red_justice ([info]red_justice) wrote,
@ 2005-11-18 13:51:00
Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend  Next Entry
When I was young I wanted to bomb things..........
......so filled with class resentment I was. Now I'm old and live in the suburbs. I still fight for the same causes but now I do it wearing a suit, organizing strikes, prosecuting unfair labor practice charges, negotiating collective bargaining agreements.

I won a sampler CD with strange tracks from a wide variety of artists. One song caught my fancy and it's sung by William Shatner (Captain Kirk) of all people.......and its driving beat and biting lyrics reminded me of why I used to want to bomb things.


COMMON PEOPLE
William Shatner
(featuring Joe Jackson)

She came from Greece,
she had a thirst for knowledge.
She studied sculpture at Saint Martin's College.
That's where I caught her eye.

She told me that her Dad was loaded.
I said, in that case I'll have a rum and coca-cola.
She said fine, and in thirty seconds time she said,

I want to live like common people.
I want to do whatever common people do.
I want to sleep with common people.
I want to sleep with common people, like you.

Well, what else could I do?
I said, I'll see what I can do.

I took her to a supermarket.
I don't know why, but I had to
start it somewhere, so it started there.

I said, pretend you've got no money.
She just laughed, and said
oh you're so funny. I said, yeah?
Well, I can't see anyone else smiling in here.

Are you sure you want to live like common people?
You want to see whatever common people see?
You want to sleep with common people?
You want to sleep with common people, like me?
But, she didn't understand,

[Jackson]
She just smiled and held my hand.

Rent a flat above a shop.
Cut your hair and get a job.
Smoke some fags and play some pool.
Pretend you never went to school.

But still, you'll never get it right.
When you're lying in bed at night
watching roaches climb the wall,
if you called your Dad he could stop it all.
Yeah.

[Shatner]
You'll never live like common people
You'll never do whatever common people do.
You'll never fail like common people.
You'll never watch your life slide out of view,
and dance and drink and screw

[Jackson and Shatner]
because there's nothing else to do.

[Shatner and Chorus]
Sing along with the common people.
Sing along, and it might just get you thru.'

[Chorus]
Laugh along with the common people.

[Shatner and Chorus]
Laugh along, even though they're laughing at you

[Shatner]
and the stupid things that you do
'cause you think that poor is cool.

[Jackson]
Like a dog lying in a corner,
they'll bite you and never warn you.
Look out.

[Shatner]
They'll tear your insides out
'cause everybody hates a tourist.

[Jackson]
'Cause Everybody hates a tourist,
especially one who thinks
it's all such a laugh.

[Shatner]
Yeah, and the chip stains' grease
will come out in the bath.

[Shatner and Jackson]
You will never understand
how it feels to live your life
with no meaning or control
and with nowhere left to go.

You're amazed that they exist
and they burn so bright,
while you can only wonder why.

Rent a flat above a shop.
Cut your hair and get a job.
Smoke some fags and play some pool.
Pretend you never went to school.

But still, you'll never get it right.
'Cause When you're lying in bed at night

[Shatner]
watching roaches climb the wall,
if you called your Dad he could stop it all.
Yeah.


You'll never live like common people

[Shatner and Jackson]
You'll never do what common people do.
You'll never fail like common people.
You'll never watch your life slide out of view
and dance and drink and screw
because there's nothing else to do.

[Chorus]
I want to sing with common people, like you.
I want to sing with common people, like you.
I want to sing with common people, like you.



(5 comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]jperceval
2005-11-18 10:37 pm UTC (link)
This is originally by the British band Pulp (you can see Pulp's lead singer Jarvis Cocker in the band Wyrd Sisters in the new Harry Potter movie, btw) -- I've loved it for years. I about died laughing when a friend of mine told me that Shatner, of all people, covered it! Does he actually *sing* it, or is it that speaking-style he thinks is singing?

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]red_justice
2005-11-19 03:25 am UTC (link)
I KNEW I'd heard the song before....was thinking maybe Iggy Pop or Jim Carrol.....but it had the british slang in it (fag for cigarette, etc.). Shatner kinda does the speak sing thing he does with Joe Jackson singing. It's actually a really compelling song the way they do it...not really a harmony since Shatner isn't singing but the interplay of the singing and Shatner's spoken word poetry delivery is oddly compelling.

(Reply to this) (Parent)

Thank you for your work.
[info]delatonja
2005-11-18 11:35 pm UTC (link)
Class resentment was my big angst to. I came from upper middle class income (but with great dysfunction). But as a young adult I was poor. I felt and heard the disgust in people's attitudes and actions. I didn't understand. I was no different than when I wasn't poor.

I learned there is great prejudice toward the poor. In fact my research at Evergreen set out to explain this. What I learned is the entire welfare system is/was based on the premise that the poor are deficient beings without potential.

My take is that this is all historically based. While the premise of America was partially built on leaving behind Aristocraty,the emergence of the industrial age and a lack of a minimum/livable wage sort of repeated or pronounced our historically embedded classism.

In a nut-shell the poor, working as disposables, not getting enough pay to buy food, and acting accordingly, -lethargic, in poor living conditions, etc. This allowed the more well off to judge them as deficient beings without potential.

How history binds us *sighs* Change is soooo slow. Your work is appreciated.

(Reply to this)


[info]lala67
2005-11-19 02:12 am UTC (link)
oooo, thanks for that, now I want to hear it.

I can relate to your feelings. Don't think I ever wanted to bomb things, but I can relate with that song. I grew up poor in one of the wealthiest places in the US. My mother worked for a company that provided nursing services to the uber wealthy - the Kennedy's, Posts, Pulitzers, etc.

People like Bush will never understand what it's like to be poor, to not have a safety net. I mean, he felt bad for Trent Lott b/c he lost ONE of his houses in MS. He couldn't fathom what it would be like to live in the 9th ward. The picture of him looking out the airplane window with his sad face on as he flew over the devestation after Katrina epitomizes his lack of understanding.

(Reply to this)


[info]kimatha
2005-11-19 03:34 am UTC (link)
I adore Joe Jackson. It sounds like the sort of thing he'd do.

(Reply to this)


(5 comments) - (Post a new comment)

Create an Account
Forgot your login or password?
Login w/ OpenID
English • Español • Deutsch • Русский…