The title is part of the repeated line "Pull a u in a sexy car" in the song, which is why the title probably means "pulling a U-turn," a phrase used while driving a car, meaning to change direction and go the opposite way.
Another repeated phrase in the song is "and your two dollar love." Two dollars is very little money, which indicates it's cheap love, as in that it doesn't mean much to one of the two, or both, parties involved in the relationship. Add that to the fact of the earlier phrase talking about a "sexy" car, it hints at the relationship at hand being only about sex and nothing more.
This makes the remaining line, "got your black magic," in the same repeated verse, seem like it might be a metaphor for sexual drive.
Further sexual references are made with the later lines "get on the hood" or "don't clean it up," the latter meaning that something is dirty, and the narrator wants to keep it dirty.
Finally, the line "I'm not trying to wake you up," is repeated prominently throughout the song. It's something someone who is trying leave his/her sexual partner behind and sleeping, so as not to have to confront him/her (maybe for both of their sakes), after sexual intercourse, might say/think. This decision of his/hers might also be described as "pulling a U-turn," since s/he decides to go the opposite direction of his/her partner after having his/her black magic satisfied.
A very powerful song, conveying a common, often tragic, modern situation in very few lines.
The title is part of the repeated line "Pull a u in a sexy car" in the song, which is why the title probably means "pulling a U-turn," a phrase used while driving a car, meaning to change direction and go the opposite way. Another repeated phrase in the song is "and your two dollar love." Two dollars is very little money, which indicates it's cheap love, as in that it doesn't mean much to one of the two, or both, parties involved in the relationship. Add that to the fact of the earlier phrase talking about a "sexy" car, it hints at the relationship at hand being only about sex and nothing more. This makes the remaining line, "got your black magic," in the same repeated verse, seem like it might be a metaphor for sexual drive. Further sexual references are made with the later lines "get on the hood" or "don't clean it up," the latter meaning that something is dirty, and the narrator wants to keep it dirty. Finally, the line "I'm not trying to wake you up," is repeated prominently throughout the song. It's something someone who is trying leave his/her sexual partner behind and sleeping, so as not to have to confront him/her (maybe for both of their sakes), after sexual intercourse, might say/think. This decision of his/hers might also be described as "pulling a U-turn," since s/he decides to go the opposite direction of his/her partner after having his/her black magic satisfied.
A very powerful song, conveying a common, often tragic, modern situation in very few lines.