Me262 Lyrics
This is obviously a song about the legendary Messerschmitt Me 262, the world's first operational turbojet fighter aircraft. It was powered by Junkers Jumo 004 engines and several two-seater "B" trainer variants of the Me 262 were adapted as night fighters. Serving with 10 Staffel, Nachtjagdgeschwader 11, Night Fighter Unit, near Berlin, these few aircraft (alongside several single seat examples) accounted for most of the 13 Mosquitoes lost over Berlin in the first three months of 1945. the two-seat trainer was largely unavailable many pilots had to do their first flight in a jet in a single seater without an instructor.
It is not known if the song refers to the last flight of the Luftwaffe: The suicide attack on the Eighth Air Force, April 7, 1945.
I believe the "Captain Von Ondine" reference is a tribute to the owner of the popular New York City bar, Ondine's, where rock 'n' roll royalty hung out in the early 1970s.
My guess is that it refers to April 10, 1945, when 1,232 bombers (with about 800 escorts!) attacked targets in the Magdeburg and Berlin/Oranienburg area, and were hit by about 50 Me 262s. See http://www.goldengatewing.org/proptalk/speaker.cfm?ID=131 for an interesting story.
My guess is that it refers to April 10, 1945, when 1,232 bombers (with about 800 escorts!) attacked targets in the Magdeburg and Berlin/Oranienburg area, and were hit by about 50 Me 262s. See http://www.goldengatewing.org/proptalk/speaker.cfm?ID=131 for an interesting story.
That seems to fit better than the April 7 "Schulungslehrgang Elbe" mission.
That seems to fit better than the April 7 "Schulungslehrgang Elbe" mission.
It wouldn't be a suicide attack because the speaker plans on living through it. He says "Must these Englishmen live that I might die Must they live that I might die"
Meaning that he is considering the war merely as a self-survival thing. He's only killing the British because otherwise they will kill him.
I disagree, I think it is the last flight. He asks "must they live?", this doesn't say that he's determined to. I'm guessing that the last two chords going downwards indicate the plane crashing. I think he dead.
I disagree, I think it is the last flight. He asks "must they live?", this doesn't say that he's determined to. I'm guessing that the last two chords going downwards indicate the plane crashing. I think he dead.
@andaloudog He doesn't ask, "Must they live?" He states, "Must they live that I might die," as in "If these Englishmen should live, I could die."
@andaloudog He doesn't ask, "Must they live?" He states, "Must they live that I might die," as in "If these Englishmen should live, I could die."
On April 7th 1945 60 Me-262's shot down 25 allied bombers over Westphalia without losing a single plane. (25 bombers wait ripe).
Typically, the jets would dive below the bomber formations, throttle down and make a high-G climb to lose speed before leveling off and firing their rockets. (G-load disaster from the rate of climb).
In 1945, a single squadron of 45 Me-262 fighters claimed 427 kills, 300 of which were heavy bombers. (...how red were the skies... it was dark over Westphalia)
That is one great WWII history lesson!
That is one great WWII history lesson!
This was my first favorite BOC song, and remains in the top 5. I love the way the lyrics are tossed in there and the philosophical lyric "Must these Englishmen live that I might die?" Done live, there was always an extended period during the "marching and bombing" segment of the song where Buck just took off and did whatever came to mind. Truly a concert rock experience.
My only gripe with this otherwise amazing track is that Messerschmitt 262s did not fire R4M rockets from their "snout". Rockets were wing mounted, with the nose of the plane being fitted with Rheinmetall-Borsig MK 108 30mm cannon (although admittedly there were a quartet of these).
@PaulZero Perhaps the lyrics were written with a comma, as “Blasts from clustered R4M, quartets in my snout.” i.e., the pilot might be listing his weaponry, with the comma separating the rocket clusters and the cannons quartets.
@PaulZero Perhaps the lyrics were written with a comma, as “Blasts from clustered R4M, quartets in my snout.” i.e., the pilot might be listing his weaponry, with the comma separating the rocket clusters and the cannons quartets.
I saw them play this July 14,2022 and Buck said it was "about the first fighter jet"