Lyric discussion by ctlizyrd 

The story is set in California, where Dolby was living at the time. He talks about a 'bar where all the English meet' in Hollywood, CA.

She used to drink in the hills, only now she drinks in the valleys. I think this line is a clever way of saying that when she used to drink, she was more upbeat, more of a party girl. Now, she drinks to forget, she is depressed.

The girl in question is from a generally well-to-do large town south of London (Croyton). As England is an island, it's an amazing thing to move to a place like California and have 'a thousand miles of real estate to choose from'. She has means, but money isn't everything...

The lyric above is wrong - it should say, "Pill in hand, you can hear his golden surfer BOYS..."

This suggests that the boys aren't hers, or doesn't seem like they are. Her partner is abusing her, and she's probably taking a pill to calm her nerves. He's 'buried in the screenplay of his feature' - he doesn't even acknowledge her or her hurt.

I think the chorus is a wistful look at how she feels love should have been for her, after all, she is in Hollywood. Blue filter lensing and Vaseline were used to blur the picture for close ups and conceal lines in the actor's faces. Look at movies from the 50's and 60's (and even some TV shows!), and you'll see this effect often. In this context, I think it means she's getting older, perhaps losing her looks.

'Rushes' or 'dailies' are quickly developed, unedited film snippets. When a director wants to see how a scene looks, he calls for that day's rushes - usually with a 24 hour turnaround time. These days, of course, everything is digital, but back then, this is how it was done.

'All the rushes look the same', means that her life is the same film over and over again, every single day.

Dolby is not happy. I think this was a real friend of his and he's saying here that it's a movie he wouldn't pay to see again if it's the one with 'him' in. 'Him', presumably being the abusive husband figure.

He wants to rescue her (hold to me and we'll climb), but instead she commits suicide. He suggests that her death, while meaningless to some, is VERY important to Dolby.

Listening to the surf at the end, the radio reports the PERFECT weather for surfing...

My favorite Dolby song - ever...

Excellent, and my inetrpretation as well, only I think the line about "Mummy won't come out of the bathroom," indicates that the golden surfer boys ARE the woman's sons. HIS golden surfer boys means that this woman's sons were fathered by the abusive partner.

Also, I think the narrator refers to the woman' sons as "HIS --" meaning the abusive fellow's -- "golden surfer boys" because he -- the narrator -- is in love with this woman and feels that he should have been the father of her sons instead of the aggressive lout she's partnered to now

@CuteSparkina I'd not considered those points, and I think your are right about that. I first listened to this song when I was 20, but probably didn't 'get 'it' until I hit 35 or so. 'The Flat Earth' is just one of those albums you couldn't recreate if all the stars and planets aligned just so again.

Truly a different age...

Thanks for your comments!

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