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Baker Street Lyrics

Winding your way down on Baker Street
Light in your head and dead on your feet
Well, another crazy day
You'll drink the night away
And forget about everything

This city desert makes you feel so cold
It's got so many people, but it's got no soul
And it's taken you so long
To find out you were wrong
When you thought it held everything

You used to think that it was so easy
You used to say that it was so easy
But you're trying, you're trying now

Another year and then you'd be happy
Just one more year and then you'd be happy
But you're crying, you're crying now

Way down the street there's a light in his place
He opens the door, he's got that look on his face
And he asks you where you've been
You tell him who you've seen
And you talk about anything

He's got this dream about buying some land
He's gonna give up the booze and the one-night stands
And then he'll settle down
In some quiet little town
And forget about everything

But you know he'll always keep moving
You know he's never gonna stop moving
'Cause he's rolling, he's the rolling stone
And when you wake up, it's a new morning
The sun is shining, it's a new morning
But you're going, you're going home
Song Info
Submitted by
nelly On Feb 19, 2002
75 Meanings

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Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

To answer that question from heylister - How can this be a sad song when it's so uplifting?:

First of all, it doesn't lift me up. But I know what you mean. The music is powerful and impressive, it "rocks". The reason behind it is that the person this song is about, is depressed, he feels his life is like plastic. Emptiness. Yet he tries helplessly to find what he's missing, and he does that by going out, having fun. Hence the uplifting part. What he doesn't see, is that having fun only makes him more depressed. It enlarges the contrast. It's like having fun when you're not happy. Instant happiness, but it's fake. He's lonely. He tries to drink his problems away, or to find some distraction in any way by going out and partying. He - and the other person in the song - try to escape from their problems. They try to just walk away from it, even by moving to a quiet little town. Forget about everything. What they don't see is that the problem won't be solved by that. The problem is in themselves. You know he'll always keep movin', you know he's never gonna stop movin'.

Everything in this song, all lines are sad. This song is depressing (to me that's a very positive thing, I need these songs sometimes..they help). I think lots and lots of people live this way, and they aren't even aware of it..

@Falcon wise boy..

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

[Edit: weirdo sociopath]

@JayCeezy Thank you for your insights. Right on.

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

My dad used to know Gerry quite well, he still has family where I live (Paisley, Scotland).. The song is about his friend and former bandmate Billy Connolly - the comedian - when he first left their band and moved to London.

@div76 great songs fit the one person it is about AND INSPIRES MANY OTHERS TO ANSWER OR ADD AA IF THEY WERE WRITTEN & Sung About

@div76 Now we know exactly what its about !

@div76 Now we know exactly what its about ! The lyrics are mysterious and that Sax is so smooth.. The lead guitar comes in and its so simple , but so bad ass ! This should be in top 20 rock/pop songs of all time.. Classic!

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

Like nearly all of GRs lyrics - it's autobiographical. A talanted wealthy SCOT living in LONDON and hating it.BUT ..'The sun is shining, it's a new morning......going home' And boy does that sax and guirar solo make 'going home' feel GOOD

Yes, autobiographical but there is much more in the "sun is shining" verse.

He did what a lot of struggling performers do, he signed the first contract shoved in his face without understanding what it said.

He spent years getting out of that contract.

The new morning was the day he officially was free of his old contract. So, finally, he was able to get more of the money generated by the music he had written and could sign to a new label and record this song which made him uncomfortably famous.

All most performers really want is...

You are right, most of his album is autobiographical. He was doing a lot of travelling between Scotland and London (hence the album title, City to City) and he had a lot of time for reflection and contrast. And what a powerful statement musically and lyrically.

Falcon makes some great comments about the song below. All I would add is that in the song he sees a parallel between his life and that of his friend with the 'dreams about buying some land'. In a fatalistic way, he sees the 'die as cast'; that the very things that bind us...

@ceadmileuk , baker street in London? sure about that? last I checked London isn't a Desert City? however Phoenix is? and so is Dungeness... ? ? ? like most songs, tit really isn't about anything fictitious really, just some lines and rhymes..

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

i am originaly from canada and am now living in london england. when i am on the sub way i always go by bakerstreet and all of a sudden i have the sax intro stuck in my head.

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

Incredibly powerful song. Very depressing, actually brings tears to my eyes sometimes. My favorite lyrics from this song are:

"Another year and then you'll be happy Just one more year and then you'll be happy But you're cryin' You're cryin' now"

This really speaks to me -- you always think things will get better, but sometimes the time passes and things are still bad. It reminds me of college in the mid-90s when I was in freezing cold upstate NY and I would hear this song, and I just wanted to get out of there in the worst way, but I felt so trapped. This song really spoke to me and the lyrics mirrored exactly what I was feeling.

My Opinion

Is college in upstate NY really that bad? I always regretted not finding a way to go to Cornell until I read of all the suicides...

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

The song is what goes thru your head as you go to the London office to renegotiate the royalties for your songs; a very unpleasant chore when all you want to do is make good music.

As someone who works in the movie industry (not music, but similar bs to it), I applaud this interpretation, and it depresses me even more. Thank you. :)

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

I think this song is directly about Gerry's alcoholism. The emptiness of the world he's trying to fill with his drinking. He's light in his head an dead on his feet, trying to fill the void. He's specifically looking for external validation to find peace, but the hope that it would is again proving fruitless. He believed is was so easy to quit, but he's really struggling, just one more year, then another, but he continues to spiral. The person he is talking to is his own conscious checking up on him, he reiterates the same "dream", moving on from his crippling addiction, settling down finally, but he knows he's just lying to himself, he's a rolling stone, ultimately believing that if he just "hopes" things will change, that in itself will change the day.

This song is a really powerful song about addition, you believe there is always hope to change, but the hope itself is what continues the cycle, an excuse that the behavior will eventually end and everything will be well.

Song Meaning

@BreakOnThrough I like your comments. I really wanted this song to be about one person, but the pronoun usage is strange because sometimes it refers the third-person "he" and sometime it speaks to the second-person "you". I like your explanation. It reconciles the different pronouns and makes sense.

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

What cracks me up is that there are plenty of comments for the Foo Fighter's cover of this tune but none for the original. Thats a shame. The original is really great (and not that old relatively). I guess it shows that its primarily young people contributing to this site.

Cover art for Baker Street lyrics by Gerry Rafferty

Beautiful song! Saxophone is DEEP! I mean DEEP!!!! Real powerful song, Im only 19 and heard it on the radio, and falled in love with the song.

 
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