Kamyr - Norwegian wod....

  • Thread starter Anthony William Sloman
  • Start date
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 23:32:30 +0100, Clive Arthur
<clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 21/04/2022 22:37, Dimiter_Popoff wrote:
On 4/21/2022 22:01, John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 10:13:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

Isn\'t it God, Norwegian wod?

Sloman corrects everyone\'s spelling but his own.

I wish he\'d research the difference between  its  and  it\'s.


Forget the typo, what I though of was the song from
\"Rubber Soul\"... :) May be he meant it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.

Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

Hardly rises to the level arson. Vandalism?

I\'m not sure what it would be called in the US.

Joe Gwinn
 
Dimiter Popoff wrote:
=================
\"Norwegian Wood\" is Beatles - Lennon/McCartney, if mostly Lennon - from 1965.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Wood_(This_Bird_Has_Flown)

The Rolling Stones may have been almost as famous, bu they never struck me as being in the same league.

Well nobody is in the league of the Beatles of course, nobody
can even come close.

** Here is a list of all Beatles songs ever released.

https://www.beatlesbible.com/songs/

I counted 341 and can recall the sound of most of them.

IMO there were just a few good Beatles covers - like this one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBGBBMLZ6bQ


....... Phil
 
Joe Gwinn wrote:
=============
Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.
Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

Hardly rises to the level arson. Vandalism?

** Not a crime at all.

But the owner of the chair or whatever is entitled to compensation.


...... Phil
 
Phil Allison wrote:
============================
IMO there were just a few good Beatles covers - like this one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F2sn2rQiXo


..... Phil
 
On 4/23/2022 0:28, Phil Allison wrote:
Dimiter Popoff wrote:
=================

\"Norwegian Wood\" is Beatles - Lennon/McCartney, if mostly Lennon - from 1965.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_Wood_(This_Bird_Has_Flown)

The Rolling Stones may have been almost as famous, bu they never struck me as being in the same league.

Well nobody is in the league of the Beatles of course, nobody
can even come close.


** Here is a list of all Beatles songs ever released.

https://www.beatlesbible.com/songs/

I counted 341 and can recall the sound of most of them.

IMO there were just a few good Beatles covers - like this one:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBGBBMLZ6bQ


...... Phil

I was sceptic about the cover but it was not bad at all actually.
And the song is anything but easy to do I think.

My take on the \"best cover I ever listened to\" is the Beatles
cover of Chuck Berry\'s \"Rock and Roll Music\" (with G. Martin at the
piano IIRC). Among other things John had this incredible voice.
One can hear how impeccable his singing is in the stereo version
of \"I Should Have Known Better\", one channel is just his voice.
 
On 4/23/2022 1:43, Phil Allison wrote:
Phil Allison wrote:
============================

IMO there were just a few good Beatles covers - like this one:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4F2sn2rQiXo


.... Phil

Aaah these girls are really good, they don\'t try to be too creative,
just cover the songs as they are. And they do it really well, it is
not just \"Nowhere Man\".
 
On 22/04/2022 21:36, Joe Gwinn wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 23:32:30 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 21/04/2022 22:37, Dimiter_Popoff wrote:
On 4/21/2022 22:01, John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 10:13:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

Isn\'t it God, Norwegian wod?

Sloman corrects everyone\'s spelling but his own.

I wish he\'d research the difference between  its  and  it\'s.


Forget the typo, what I though of was the song from
\"Rubber Soul\"... :) May be he meant it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.

Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

Hardly rises to the level arson. Vandalism?

I\'m not sure what it would be called in the US.

Joe Gwinn

I had always thought it meant setting the room on fire. Seems I\'m not
alone...

<Wikipedia>

McCartney commented on the final verse of the song: \"In our world the
guy had to have some sort of revenge. It could have meant I lit a fire
to keep myself warm, and wasn\'t the decor of her house wonderful? But it
didn\'t, it meant I burned the fucking place down as an act of revenge,
and then we left it there and went into the instrumental.\"

</Wikipedia>

--
Cheers
Clive
 
On Wed, 27 Apr 2022 12:57:14 +0100, Clive Arthur
<clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 22/04/2022 21:36, Joe Gwinn wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 23:32:30 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 21/04/2022 22:37, Dimiter_Popoff wrote:
On 4/21/2022 22:01, John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 10:13:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

Isn\'t it God, Norwegian wod?

Sloman corrects everyone\'s spelling but his own.

I wish he\'d research the difference between  its  and  it\'s.


Forget the typo, what I though of was the song from
\"Rubber Soul\"... :) May be he meant it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.

Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

Hardly rises to the level arson. Vandalism?

I\'m not sure what it would be called in the US.

Joe Gwinn

I had always thought it meant setting the room on fire. Seems I\'m not
alone...

Wikipedia

McCartney commented on the final verse of the song: \"In our world the
guy had to have some sort of revenge. It could have meant I lit a fire
to keep myself warm, and wasn\'t the decor of her house wonderful? But it
didn\'t, it meant I burned the fucking place down as an act of revenge,
and then we left it there and went into the instrumental.\"

/Wikipedia

Hmm. Well, Counselor, you have a point there. So it was arson.

Not that anything ever happened in consequence.

Joe Gwinn
 
On Friday, April 22, 2022 at 9:21:22 AM UTC-7, Ricky wrote:

> I think it is Seattle that has a pulp mill near the airport. You walk out of the building and WHAM! Welcome to Seattle!

The main airport (Seattle-Tacoma international) did get some of the famed Aroma of Tacoma...
 
On 2022-04-22, Joe Gwinn <joegwinn@comcast.net> wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 23:32:30 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 21/04/2022 22:37, Dimiter_Popoff wrote:
On 4/21/2022 22:01, John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 10:13:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

Isn\'t it God, Norwegian wod?

Sloman corrects everyone\'s spelling but his own.

I wish he\'d research the difference between  its  and  it\'s.


Forget the typo, what I though of was the song from
\"Rubber Soul\"... :) May be he meant it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.

Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

There wasn\'t a chair.

--
Jasen.
 
On Wed, 27 Apr 2022 20:22:27 -0000 (UTC), Jasen Betts
<usenet@revmaps.no-ip.org> wrote:

On 2022-04-22, Joe Gwinn <joegwinn@comcast.net> wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 23:32:30 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 21/04/2022 22:37, Dimiter_Popoff wrote:
On 4/21/2022 22:01, John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 10:13:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

Isn\'t it God, Norwegian wod?

Sloman corrects everyone\'s spelling but his own.

I wish he\'d research the difference between  its  and  it\'s.


Forget the typo, what I though of was the song from
\"Rubber Soul\"... :) May be he meant it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.

Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

There wasn\'t a chair.

I noticed that now as well, after the quote from a Beetle in the Wiki
article.

But I recall two versions of the lyrics, one saying \"I once met a girl
....\", the other saying that \"I once had a girl ...\", the difference
being the implications of had versus met. This was always bothering
me.

Later, it came to me that the \"had\" story given in the Wiki didn\'t
hold up:

If the girl was already a mistress, there would not likely be any
tease involved, and if her apartment had in fact been set alight,
there would be no mystery as to who set the fire, or why for that
matter, and we would have seen news reports of a real arson
prosecution. Which never happened.

The \"met\" story makes more sense. In that case, a tease could well
have happened, and it\'s entirely possible that the girl did not know
exactly who her guest was. If no accelerant was used, the fire
investigators could well have had difficulty showing that this was
anything more than a stove left on or the like.

Joe Gwinn
 
On 28/04/2022 17:15, Joe Gwinn wrote:

<snip>

But I recall two versions of the lyrics, one saying \"I once met a girl
...\", the other saying that \"I once had a girl ...\", the difference
being the implications of had versus met. This was always bothering
me.

The \"I once had a girl\" line is a feed for \"Or should I say, she once
had me\". In this context the meaning of the second \'had\' is \'fooled\',
which is common English informal usage.

--
Cheers
Clive
 
On Thu, 28 Apr 2022 18:07:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
<clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 28/04/2022 17:15, Joe Gwinn wrote:

snip

But I recall two versions of the lyrics, one saying \"I once met a girl
...\", the other saying that \"I once had a girl ...\", the difference
being the implications of had versus met. This was always bothering
me.

The \"I once had a girl\" line is a feed for \"Or should I say, she once
had me\". In this context the meaning of the second \'had\' is \'fooled\',
which is common English informal usage.

Yep, and I also read it that way.

But met can also be used two ways, the second implying intent to meet
versus accidental meeting.

Joe Gwinn
 
In article <klel6h5hu0bqdvr9i6q0a050kjf5v96kce@4ax.com>,
Joe Gwinn <joegwinn@comcast.net> wrote:

But I recall two versions of the lyrics, one saying \"I once met a girl
...\", the other saying that \"I once had a girl ...\"

I suspect a dual meaning of \"had\" in Lennon\'s wordplay is relevant
here ...

\"I once had a girl\" (had a relationship with) versus
\"she once had me\" -- as in \"she conned me\" (had me over) due to him not
getting any sex out of it, despite putting in the groundwork. Biding
his time, as it were.

The \"met\" version of the lyric (an early draft?) would not lead to that
wordplay.
--
--------------------------------------+------------------------------------
Mike Brown: mjb[-at-]signal11.org.uk | http://www.signal11.org.uk
 
On 2022-04-28, Joe Gwinn <joegwinn@comcast.net> wrote:
On Wed, 27 Apr 2022 20:22:27 -0000 (UTC), Jasen Betts
usenet@revmaps.no-ip.org> wrote:

On 2022-04-22, Joe Gwinn <joegwinn@comcast.net> wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 23:32:30 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

On 21/04/2022 22:37, Dimiter_Popoff wrote:
On 4/21/2022 22:01, John Larkin wrote:
On Thu, 21 Apr 2022 10:13:23 +0100, Clive Arthur
clive@nowaytoday.co.uk> wrote:

Isn\'t it God, Norwegian wod?

Sloman corrects everyone\'s spelling but his own.

I wish he\'d research the difference between  its  and  it\'s.


Forget the typo, what I though of was the song from
\"Rubber Soul\"... :) May be he meant it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

Yes, a song about sexual frustration provoking arson.

Teasing leading to furniture combustion in a fireplace.

There wasn\'t a chair.

I noticed that now as well, after the quote from a Beetle in the Wiki
article.

But I recall two versions of the lyrics, one saying \"I once met a girl
...\", the other saying that \"I once had a girl ...\", the difference
being the implications of had versus met. This was always bothering
me.

Later, it came to me that the \"had\" story given in the Wiki didn\'t
hold up:

Had can also mean tricked, many 3 letter words are quite versitile.

If the girl was already a mistress, there would not likely be any
tease involved, and if her apartment had in fact been set alight,
there would be no mystery as to who set the fire, or why for that
matter, and we would have seen news reports of a real arson
prosecution. Which never happened.

It\'s probable that some of the story is fantasy... just like the
Yellow Submarine and and Sergeant Pepper (etc)

wiki says that the story is mostly John\'s but the arson was added by
Paul.

--
Jasen.
 

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