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Welfare Mothers Lyrics

People, pick up
on what I'm putting down now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Down at every
Laundromat in town now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

While they're washing
you can hear this sound now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Divorcee!

Hard to believe
that love is free now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Out on the street
with the whole family now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Hard to believe
that love is free now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Divorcee!

People, pick up
on what I'm putting down now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Down in every
Laundromat in town now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

While they're washing
you can hear this sound now

Welfare mothers
make better lovers

Divorcee!
3 Meanings

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Cover art for Welfare Mothers lyrics by Neil Young

In brief, it seems to be a put-down of the 'Free Love' concept that the hippies of the 60's promoted and practised. I think the song is saying that either the idea itself is flawed or the term and the way it promoted is, because it tends to result in unwanted pregnancies.

Or it could just be a put-down on people who cheat, thus causing break-ups of couples and leaving the mother to rely on welfare to help raise the child.

I don't care too much for either meaning though, being a Hippy at Heart myself! :p

Song Meaning

Glad you understood it because I was very confused. Love the artist, but this song is not one of his best. Too many assumptions made about 'welfare mothers'....lumping them altogether. Decades ago there were many negative assumptions made about divorcees...until the numbers skyrocked, and some of those being cruel found themselves divorced....

I came here looking for some insight. My take is that he's being 'ironic' by claiming Welfare Mothers make better lovers. He's making a statement about preconceptions perhaps. Pointing out that conquences of "free love' are babies....

Your analysis is spot on. It's a classic example of what you could call "wry social commentary". In the 70s, I don't think it was hip to point out the down-sides of "Free Love" and Freedom in general. Didn't matter to Neil, though, and fit in well with the punk movement that was questioning the dogma of the "revolution" at that time.

Divorces were becoming commonplace, but don't forget that Neil came from one of the first "broken families" in his town, at a time when there was a real stigma attached to divorce....

Cover art for Welfare Mothers lyrics by Neil Young

I think this is a happy song that means exactly what it seems to mean. Neil is a man of the people and the lower classes rock.

My Interpretation
Positive
Subjective
Enjoyment
Happiness
Interpretation
Working Class
Neil Young
Music
Cover art for Welfare Mothers lyrics by Neil Young

I've seen this pattern in many older rock songs. You have a bunch of musicians sitting around talking their normal trash with each other and then somebody says something that sets off a spark. The guys laugh and they start goofing around...before you know it a song is created. No special meaning, no deep ideas...just a rock song that means nothing but sounds good. I think that's a perfect example of Welfare Mothers. I can almost hear the boys sitting around the studio and one of them blurts out "You know welfare mothers make better lovers"..they laugh and voila a song is written.

Positive
Subjective
Enjoyment
Rock Music
Songwriting
Creativity
Humor
Improvisation

@RonJonSurfer sometimes neil just lets the weirdness fly and it turns into something raw and messy, but it sticks with you

@RonJonSurfer @ibedave Yep, sometimes that's all it takes.

 
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