You crazy Bathsheba, I wancha
You're suffocating, you need a good shed
I'm tired of living, shebe, so gimme, dead, dead
we're apin? rapin? tapin? catharsis
You get torn down and I get erected
My blood is working but my
My heart is, dead, dead
Hey what do you know?
Your lovely tan belly
Is starting to grow
Uriah hit the crapper, the crapper
Uriah hit the crapper, the crapper
Uriah hit the crapper, the crapper
Dead, dead
You're suffocating, you need a good shed
I'm tired of living, shebe, so gimme, dead, dead
You get torn down and I get erected
My blood is working but my
My heart is, dead, dead
Your lovely tan belly
Is starting to grow
Uriah hit the crapper, the crapper
Uriah hit the crapper, the crapper
Dead, dead
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Here's some more details.
The song is taken from 2 Samuel, Chapter 11.
After Bathsheba tells King David that he has impregnated her, David sends for her husband Uriah the Hittite who is fighting in David's army. David tells Uriah to "Go down to your house and wash your feet". But Uriah, being the faithful servant refuses and sleeps outside the entrance to the King's palace.
The reason David was telling Uriah to go wash his feet is so that he would go home, sleep with his wife, and cover up the pregnancy. That's where the "hit the crapper" part comes from... it's King David telling Uriah to go home to his bathroom and wash his feet.
I believe that the whole reference to "Dead" is the fact that starting with these evil deeds, King David's life starts to go downhill, leading to his death.
P.S. Frank Black confirms that this song is indeed about David and Bathsheba in a recent SPIN article, (Summer 2004).
as far as I can tell, black francis wrote this song from the perspective of king david. i vaguely remember a biblical story in which king david sees bathsheba bathing and has her sent to his palace. meanwhile, he sends bathsheba's husband, uriah, off to the front line of battle, where he dies.
Suitably filthy song for the unsuitable and filthy deeds of King David.
As an epilogue to Bathsheba getting pregnant and Uriah getting sent to the front line and topped by the opposing army, David & Bathsheba's baby dies. Never say the Bible's light reading.
Shed is an easy rhyme with dead.
I think it's David telling her, "You're place is pretty small, baby. You can hardly breathe there. Come on over and live at my place."
zooey, yep that's correct, he sees her bathing and brings her over, impregnates her, and then he asks uriah to go over and have sex with his wife, so it seems as if he impregnated her, but uriah didn't agree, he sayed that it isn't fair for him to rest while other soldiers are dying, so david sent him to die in battle. (corrupt lil' bastard) and other than that, this song rules
This song is just another brilliant Pixies creation. And it's "I can't think of nothing/ I'd like to do a nursery rhyme" like melonforecstasy said.
9ign, I think "Uriah hit the crapper" is just a rude way of saying that he died. Frank Black said in some interview that the word "dead" in the song is a metaphor for lustful sex.
The song has depressing lyrics, but it makes me bob my head everytime I hear it.
(Sorry if this is a triple post, hope it's not)
Absolutely love this and all of Frank's biblical songs.
One question I have: any idea what the line "you're suffocating you need a good shed" means?
what an excellent song this is. I hear the distorted guitar as a clear inspiration for Nirvana's Radio Friendly Unit Shifter, among others. and the change of the funk riff from a major interval to a minor interval the second time it is played is absolutely genious!
Of course we all know the French refer to orgasm as "the little death," and this song makes the connection between sex and death just as explicit. David's lustful demands morph suddenly into suicidal urges. And of course in the story death does result from David's actions, though not his own.