Bodacious am a whole lotta' bull over nineteen hundred pounds. He's born Show Slice me up a big slab of that sympathetic cheer. If The Earth it did crack open on the day that I I been fightin' gravity since I was two. Questers of the The man he stepped up to the microphone and he Glad you came, glad you're here. Have some champagne, imported beer. Dig He's standin' tall at 5 foot 4, with the sharpness of Went down to Coddingtown to buy for Lucky Dog. Moved on Burnin', I feel a burnin' in my stomach, I wanna know They found James Ambrose dead in his cell, a gaping gash He was a mighty golden boy, as gold as ever When I was born, the doc he held me by They broke out in laughter again, his lip beaded with sweat Pass the pen there Billy Bob, I'll write us up The Web's Largest Resource forMusic, Songs & LyricsA Member Of The STANDS4 Networkmore tracks from the album
Our awesome collection ofPromoted Songs»Get promoted QuizAre you a music master?»"Baby Jane, I've said all I want to say. Go your own way, don't think ______ about me.""Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers"I've seen them out at Soco I knew a man who hung drywall Now the union boys are there Now the flame that burns twice as bright Writer(s): Leslie E Claypool, Reid L. Iii Lalonde, Timothy W Alexander album: "Sailing The Seas Of Cheese" (1991) "Those Damned Blue-Collar Tweekers" is a song by the American rock band Primus. It was released as the third single from their 1991 album Sailing the Seas of Cheese. Unlike its preceding singles "Jerry Was a Race Car Driver" and "Tommy the Cat", "Tweekers" did not feature an accompanying video. The song opens with Larry LaLonde on guitar and a reserved bassline from Les Claypool, from there alternating between his trademark slap bass and a quiet section for the vocals. The song's narrative describes several different trades that the town's blue collar tweekers engage in, but, like many of the other story-telling songs in Primus's catalogue, lacks any clear, single meaning and leaves plenty of ambiguity in its lyrics. The song is about truck drivers and "blue-collar workers" using methamphetamine.
When performing live, Claypool changed a particular word in the lyrics. In the third verse, instead of "my eyes are growing weary as I finalize this song," it is now ""my eyes are growing weary as I sodomize this song..." The band's Woodstock 1994 performance of the song was particularly notable, with Claypool beginning a bass rendition of the Star Spangled Banner in homage to Jimi Hendrix's guitar performance of the national anthem decades before, but eventually apologizing to the crowd by saying "Sorry, I had to do it" and returning to the song. As of 2015, it is Primus's second most-performed song live. A live version of the song (performed at Primus' show at the Brixton Academy, London, England on July 13, 2011) also appears as an iTunes exclusive bonus track on the band's 2011 album, Green Naugahyde. |