I met a man
He was a good man
Sailing and shoring
Dancing the beta can-can
Making me foreign
Oh yeah

I want to live in Los Angeles
Not the one in Los Angeles
No, not the one in South California
They got one in South Patagonia

I want to live in Los Angeles
Not the one Los Angeles
They got a bunch down in Moleville
They got a bunch more still

I want to live in Los Angeles
Not the one in Los Angeles
They got one in twenty-five two five
Works just like a beehive

I want to live in Los Angeles
Not the one in Los Angeles
Counting helicopters on a Saturday night
The symphony of the fair light

I hear them saying Los Angeles
In all the black and white movies
And if you think they star-spangled us
How come we say Los Angeleez?

I'll wait in Los Angeles
I'll wait in the pouring sun
No way
For not anyone
No way

I met a man
He was a good man
Sailing and shoring
He got a betatron, man
Talking that foreign
Oh yeah

I'll wait in Los Angeles
I'll wait in the pouring sun
No way
For not anyone
No way

I'll wait in Los Angeles
I'll wait in the pouring sun
No way
For not anyone
No way


Lyrics submitted by benben

Los Angeles Lyrics as written by Charles Thompson

Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

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Los Angeles song meanings
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    General Comment

    Maybe even if the song is titled "Los Angeles" and mentions a city called like that, it's not speaking about those cities in particular, but maybe it uses them to make a reference to something else. There is, in fact, a small city in Chile named Los Angeles, but it is not located in the Patagonia, since Patagonia is a vast portion of plains located mailny in Argentina. Even though Patagonia includes some Chilean territory, Los Angeles lays more to the north. But I think Frank Black's idea was to make reference to this Chilean spot.

    Perhaps this song deals with the Mexican/Spanish influence on California, and hence the questioning about the name of the city even though the hegemony of an English-speaking country over the U.S.A.

    Alienoon March 12, 2007   Link

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