Excuse Me While I Kiss This Guy: The Science of Misheard Song Lyrics 244
HughPickens.com writes Maria Konnikova writes in The New Yorker that mondegreens are funny but they also give us insight into the underlying nature of linguistic processing, how our minds make meaning out of sound, and how in fractions of seconds, we translate a boundless blur of sound into sense. One of the reasons we often mishear song lyrics is that there's a lot of noise to get through, and we usually can't see the musicians' faces. Other times, the misperceptions come from the nature of the speech itself, for example when someone speaks in an unfamiliar accent or when the usual structure of stresses and inflections changes, as it does in a poem or a song. Another common cause of mondegreens is the oronym: word strings in which the sounds can be logically divided multiple ways. One version that Steven Pinker describes goes like this: Eugene O'Neill won a Pullet Surprise. The string of phonetic sounds can be plausibly broken up in multiple ways—and if you're not familiar with the requisite proper noun, you may find yourself making an error.
Other times, the culprit is the perception of the sound itself: some letters and letter combinations sound remarkably alike, and we need further cues, whether visual or contextual, to help us out. In a phenomenon known as the McGurk effect, people can be made to hear one consonant when a similar one is being spoken. "There's a bathroom on the right" standing in for "there's a bad moon on the rise" is a succession of such similarities adding up to two equally coherent alternatives.
Finally along with knowledge, we're governed by familiarity: we are more likely to select a word or phrase that we're familiar with, a phenomenon known as Zipf's law. One of the reasons that "Excuse me while I kiss this guy" substituted for Jimi Hendrix's "Excuse me while I kiss the sky" remains one of the most widely reported mondegreens of all time can be explained in part by frequency. It's much more common to hear of people kissing guys than skies.
Other times, the culprit is the perception of the sound itself: some letters and letter combinations sound remarkably alike, and we need further cues, whether visual or contextual, to help us out. In a phenomenon known as the McGurk effect, people can be made to hear one consonant when a similar one is being spoken. "There's a bathroom on the right" standing in for "there's a bad moon on the rise" is a succession of such similarities adding up to two equally coherent alternatives.
Finally along with knowledge, we're governed by familiarity: we are more likely to select a word or phrase that we're familiar with, a phenomenon known as Zipf's law. One of the reasons that "Excuse me while I kiss this guy" substituted for Jimi Hendrix's "Excuse me while I kiss the sky" remains one of the most widely reported mondegreens of all time can be explained in part by frequency. It's much more common to hear of people kissing guys than skies.
Steely Dan (Score:4, Funny)
Are you reeling in the yeast
Stowing away the thyme
Are you gathering up the cheese
Have you had enough of mine
Rhianna (Score:2)
We Found Dove In A Soapless Place
Santana (Score:3, Funny)
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Anna Kendrick (Score:2)
Ricky Martin? (Score:2)
For years, my ex had been singing:
She never drinks the water, makes you order "fresh and pay"...
until I pointed out that it was probably French Champagne.
In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida Bay-bee (Score:5, Interesting)
In the garden of Eden, baby.
Grandaddy of them all i'int?
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Not really - that is the actual lyrics, a record exec or something like that couldn't understand them and thus the song name.
Re:In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida Bay-bee (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ob80's (Score:2)
Michael Winslow [youtube.com] of Police Academy fame
Creedence Clearwater (Score:2)
My personal favorite is from "Bad Moon Rising" by Creedence Clearwater Revival: "There's a bathroom on the right" instead of "There's a bad moon on the rise."
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How about Guns & Roses "Paradise City"?
Take me down to the very last city...
Oronyms are part of Tamil grammar. (Score:5, Interesting)
Most Indian languages are written exactly as they are spoken, no silent letters. They also have very strict rules about how the pronunciation changes when say, a "n" follows a "ga" or "cha" or "ta" or "tha" or "pa". In fact Hindi would reduce "N" to a dot, because the preceding consonant would unambiguously define the pronunciation of the n, even though n has three different glyphs representing the labial, palatal and the dental versions of it.
Steven Pinker mentions some African languages using seven tenses instead of the usual present, past and future. Jared Diamond mentions some Pacific Island language that has words for "towards the sea" and "away from the sea", as in "there is a speck of dirt on your seawards cheek"
The richness of the languages and constructs are astounding. And most of the 6000 languages of the world are moribund and are expected to go extinct soon.
The actual Zipf's law... (Score:5, Informative)
Speaking of the richness of languages, TFA oversimplifies some important language tendencies too.
For example, Zipf's law [wikipedia.org] (which is also linked in TFS) has little to do with "familiarity" or being "more likely to select a word or phrase that we're familiar with."
It basically is just an observation that the statistical ranking of word in most natural languages is inversely proportional to its frequency. From the Wiki article:
Thus the most frequent word will occur approximately twice as often as the second most frequent word, three times as often as the third most frequent word, etc. For example, in the Brown Corpus of American English text, the word "the" is the most frequently occurring word, and by itself accounts for nearly 7% of all word occurrences (69,971 out of slightly over 1 million). True to Zipf's Law, the second-place word "of" accounts for slightly over 3.5% of words (36,411 occurrences), followed by "and" (28,852). Only 135 vocabulary items are needed to account for half the Brown Corpus.
Yes, I suppose one might get out of this that "we tend to choose words we're more familiar with," but Zipf's law is a MUCH more specific constraint on distribution of word frequencies. And it's more a statement about what word frequency distributions ARE rather than how we come to choose words or what we may be "familiar with," unless by "familiar with" you just mean "occurs more frequently."
Moreover, there is some research that has shown a distribution somewhat like Zipf's law will emerge even in texts generated with artificial random "languages" composed of random letters... which makes the claims about how we're making conscious or sub-conscious choices about "familiarity" even less likely.
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In Japan these songs are known as "soramimi" or "mishearing" songs. They are usually in a foreign language, and the most famous one is Dragostea Din Tei by O-Zone, which I think are from Moldova. Anyway, the mis-heard words are influenced by the English vocabulary taught at school.
Interestingly this applies to onomatopoeia too. The song goes "sent that beep" (send a text message to someone, make their phone beep). Beep is misheard as "beef" because that sound is thought of as "pi pi" in Japanese, rather tha
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Benny lava!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Re:Oronyms are part of Tamil grammar. (Score:5, Informative)
Jared Diamond mentions some Pacific Island language that has words for "towards the sea" and "away from the sea", as in "there is a speck of dirt on your seawards cheek"
Hawaii has that.
mauka - towards the mountain
makai - towards the sea
The mauka side of a house is whichever one faces the mountain. If you live on the north side of the island, mauka is southward, and on the south side mauka is northward.
Also, if you are in Honolulu, and you are heading "eva", you are going west. If you are somewhere west of the town of Eva Beach [google.com], you might use that phrase, but I'm not sure whether it would mean you are going west or east.
I Wonder WHere You Are Tonight (Score:2)
A classic bluegrass tune "I Wonder Where You Are Tonight" by Jim & Jesse [youtu.be].
Often heard as "I'll Wear Your Underwear Tonight".
Slow moving Walter (Score:2)
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And then add some age (Score:2)
Turns out he thought We're up all night to get lucky sounded like a nice riff about gambling across the border.
Epcot Bait (Score:2)
When I was a kid, I thought there must be some special lure to get you to go to one of Disney's attraction. I'm talking about Janet Jackson's Epcot Bait [wikipedia.org].
SMB jet airliner (Score:2)
The Steve Miller band stumped me for years with "big old jet airliner," though I had no idea what he was saying. My best guess was Jeb O'Brian, whoever that was.
In my 20s I spent a LOT of time listening to and writing down lyrics for my cover band and finally figured that one out (and no, I didn't have the album, in fact, I rarely had the albums, thank you very much - not really my favorite music, but I played it).
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Yeah, I settled on "big-ol' Carolina" for years before figuring that one out.
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Poor enunciation (Score:2)
And in some cases it's purely a matter of poor enunciation and the singer not really caring that the sounds coming out of their mouth sound nothing like the words are supposed to.
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While that's somewhat true, the mere act of singing properly (extending vowels and turning dipthongs/consonants at the beginning of the "next" word) leads to this quite a bit. I once learned a song mostly from a commercial recording, then found out that the (somewhat odd) words I'd learned in one phrase were different than what I'd learned. Thing was - it didn't matter. The vowel and consonant sounds were identical for all practical purposes, and it didn't matter which "words" were there.
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People are terrible at enunciation in their normal speech and that's the reason why enunciation is terrible in songs. It has nothing to do with singing properly.
The most flagrant offender of enunciation is "chewing" where you have a hard T followed by the word "you". The common result is a chew such as "I want you" becoming "I wan chew". It's sloppy and lazy.
I say this as someone who has had the pleasure of performing solos in front of a live audience where you don't get the luxury of redos for that CD reco
Christmas Carols and Hymns (Score:2)
When I was a kid, I thought "Silent Night" telling me to "sleep in heavenly peas".
Then there was the hymn "Gladly the Cross I'd Bear", which I thought was about Gladly, the cross-eyed bear.
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My favorite is Rocking Around the Christmas Tree
"Later we'll have some fuckin' pie and do some caroling"
I can't believe you kiss your cock at night (Score:2)
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I can't believe it either, but it would impress me much.
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Kind of fits - looked up the lyrics and two lines before is "You're one of those guys who likes to shine his machine"
I will choose a bathysphere (Score:2)
As a kid I always wondered what the hell submersibles had to do with free will.
_this_ guy... (Score:2)
There is at least one released version of "Purple Haze" where he sings something very similar but instead of proclaiming to "kiss _this_guy" he sings "S'cuse me while I kiss _that_ guy."
It's the "Live at the Sandiego Sports Arena" version on the Jimi Hendrix Experience box set.
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There's a sort of reverse Mondegreen at the end of Queen's "One Vision" where they sneak in some funny words that most people pass off as more normal words. After repeating the title phrase frequently in the song, at the very end they sneak in a "fried chicken!" It's easy to miss, and was put in as a joke. I cracked up a bunch of college friends by pointing it out to them. They had to listen to it half a dozen times to believe it was really in there.
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Then there's Paul McCartney and Wings counting on the Mondegreen for Helen Wheels.
Comment removed (Score:3)
Blinded by the light... (Score:2)
Wrapped up like a douche, another boner in the night.
A timeless classic (Score:2)
I give you, "Ken Lee":
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
My Nephew And I (Score:3)
I'd made the same misinterpretation at his age; watching him sing those same wrong lyrics was like a time warp. First time I felt that weird "oh we've got some of the same 'DNA stuff' floating around in us" feeling. Wouldn't surprise me if it's because our brains are wired up quite similarly in some key places.
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Conversely as a kid I ended up singing "Robots in the skies" instead of "Robots in disguise" to the Transformers theme song. To be fair, many of them could fly.
Later in the same song where it says autobots "wage their battle" I was convinced it was "pledge their phantoms" which I guessed was some kind of swear on their souls sort of thing. Apparently I'm especially prone to these things, or was as a kid.
If I can... (Score:2)
Hands to Heaven (Score:2)
One of my favorites is "Hands to Heaven" by Breathe -- which is mostly a mawkish 1980s power ballad, until the chorus swells and...
"Tonight I may just tweak your ass..." [youtube.com]
Whoa! Getting a little raunchy there aren't we?
kissthisguy.com (Score:2)
So far there's only one reference to kissthisguy.com [kissthisguy.com] and it's about a particular mondegreen in a particular song. I think the summary does us all a disservice by not tying this site into the discussion. It's a site all about the topic.
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It's a fun site, though some of the entries are so far off I lean toward assuming they're jokes/spam rather than real. (Then again, someone above claimed they heard "pet shark" for "best shot" so maybe anything really is possible.) Good way to spend some time, though.
Don't go around tonight... (Score:2)
It's bound to take your life.
There's a bathroom on the right.
Chief Horses (Score:2, Interesting)
NASA used to employ stenographers to record meetings, who would then transcribe their notes. I remember reading some transcripts that repeatedly mentioned "chief horses", and it took me a few moments to realize it was "G-forces" being mentioned.
Charlene don't like it (Score:2)
How can I exist without you (Score:2)
How can I have sex without you (which actually kind of makes sense...)
Another (more well known mishearing):
Blinded by the light, Revved up like a deuce
I hear something like "...wrapped up like a douche". I just can't take that song seriously... it's the douche song.
Hi! I'm Damn Small. (Score:2)
REO Speedwagon (Score:2)
I believe Fogerty has recorded bathroom version (Score:2)
What about words you learned from reading? (Score:2)
Everybody in my family was a precocious reader -- me, my wife, my kids were all reading on an adult level while we were still quite young. So consequently we *all* have words we mispronounce because we learned them from reading before we heard anyone use them. It wasn't until I was in high school that I realized my word "sub-tull" and the word "suttle" I sometimes heard were one and the same -- "subtle".
The family will be sitting around and someone will use an unfamiliar word, then there will be a brief
In THIS day and age yes (Score:2)
In THIS day and age yes. In the day and age he made the song hell no. Never even dawned on me to think he says guy. But there are plenty of songs with hard to hear clearly words.
I'm not the only one that heard the bathroom... (Score:5, Funny)
oops... (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.amiright.com/misheard/stories/blacksabbath.shtml
Re:And the lawsuits (Score:4, Informative)
I don't think that's what TFA was talking about. In the Ozzie case, the dad found the son dead and a song named "suicide solution". None of the lyrics could be misunderstood to sound like he was advocating suicide. The grieving father saw the title and jumped to conclusions.
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We had a debate in a "Current Events" class in high school about violent lyrics. As a heavy metal fan, this was important to me. Unfortunately, at the time, I wasn't very familiar with the words to "Suicide Solution", and one of my classmates had transcribed only one verse, showing how it was "advocating suicide". (To keep this semi-relevant, I'll also add that he said the lyrics were hard to understand and took him a while to discern.) I told him he was taking it out of context, but unfortunately I cou
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Rihanna's "We found Dove in a soapless place".
This one always sounded like "we fell in love in a hopeless place" to me. It is supposed to be "we found love", but that is what happens when you give the word "found" two syllables.
Then there is Lady Gaga's Bad Romance. About 50% of the song's lyrics are unintelligible. "Want you bad romance" sounds something like "wajagunro mance."
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here [youtube.com]
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Jennifer Lopez' "Let's Get Loud" somehow always sounded like "Netscape Now!" to me.
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Not sure I'm 100% committed to this rock'n'roll lifestyle:
"I wanna rock'n'roll all night,
and part of every day"
- KISS
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Apple Strudels? anyone?
http://vimeo.com/29469155#t=75... [vimeo.com]
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I always thought it was a Thunder Chief.
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This guy is crying. Can't you see the tears roll down the street?
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The popular version you hear on radio all the time doesn't sound like this to me, but there is another version that is on the box set that really sounds like this to me.
Re:excuse me while I kiss this guy... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Like in the Family Guy theme? (Score:5, Funny)
I think this was intentional in Family guy.
The Censors it is Laugh and Cry.
To the listeners it is F'ing Cry
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I think this was intentional in Family guy. The Censors it is Laugh and Cry. To the listeners it is F'ing Cry
I can see how someone might hear Fing Cry, but I always heard Laugh and Cry. I mean, Laugh and Cry is much more common a phrase than F'ing Cry. and why F'ing Cry doesn't fit in context at all. "Lucky there's a man who positively can do all the things that make us F'ing Cry"? Why are we lucky there's a guy that can make us cry? Laugh and cry, yes. Just cry? No.
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The Censors it is Laugh and Cry.
To the listeners it is F'ing Cry
Look that up in your Funk and Wagnall's.
sigh I know, only people over 50 will get that one. The rest of you, get off my lawn.
Or... (Score:5, Funny)
...could just be most singers are mumbling and the damned music is too loud.
Now, excuse me while I look for my fucking hearing aids.
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"Blinded by the Light", the Manfredd Mann version....
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I still don't know why people wrap up douches.
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"Wrapped up like a douche and then I'll roll her in the night" - Drove me nuts for years. I couldn't hear it any other way.
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Because "revved up like a deuce in the middle of the night" just sounds like it must be the wrong lyric, a meaningless string of words that's nonsensical. Sure, "douche" is wrong, but "deuce" sounds wrong too. And the way it sounds on the Manfred Mann version it really is closer to "douche" in pronunciation, whereas the original has better enunciation even though the original lyric still doesn't make sense.
I've got a coworker from New Jersey who finds it ludicrous that anyone could make a mistake with tha
Re:Or... (Score:5, Informative)
It's a deuce coupe. As in a hotrodded 1930s Ford or something similar, it's a car, which is something people rev up.
we'll kill the fathead, coughed the Knight (Score:5, Funny)
She's got electric boobs, and mohair pubes, you know I heard it from a Pakistani...
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"In the American way." You mean not killing the French pronunciation like the Brits do. Garage, filet, foyer, valet...
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That one always translated to me as sounding like "Fleas on my dog"
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I remember hearing "Please Molly Dodd" when I was a kid, partially explained by some show with the title character Molly Dodd being on the air that my mom used to watch.
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The iPad's sound chip has phenomenal fidelity, as does most digital hardware. (Although laptops often suffer signal noise due to unshielded signal lines outside the chip.) If he thinks we're getting poorer quality than in the 60s, he's mad. An iPad can produce a higher quality recording than anything the Beatles ever produced.
On the other hand, if he's talking about his recent material, sound quality is meaningless if the song is unlistenably crap.
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cheap earbuds
This was the OP's point. And just because the iPad has a DAC, that doesn't mean perfect fidelity in today's terms.
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The lossy compression really doesn't lose a lot acoustically. Some harmonics and some complex high-frequency sounds (like cymbals) are affected, but this is highly dependent on bitrate and codec. At 192Kbps, AAC doesn't lose much at all.
The biggest issue is the overuse of range compression effects on the original master recording to make the sound more punchy. Listen to a Beatles recording vs. anything recent. Look at the waveform of any popular music and you'll see an almost solid block with no variati
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It is 'Watergate does not bother me, does your conscience bother you, tell the truth'.
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Reminds me of the old quest catchphrase "Committed to Service Inaction" that you'd hear on TV commercials.
The next version of the commercial they changed the pacing so that it was "Commited to. Service. ... In. ... Action" in a really halting speech.
The next version of the commercial, they either dropped the phrase or changed it entirely. It just wasn't possible to say it clearly.
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For years I interpreted that as "Awesome, shoot your own way".
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For me, Stevie Nicks with her "just like the wide ranger" (white-winged dove). That song has some others, but I don't remember them now.
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