Wednesday, July 26, 2017

"Kokomo"

For whatever reason, I started thinking about "Kokomo" this morning.  The only album I have it on is the compilation Sounds of Summer: The Very Best of the Beach Boys, which I haven't listened to since last September.  In any case, I realized something about the first section:
Aruba, Jamaica, ooh, I wanna take ya
Bermuda, Bahama, come on, pretty mama
Key Largo, Montego, baby, why don't we go
The listing of places (a rhetorical technique called cataloguing) recalls the earlier Beach Boys song "Surfin' U.S.A." specifically these two sections:
You'll catch 'em surfin' at Del Mar
Ventura County Line
Santa Cruz and Trestle
Australia's Narrabeen
All over Manhattan
And down Doheny Way
At Haggerty's and Swami's
Pacific Palisades
San Onofre and Sunset
Redondo Beach L. A.
All over La Jolla
And Waimea Bay
I referenced the lyrics found here, although I'm dubious of their accuracy.  It's clearly "You'll catch 'em" rather than "You'd catch 'em" and "We'll all be planning out a route" rather than "We'll all be planning that route."  I also referenced the Wikipedia page to verify and correct some of the locations.

The music for "Surfin' U.S.A." was taken from Chuck Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen," so it seems that the notion of cataloguing places is also taken from Berry's naming various locations in "Sweet Little Sixteen."  I'm not sure whether the catalogue of places in "Kokomo" was meant to be reminiscent of that in "Surfin' U.S.A." (or "Sweet Little Sixteen"), but it is the same technique.

Thursday, July 13, 2017

"Heroes and Villains"

Yester-day I listened to the Smiley Smile/Wild Honey reissue from 1990, and I remembered a reference in "Heroes and Villains" that I'd recognized before but had forgotten about.  It's in the lines:
My children were raised, you know they suddenly rise.
They started slow long ago, head to toe; healthy, wealthy and wise.
(They're how they're written in the liner notes from the 2004 SMiLE.)

The "healthy, wealthy, and wise" part seems to come from "Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise."  (I'd thought this was a Benjamin Franklin quote, but The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations says it's a proverb from the 15th century.)  Both the lyrics and the proverb rhyme "rise" with "wise," which makes me a bit more confident that they're related.