floats their boat? The question hangs open. That such a taboo idea could be expressed in 1962 and still be taboo today, while other counterculture ideas of the '60s have become less shocking, says a lot for the daring minds behind the concept.

  • To make this song even more surreal, an ensemble of kazoos are just thrown in there like they were regular instruments. That's another mind-bender almost worthy of John Cale. Is that to make this seem like a novelty song? Or is it perhaps making a statement about the singer's unbalanced mental state?

  • "Emotional Masochism," our subculture department informs us, "is a variant of S&M in which the bottom wants the top to "mess with their head." Through such means as humiliation, name-calling, confrontation, provoking jealousy, and degrading treatment, the masochist hopes to reach an emotional low which would provoke the same triggered release of endorphins that physical pain would." It's considered shocking "edge play" even within alternative lifestyles, even if it's fully consensual and the parties understand that it's "just pretend."

  • One more bit of cultural ground this song opens up: Notice that the singer is disappointed with the way Johnny acts like a doormat instead of being her "cave man." Today we have the term "friend zone" for when a woman deflects a man who has romantic interest in her by relegating him to "just a friend." Or join an online discussion on dating and ask the ladies why men get friend-zoned. The responses generally even out to "he acted like a friend, not a lover." Hey, wait a minute. Michael Bolton would like to have a word with you.

  • This was written by Hal David and Sherman Edwards, who were part of the New York City songwriting community in the '60s - often simplified as "The Brill Building." David would later team up with Burt Bacharach and form one of the most successful songwriting duos in pop music history. These staff songwriters were always looking for topics that would resonate with the listening public, and emotional masochism was a winner here.

  • Sommers seemed to enjoy a relatively stable career for an early '60s vocalist, but also went on to do considerable voice-acting work in several animated TV and film works.
 

Akrasian

Rams On Demand Sponsor
Rams On Demand Sponsor
Joined
Jun 18, 2014
Messages
4,929
To make this song even more surreal, an ensemble of kazoos are just thrown in there like they were regular instruments. That's another mind-bender almost worthy of John Cale. Is that to make this seem like a novelty song? Or is it perhaps making a statement about the singer's unbalanced mental state?

Kazoos, you say?

 

Ramsey

Starter
Joined
Jul 14, 2013
Messages
610
Name
Ramsey
20 years ago my friends and I were partying at a Dallas hot spot listening to a reggae cover band. Some drunk man in the audience kept screaming his head off for this song...We were laughing, the band was laughing their assess off, because the bleary eyed drunk was yelling,

"I want to hear Buffalo Sergeant! Play Buffalo Sergeant!"


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5FCdx7Dn0o
 

Prime Time

PT
Moderator
Joined
Feb 9, 2014
Messages
20,922
Name
Peter

Selassie I

H. I. M.
Moderator
Joined
Jun 23, 2010
Messages
17,690
Name
Haole
20 years ago my friends and I were partying at a Dallas hot spot listening to a reggae cover band. Some drunk man in the audience kept screaming his head off for this song...We were laughing, the band was laughing their assess off, because the bleary eyed drunk was yelling,

"I want to hear Buffalo Sergeant! Play Buffalo Sergeant!"


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5FCdx7Dn0o



Blasphemy I say. LOL

There's a very cool music vid for this one. Great song.