20 Canciones de dro...
 
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20 Canciones de drogas

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http://www.spinner.com/2011/04/14/top-drug-songs

'Love Is the Drug,' Roxy Music sang. Yet when it comes to rock 'n' roll songs, drugs are often the drug. The creators of the following alleged dope ditties almost invariably deny it, so we're placing them on trial. Guilty or not? The question itself is intoxicating.

20 'Got to Get You Into My Life' the Beatles (1966)
The accusation: It's Paul McCartney's thinly veiled desire to sample the forbidden fruit.
The defense: It's just a silly love song.
The verdict: Guilty. As McCartney admitted, it is his paean to "some other kind of mind." "If I am true I'll never leave," he sang. With songs such as 'Hi Hi Hi' and his Japanese pot bust, he has stayed true to his beloved for years.

19 'Mary Jane' Rick James (1978)
The accusation: The admitted (and convicted) drug abuser was undoubtedly well aware that "Mary Jane" is a street term for marijuana.
The defense: She's not the kind of girl "you can just tie down," he sang, disguising the subject as an ode to an unfaithful girlfriend.
The verdict: Guilty. Coolio's 'Half Baked' sample is confirmation from on high.

18 'Fire It Up' Modest Mouse (2007)
The accusation: An invitation to smoke 'em if you got 'em.
The defense: Isaac Brock said it's about "turning over a car"; lyrics refer to carburetor trouble and "broke-down transportation."
The verdict: Not guilty, though Brock did admit, "I highly approve of stoners and stoner anthems."

17 'Space Oddity' David Bowie (1969)
The accusation: Space -- it's deep, man.
The defense: Inspired by '2001: A Space Odyssey,' the song was released to coincide with the Apollo 11 moon landing.
The verdict: Guilty. "We know Major Tom's a junkie," Bowie confessed on the 1980 followup, 'Ashes to Ashes.'

16 'Viva la White Girl' Gym Class Heroes (2006)
The accusation: "Take your razor, break down my line/Put your nose to the speaker/ Now breathe in, breathe in" ID's this 'White Girl.'
The defense: It's more about the trappings of stardom, of which drugs are merely incidental.
The verdict: Guilty. The intro "Travie, you high.../S---, yeah, I'm high" tips its hand.

15 'The Candy Man' Sammy Davis Jr. (1972)
The accusation: Dope dealers are often known as "the candy man" (see: Grateful Dead, Mississippi John Hurt, etc.).
The defense: It's from 'Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factor,' for Pete's sake!
The verdict: Guilty. In the movie 'Madagascar,' when Alex the lion gets shot with a tranquilizer dart, the song plays as he hallucinates.

14 'Pass the Dutchie' Musical Youth (1982)
The accusation: "Kouchie," in the Mighty Diamonds' original 'Pass the Kouchie,' is Jamaican slang for a ganja pipe.
The defense: Changing the name to "dutchie" (a stew pot) sanitized the song for the adolescent band members.
The verdict: Guilty. "Dutchie" now refers to a joint rolled in (Dutch Masters) cigar paper.

13 'A Horse With No Name' America (2006)
The accusation: "Horse" is a common slang term for heroin.
The defense: Singer Dewey Bunnell said the horse is "a vehicle to get me away from all the confusion and chaos of life."
The verdict: Not guilty. Real drug users could've done much better than "there were plants and birds and rocks and things."

12 'Beetlebum' Blur (1997)
The accusation: Said to be about Damon Albarn's drug experiments with old girlfriend Justine Frischmann of Elastica.
The defense: It's about a complex emotion -- part sleepy, part sexy -- as Albarn once claimed, or it's about Oasis' Beatles fixation.
The verdict: Guilty. "It's about drugs, basically," Albarn finally confessed.

11 'Eight Miles High' The Byrds (1966)
The accusation: This pioneering psychedelic song could only have been about getting high.
The defense: The group insisted the song was about an airline flight to England.
The verdict: Not guilty, despite Don McLean's implication in 'American Pie' ("Eight miles high and falling fast/Landed foul on the grass").

10 'White Rabbit' Jefferson Airplane (1967)
The accusation: Pills that make you larger or smaller; hookah-smoking caterpillars literally on mushrooms.
The defense: It's just 'Alice in Wonderland.'
The verdict: Guilty. It was the theme song of teen-drug-abuse cautionary TV movie 'Go Ask Alice'; Grace Slick admitted to conceiving the song while on LSD.

09 'Morning Glory' Oasis (1995)
The accusation: "All your dreams are made/ When you're chained to the mirror and the razor blade" points in one direction.
The defense: It's really a sex song, and "morning glory" refers to a man waking up, let's say, at full attention.
The verdict: Not guilty. Drugs actually keep a fella from becoming "glorious" in the A.M.

08 'Jumpin' Jack Flash' The Rolling Stones (1968)
The accusation: A 'Jumpin' Jack Flash' is a method of injecting heroin into your tear ducts ("a spike right through my head").
The defense: Keith Richards and Mick Jagger have said it's named for "Jumpin'" Jack Dyer, Richards' gardener at his country estate.
The verdict: Guilty. Has Keith Richards ever written a song that's not about drugs?

07 'There She Goes' The La's (1991)
The accusation: She's "pulsing through my vein" and "no one else can heal my pain" -- "she" can only be Sweet Lady Heroin.
The defense: Guitarist Paul Hemmings says no; bassist John Power says he doesn't know.
The verdict: Guilty. When Sixpense None the Richer's version was used for a birth-control pill ad, the drug connection was made official.

06 'Lookin' Out My Back Door' Creedence Clearwater Revival (1970)
The accusation: Tambourines, elephants, a dinosaur Victrola -- "Won't you take a ride on the flying spoon?" is an invitation to cocaine.
The defense: John Fogerty says he wrote the song for his son, inspired by Dr. Seuss.
The verdict: Not guilty. These blue-collar boys would literally turn their noses up at blow.

05 'Golden Brown' The Stranglers (1981)
The accusation: The woozy, waltz-y tune is an ode to heroin.
The defense: The song was about singer Hugh Cornwell's Mediterranean girlfriend; the video featured exotic footage in places populated with dark-skinned people.
The verdict: Guilty. How else to explain a punk band with a harpsichord?

04 'Cloud Nine' The Temptations (1968)
The accusation: The narrator escapes his troubles by "riding high on Cloud Nine."
The defense: The Tempts countered that songwriters Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong were clean-living fellows.
The verdict: Guilty. Living in a "one-room shack" with a father that "treated us like dirt," you don't get to Cloud Nine without help.

03 'Mary Jane's Last Dance' Tom Petty (1993)
The accusation: One last hit of weed, "one more time to kill the pain."
The defense: "It could just be a goodbye love song," said guitarist Mike Campbell.
The verdict: Guilty. Petty was more explicit on his next hit, 'You Don't Know How It Feels': "Let's get to the point/Let's roll another joint."

02 'Windy' The Association (1967)
The accusation: It's about "windowpane" acid.
The defense: The songwriter claimed it's about her dog, who walked "down the streets of the city, smiling at everybody she sees."
The verdict: Not guilty. Despite a separate claim that the band's 'Along Comes Mary' was about pot, only a squeaky-clean glee club could sing 'Cherish.'

01 'Puff, the Magic Dragon' Peter, Paul & Mary (1963)
The accusation: A kilo of pot references -- Puff, little "Jackie Paper," the Hawaiian pot-growing town of Hanalei.
The defense: The lyrics were inspired by Ogden Nash's 'The Tale of Custard the Dragon,' about loss of childhood innocence.
The verdict: Guilty. You'd need some Maui Wowee to tap into that childlike imagination.


 
Respondido : 15/04/2011 5:45 am