| Sublime – Garbage Grove Lyrics | 18 years ago |
| jermstead made a total ass out of herself...lol | |
| Alice Cooper – I'm Eighteen Lyrics | 18 years ago |
| Featured on VH1's top 40 metal songs. I'm not a huge Alice Cooper fan, but this song is really good. "I'm in the middle without any plans." | |
| Alicia Keys – Wild Horses Lyrics | 18 years ago |
| Originally performed by the Rolling Stones. The best version is on the "Old & in the Way" album, with Jerry Garica. A great song. | |
| The Beatles – A Day in the Life Lyrics | 18 years ago |
| This song is about the food network and their search for a new food network star. It relates to me because I have to consume food to live, and often find it hard deciding which food to eat. I know in my heart the new food network star will make the choice easier, although I still get heartburn when I take big dumps in my moms bathroom. At the end of the day, The Beatles settle the score and makes me choose steak omelletes everytime. Beatles 4evr. | |
| Led Zeppelin – Bonzo's Montreux Lyrics | 18 years ago |
| Well, Skynyrd is far overrated, they really are. | |
| Paul Simon – Mother and Child Reunion Lyrics | 18 years ago |
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"I was eating in a Chinese restaurant downtown. There was a dish called Mother and Child Reunion. It's chicken and eggs. And I said, I gotta use that one." -Paul Simon Source: www.brainyquote.com |
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| Led Zeppelin – Misty Mountain Hop Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| It's not about Hobbits, or the "Fellowship." That's a bunch of crap. | |
| The Beatles – I Want to Tell You Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| there you go, sleuth | |
| The Beatles – All Things Must Pass Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| This song reminds me of 'Nam | |
| The Beatles – A Day in the Life Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| get a record player and the record and manually move it backwards | |
| The Beatles – A Day in the Life Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| At the end of the Anthology 2 version, you can hear paul say something like "People are going to get a little suspicious, like 'what are you up to?'" Having to do with his "death." The suspenseful music at the end is supposed to be the final moments of the car crash, and the animal sounds are supposed to be animals that chase each other. Like you hear a meow and then a bark, because dogs chase cats. | |
| The Beatles – A Day in the Life Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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A website I read says: "never kiss me any other way. Played backwards, said "Will Paul come back as Superman?" (or alternately, "We'll f*ck you like Supermen!") I read somewhere else that it said "Paul and Lucy could be any other way." or something like that. Having to do with the clues that Paul was dead. I forget what it was supposed to mean though? |
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| The Beatles – Strawberry Fields Forever Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| Some believers have interpreted what is generally agreed to be Lennon saying "cranberry sauce" at 3:57 & 4:03 into "Strawberry Fields Forever" to in fact be "I Buried Paul". | |
| The Beatles – I Am the Walrus Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| The John Lennon track "I Am The Walrus" allegedly implies that McCartney died on a "stupid bloody Tuesday"; if we are to believe that McCartney died "Wednesday morning at five o'clock", as in "She's Leaving Home" from Sgt. Pepper, this could translate to be Wednesday morning UK time, while it would still be Tuesday evening in the U.S. West Coast. The chant at the end of the track, played backwards, seems to reveal "Paul Is Dead, Paul Is Dead..." And when played forwards to the end, contains a portion of a BBC radio broadcast of King Lear which mentions, "O, untimely death!" John had simply turned on the radio while recording and the "King Lear" bit was a coincidence. Also, right at the end, if reversed a voice says, "Paul is dead, his head off lies with his spirit." | |
| The Beatles – Your Mother Should Know Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| According to The Beatle Plot, reversing this McCartney song produces the words "Why doesn't she know me...I shed the light...dead." It may also suggest "Why does she know me?". | |
| The Beatles – Your Mother Should Know Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| The John Lennon track "I Am The Walrus" allegedly implies that McCartney died on a "stupid bloody Tuesday"; if we are to believe that McCartney died "Wednesday morning at five o'clock", as in "She's Leaving Home" from Sgt. Pepper, this could translate to be Wednesday morning UK time, while it would still be Tuesday evening in the U.S. West Coast. The chant at the end of the track, played backwards, seems to reveal "Paul Is Dead, Paul Is Dead..." And when played forwards to the end, contains a portion of a BBC radio broadcast of King Lear which mentions, "O, untimely death!" John had simply turned on the radio while recording and the "King Lear" bit was a coincidence. Also, right at the end, if reversed a voice says, "Paul is dead, his head off lies with his spirit." | |
| The Beatles – Your Mother Should Know Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| According to The Beatle Plot, reversing this McCartney song produces the words "Why doesn't she know me...I shed the light...dead." It may also suggest "Why does she know me?". | |
| The Beatles – Blue Jay Way Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| The George Harrison track, "Blue Jay Way", may be heard as a eulogy to Paul (with the lyrics "please don't be long, please don't you be very long, please don't be long, or I may be asleep..."). Also, some have claimed that the song's repeated line "Please don't be long," when played backwards, reveals "He said "Get Me Out!" Paul is what is. Paul is Hare Krishna, it seems. Paulie is bloody." The song is actually about George waiting for Derek Taylor to help him move into his LA home on Blue Jay Way on a foggy day. | |
| The Beatles – While My Guitar Gently Weeps Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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The end of George Harrison's track "While My Guitar Gently Weeps" has Harrison seem to be calling "Paul, Paul, Paul..." Having to do with Pauls "death" of course. |
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| The Beatles – Don't Pass Me By Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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Ringo's track "Don't Pass Me By", has lyrics that read, "I listen for your footsteps but they don't arrive", and later, "I'm sorry that I doubted you...I was so unfair. You were in a car crash, and you lost your hair...". Also, when the chorus is played backwards, you can hear "Who'd we pay for now, we paid for now, it's that one." This may refer to them looking for a replacement for Paul. |
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| The Beatles – Cry Baby Cry Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| At the end of the song Paul laments (from the grave?) "Can you take me back where I came from? Can you take me back?" | |
| The Beatles – Revolution 9 Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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In probably the most talked-about clue, the words "number nine, number nine" on the track "Revolution 9" became "turn me on, dead man, turn me on, dead man" when played backwards. The track also includes other alleged clues, such as the sound of a car crashing, and comments by John Lennon which seem to indicate what McCartney was "doing" before he "died"—for example, one forward-playing comment goes "who can tell what he was saying...his eyes was on fire", while another comment goes "Yoko, you better go to see he's dead". One comment played backwards yields "get me out, get me out!". Other things heard backwards are the sounds of a raging fire, an ambulance arriving at an accident, and the sounds of a funeral choir. Amongst playing the song in reverse, in the end as the fire is heard, reversing the line said before reveals the phrase, "There were two, there are none now" (one of the clearer messages). Moving forwards, another crackling sound (representing fire) is heard, followed by the phrase "ooh, death" (when played backwards seems to say "Paul is doomed"). In the most overt clue of all, a man's voice, presumably John's, seems to declare "Paul died", to which a crowd erupts in chaos (and some applause). The shouting at the end of this song when played backwards sounds similar to "Where's my Paul?" There is another reference to the alleged time of death considering the numbers after the songs "Revolution 1" and "Revolution 9". Considering the information already given (McCartney "died" on 11/9) could indicate why Hey Jude 's B-side version of "Revolution" was released again on the Past Masters album. |
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| The Beatles – I'm So Tired Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| Backmasking of "I'm So Tired" allegedly revealed "Paul is dead, man. Miss him, miss him, miss him!" (or sometimes, "Paul is a dead man. Miss him, miss him, miss him!") near the end and "I wish I were not a Beatle!" from the line "...should I call you but I know what you would do", taken to mean that with the death of his friend, the singer (John) wishes to quit the band. | |
| The Beatles – Glass Onion Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| On The Beatles, Lennon's track "Glass Onion" has lyrics that read "...here's another clue for you all...the Walrus was Paul" (a back reference to "I Am The Walrus" from the previous Magical Mystery Tour album). Also, he states, "I told you 'bout the 'Fool On The Hill', I tell you, man, he's living there still", interpreted as claiming Paul remains on the hill where he was buried. It is also said that a 'Glass Onion' is a term used to describe a coffin with a glass top, or looking panel, though it is actually a slang term for a monocle. The lyrics "Looking through a glass onion" suggest that Paul would have been buried in such a coffin. | |
| The Beatles – Get Back Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| When the chorus of this song is played backwards, it seems to become, "I need some wheels. Help me! Help me! Help me!", referring to Paul's car being totaled in the crash. | |
| The Beatles – Let It Be Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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The lyrics from this song include "I wake up to the sound of music, Mother Mary comes to me". This has been interpreted by believers to signify Paul meeting his mother Mary, who died when he was 14, in heaven. A more obscure clue is that when the words "Let it be" are played backwards, they become "He is dead". |
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| The Beatles – She Came In Through the Bathroom Window Lyrics | 19 years ago |
| This song contains the lines "And so I quit the police department/and got myself a steady job". This is taken by believers to be a reference to McCartney's supposed replacement William Campbell and his previous job as a policeman in Ontario. | |
| The Beatles – Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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Billy Shears - BillyS hears - Billy's Here According to believers, after McCartney "died," he had been replaced with the winner of a McCartney look-alike contest. The name of this look-alike has been recorded as William Shears Campbell, Billy Shears (the name of the fictitious leader of Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band), William Sheppard (based on the inspiration for song "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill"), or some combination of the names. |
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| The Beatles – Come Together Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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"Come Together" contained several alleged clues that Paul was dead in the lyrics. "He got hair down to his knee" is taken by believers to refer to the claim that hair and nails continue to grow after death. "He wear no shoeshine" is taken to refer to Paul being barefoot on the cover. "He got toe-jam football" is taken to refer to rugby, a sport Paul liked to play. Called a toe-jam football, because when you used your finger to wipe out the toe-jam, it would roll up into a shape similiar to a rugby ball. "He got monkey finger" allegedly refers to the thin frail fingers of a dead body. "One and one and one is three" allegedly refers to there being only three "remaining" Beatles. "Got to be good looking" is believed to refer to McCartney as the "cute" Beatle. "'Cause he's so hard to see" supposedly refers to the faded memory of someone who is now gone. "Come together right now over me" supposedly refers to the scene over McCartney's grave as the mourners come together. Additionally, the song's chorus when played in reverse is supposed to become "Heave ho...and now...Oh, thank the smoke"; interpreted to mean that they were lifting Paul's crashed car but thankfully the smoke obscured their view of Paul's body from the inside. |
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| The Beatles – A Day in the Life Lyrics | 19 years ago |
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Now, just because...just because, you hear King Lear's death speech, because you hear, 'Turn me on. dead man,' because you hear the sounds of car wrecks and flames, because you hear 'You say hello, I say goodbye,' because Number 9 is the number of death, because OPD means Officially Pronounced Dead, because you hear 'ha ha Paul is dead,' because you see hands over Paul's head and signs in front of him that say 'I was,' because Paul has a black rose on, because Paul faces in and the rest face out, and 28-IF, because he 'blew his mind out in a car...' Does that mean he died? NO! It means that you died. You there, staying up all night next to your stereo listening for more clues, you with your radio station that goes over to talk to Paul's barber to see if it's the same Paul. You..you lethal punk you, YOU died. Of course, it was all fun for a while. |
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