The World Isn't Fair, REDWAVE

Dixon Carter Lee

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The World Isn't Fair
Randy Newman

When Karl Marx was a boy
he took a hard look around
He saw people were starving all over the place
while others were painting the town
The public spirited boy
became a public spirited man
So he worked very hard and he read everything
until he came up with a plan

There'll be no exploitation
of the worker or his kin
No discrimination 'cause of the color of your
skin
No more private property
It would not be allowed
No one could rise too high
No one could sink too low
or go under completely like some we all know

If Marx were living today
he'd be rolling around in his grave
And if I had him here in my mansion on the hill
I'd tell him a story t'would give his old heart
a chill

It's something that happened to me
I'd say, Karl I recently stumbled
into a new family
with two little children in school
where all little children should be
I went to the orientation
All the young mommies were there
Karl, you never have seen such a glorious sight
as these beautiful women arrayed for the night
just like countesses, empresses, movie stars and
queens
And they'd come there with men much like me
Froggish men, unpleasant to see
Were you to kiss one, Karl
Nary a prince would there be

Oh Karl the world isn't fair
It isn't and never will be
They tried out your plan
It brought misery instead
If you'd seen how they worked it
you'd be glad you were dead
just like I'm glad I'm living in the land of the
free
where the rich just get richer
and the poor you don't ever have to see
It would depress us, Karl
Because we care
that the world still isn't fair
 
he won't take that into consideration... no reference.

nice read though
 
Re: Re: Nice message...

Dixon Carter Lee said:


Randy Newman. Badly written.

LOL

Never having heard of Randy Newman I'm not pre-judging the piece based on the writer's fame (?)...

It is extremely badly written...

ppman
 
Cute

Pretty funny, Dixon. Did Randy Newman really write that song?

BTW, old Karl was a wonderful lover . . .
:p
 
Re: Re: Re: Nice message...

p_p_man said:


Never having heard of Randy Newman I'm not pre-judging the piece based on the writer's fame (?)...

It is extremely badly written...

ppman

Ah. You don't know him at all, then?

Randy Newman is one of the best song writers around. It's a performance piece, not a poem. Its charm and brilliance is in its "hardly there" melody and thrown-away delivery. Randy is about irony. Porter's "You're the Top" is a brilliant song despite its horrible metaphors -- if you read it with a fundamentalist humorless eye it would look terrible. But sung, with an understanding of its cheek, its wonderful, spare, and touching. Randy's songs are like that. They're all extremely well written.
 
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Re: Cute

REDWAVE said:
Pretty funny, Dixon. Did Randy Newman really write that song?

BTW, old Karl was a wonderful lover . . .
:p

FUCK! man. How old are you?
 
Actually I don't see much difference in Dixie Lee and Redwave besides one is the chief cocksucker and the other is a mere apprentice. On my vacation from my vacation, I decided to pick up a book "The Elusive Republic: The Political Economy in the Jeffersonian Era". Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, George Mason and the other libertarians/republicans seemed to champion a limited government to prevent becoming the mercantile disaster that England had become. Well, we have surpassed 18th century England in terms of detachment from the land and false brazen that those great patriots would shudder at our reality.

Redwave is calling for the simpler times of old by distributing more assets to the common man, minus the slavery and overt discrimination. Dixie Lee wants simpler times by giving more power to the corporate elite, who will then gladly pass the blessings to everyone. You guys are practically conjoined twins.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Nice message...

Dixon Carter Lee said:


Ah. You don't know him at all, then?

Randy Newman is one of the best song writers around. It's a performance piece, not a poem. Its charm and brilliance is in its "hardly there" melody and thrown-away delivery. Randy is about irony. Porter's "You're the Top" is a brilliant song despite its horrible metaphors -- if you read it with a fundamentalist humorless eye it would look terrible. But sung, with an understanding of its cheek, its wonderful, spare, and touching. Randy's songs are like that. They're all extremely well written.

When a piece, whatever type it is, has to be explained to me how brilliant it is and how I should listen to it, that just proves my point...

It's badly written.

Though as I said in the beginning I can appreciate the content and the message.

It could have been better constructed that's all...

ppman
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Nice message...

p_p_man said:


When a piece, whatever type it is, has to be explained to me how brilliant it is and how I should listen to it, that just proves my point...

It's a patter song, Dopey, not "Loch Lomond".
 
70/30 said:
Dixie Lee wants simpler times by giving more power to the corporate elite, who will then gladly pass the blessings to everyone.

I want exactly the opposite, but, please, go on, tell me more about my eyes...
 
Davy the fat boy

I like "Davy the Fat Boy," also by Randy Newman, much better.
 
It's the dirge-like melody that makes this one

Burn On
Randy Newman

There's a red moon rising
On the Cuyahoga River
Rolling into Cleveland to the lake

There's a red moon rising
On the Cuyahoga River
Rolling into Cleveland to the lake

There's an oil barge winding
Down the Cuyahoga River
Rolling into Cleveland to the lake

There's an oil barge winding
Down the Cuyahoga River
Rolling into Cleveland to the lake

Cleveland, city of light, city of magic
Cleveland, city of light, you're calling me
Cleveland, even now I can remember
'Cause the Cuyahoga River
Goes smokin' through my dreams

Burn on, big river, burn on
Burn on, big river, burn on
Now the Lord can make you tumble
And the Lord can make you turn
And the Lord can make you overflow
But the Lord can't make you burn

Burn on, big river, burn on
Burn on, big river, burn on
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Nice message...

p_p_man said:


When a piece, whatever type it is, has to be explained to me how brilliant it is and how I should listen to it, that just proves my point...

It's badly written.

Though as I said in the beginning I can appreciate the content and the message.

It could have been better constructed that's all...

ppman

But then you're not an accomplished known writer, are you? I'm also a Randy Newman fan.

Perhaps if you actually heard him, you'd think differently.

Or not.

Moon
 
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