List of answer songs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of answer songs, songs that refer directly to another song or that are meant as a reply to another song. It is organized alphabetically by title.
Songs that refer to themselves should be listed at List of self-referential songs.
Contents |
---|
[edit] 0–9
- "21 Answers" by Lil Mo is written as a response track to 50 Cent's "21 Questions"
[edit] A
- "And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda" by Eric Bogle, about a young Australian who comes of age in the Battle of Gallipoli, refers to the Banjo Paterson song "Waltzing Matilda".
- "Annie Had A Baby" and "Annies's Aunt Fanny" by Hank Ballard are followup songs to his Work With Me, Annie.
- "The Answer Is Clear" by Peter Murphy is an answer to former Bauhaus bandmate Daniel Ash's song "The Movement of Fear" (recorded by Ash's side project Tones on Tail), which was a song written in second person to Murphy.
- "Ashes To Ashes" by David Bowie makes reference to the character of Major Tom from his earlier "Space Oddity", talking about how connection was re-established with the wiser-for-the-wear astronaut who exiled himself in space. He also returns in Bowie's duet with Pet Shop Boys Hallo Spaceboy where the original wordings are thrown around creating a catastrophe scenario during take-off with references to sexual ambivalence.
[edit] B
- "Baby Bitch" by Ween is a bitter song about the same person that the earlier Ween song "Birthday Boy" was written about. The singer mentions; "Wrote 'Birthday Boy' for you, babe".
- "Baby, Hold On" by Eddie Money is a response to "Que Sera Sera (Whatever Will Be)"[citation needed] by Doris Day with the lyrics "'whatever will be, will be...the future is ours to see.'"
- "Bad Old World" by New Model Army is a response to the same band's "Green and Grey". "Green and Grey" takes the form of a letter from Justin Sullivan to an old friend who moved away to "the land of gold and poison" and dropped out of touch. "Bad Old World" is the friend's response.
- "Bandwitch" by Broken Social Scene contains a fragment from Carole King's popular classic, "You've Got A Friend".
- "Bark, Battle and Bawl" by The Platters is a response to "Shake, Rattle and Roll" by Big Joe Turner and Bill Haley and His Comets, and opens with a direct reference to the opening verse of that song.
- "The Best Song In the World" (aka "Tribute" in the album version) by Tenacious D refers obliquely to "Stairway to Heaven" by Led Zeppelin; the stage version contains lots of Stairway riffs; the album version, for legal reasons, contains much less.
- "Boom I Got Your Boyfriend" by M.C. Luscious is an answer to "Boom I Got Your Girlfriend" by Boyz From the Bottom. The group also produced the response song, which was more popular than the original.
- "Bossy" by Kelis has an answer lyric to 50 Cent's "Piggybank" The Lyric "That's right, I brought all the boys to the yard/And that's right, I'm the one who's tattooed on his arm," in response to 50 Cent rapping, "Kelis said her milkshake bring all the boys to the yard/Then Nas went and tattooed the bitch on his arm" in his song.
- "But Julian, I'm a Little Older Than You", by Courtney Love, is an answer to The Strokes' song "Meet Me In The Bathroom", about a fling between Love and Julian Casablancas.
- "Bye Bye Johnny" by Chuck Berry is a sequel to and references the events in "Johnny B. Goode".
- "BB King Was Wrong" by John Gorka answers "The Thrill is Gone" by saying "BB King was wrong/The thrill, it isn't gone/The thrill, it is here, it is now, it is strong."
[edit] C
- "The Chelsea Hotel Oral Sex Song" by Jeffrey Lewis refers to "Chelsea Hotel #2" by Leonard Cohen.
- "Complete Control" by The Clash begins "They said, release 'Remote Control', but we didn't want it on the label," referring to CBS Records releasing their song "Remote Control" as a single against the band's wishes.
- "Courtroom In the Sky" by Dick Nolan is a sequel to his previous song "Aunt Martha's Sheep".
- "Crazy in Love" by Beyonce f/ Jay-Z answer to the hit song which was released in 2003 named "03 Bonnie & Clyde"
- "Clown" by Mariah Carey on her Charmbracelet album was the answer to Eminem after the alleged sex affair.
- "Confessions Part III" by "Weird Al" Yankovic on his album Straight Outta Lynwood parodies "Confessions Part II" by Usher, adding more comic confessions by Usher's character.
[edit] D
- "Daddy's Home" by Shep and the Limelites refers to "A Thousand Miles Away" by The Heartbeats, for whom the self-same Shep was also the lead singer.
- Daddy's home - to stay
- I'm not a thousand miles away
- "Dance Around the Clock" by Bill Haley & His Comets is a sequel to "Rock Around the Clock".
- "Dawn of Correction" was a minor hit for a group called The Spokesmen; it was an answer song to "Eve of Destruction" by Barry McGuire.
- "Dear Boy" was one of several answer songs by Paul McCartney and Wings to John Lennon's "How Do You Sleep?".
- "The Devil Comes Back to Georgia" by the Charlie Daniels Band is a sequel to their previous song "The Devil Went Down to Georgia".
- "Dog in Sweden" by X-Ray Spex references The Stooges' "I Wanna Be Your Dog", featuring the song's famous guitar riff in the intro and including the line:
- Iggy says I wanna be your dog,
- But I want you to be a devil dog.
- "Don't Wanna Know Why", written by Ryan Adams, on the Whiskeytown album Pneumonia was written in response to a song called "You Never Say Goodbye" by an unnamed musician.
- "Dreams" by Gabrielle was a positive response to Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" and originally contained the same guitar sample.
[edit] E
- "Eden is Burning" by John Mellencamp starts with the line, "Diane and Jack went to the movies," an obvious reference to his classic, "Jack and Diane."
- "El Paso City" by Marty Robbins refers in detail to his earlier hit "El Paso," although he says "I don't recall who sang the song, but I recall the story that I heard."
- "Emancipate Myself" by Thirsty Merc opens with the lines "'Every breath you take...' as if I'd sing that song to you", referring to The Police's song of the same name (and misinterpreting it).[citation needed]
- Exile in Guyville (the album) by Liz Phair is generally considered to be a song-by-song response to The Rolling Stones' classic Exile on Main Street.
- "Everytime" by Britney Spears is a response to Justin Timberlake's song "Cry Me A River". She refers to the song in the line "I may have made it rain, please forgive me. My weakness caused you pain, and this song's my sorry" - referring to her "supposed" affair.
[edit] F
- "Fred Jones Part 2" by Ben Folds is a sequel to "Cigarette" by Ben Folds Five
- "F.U.R.B. (Fuck U Right Back)" by Frankee answers Eamon's "Fuck It (I Don't Want You Back)".
- "Fuck Vans" by Drino Man answers to The Pack's Vans.
- According to critics, "Fourth Time Around" is Bob Dylan's answer to The Beatles' "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)." While Dylan doesn't directly refer to the Beatles song, his song is uncannily similar in melody and subject matter.
[edit] G
- "Garden Party" by Rick Nelson is a rueful comment on the audience at a Madison Square Garden show that booed him when he played some of his new songs:
- "Played them all the old songs, thought that's why they came
- "No one heard the music, we didn't look the same
- "I said hello to "Mary Lou", she belongs to me
- "When I sang a song about a honky-tonk, it was time to leave"
- "Get Up" by R.E.M. was written by Michael Stipe in response to the song "Like the Weather" by folk-rock band 10,000 Maniacs.
- "Glass Onion" by The Beatles repeats lyrics from and makes reference to "Strawberry Fields Forever", "There's A Place", "I'm Looking Through You", "I Am the Walrus", "Within You, Without You", "Lady Madonna", "Fixing a Hole", and "The Fool on the Hill"
- "I told you about strawberry fields
- you know the place where nothing is real...
- We'll here's another place you can go,
- where everything flows..."
- . . .
- "...Looking through a glass onion..."
- . . .
- "I told you about the walrus and me, man
- you know we're as close as can be, man
- Well here's another clue for you all,
- The walrus was Paul."
- . . .
- "...Standing on the cast iron shore- yeah...
- Lady Madonna trying to make ends meet- yeah"
- . . .
- "I told you about the fool on the hill
- I tell you man he's living there still"
- . . .
- "Fixing a hole in the ocean.."
- "God, Pt 2" from U2's Rattle and Hum uses the same lyrical structure as John Lennon's "God".
- "God Save The Queen" by the Sex Pistols refers to "God Save The Queen", naturally.
- "God Tonight (Beat Me Senseless Mix)" by Real Life contains the line "Couldn't I just send you an angel instead?", which of course refers to their hit, "Send Me An Angel". It could be a reference to the song of the same name by Scorpions.
- "Goodies" by Ciara answers Petey Pablo's 2004 rhythmic hit "Freek-A-Leek", shortly four months after its release.
- "Gordon's Not A Moron" by Julie and Gordon is a reply to "Jilted John" by Jilted John, supposedly by the girl who jilted him and her new boyfriend. The title refers to the original song's refrain "Gordon is a moron".
- "Got A Job" by Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, a response to "Get A Job" by The Silhouettes
[edit] H
- "He'll Have to Stay" Jeannie Black answers "He'll Have To Go" by Jim Reeves.
- "Hepcat Season" by Skinnerbox is an answer to Hepcat's "Open Season... is Closed", which is in turn a response to the Stubborn All-Stars' "Open Season".
- "Hit or Miss" by The Damned refers to The New York Dolls' "Looking for a kiss": "Another hit or miss, I was looking for a kiss"
- "Hope" from R.E.M.'s Up uses the same lyrical structure as Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne." Because of this, Cohen is credited as a co-writer of the song.
- "How Do You Sleep?" by John Lennon attacks Paul McCartney, saying "The sound you make is muzak to my ears" and "The only thing you done was Yesterday". McCartney and Wings responded with several answer songs.
- The title of "How He Wrote Elastica Man" by Elastica, featuring guest Mark E. Smith on vocals, refers to the song "How I Wrote Elastic Man" by Smith's band The Fall. (Note that "Elastic Man" is not actually the title of a song Smith ever wrote.)
- "Hungry Daze" from Deep Purple's Perfect Strangers album contains the line "We all came down to Montreux, but that's another song" referring to Smoke On The Water.
- "Hot Rod Lincoln" by Commander Cody and the Lost Planet Airmen is the 1972 answer song to 1950's "Hot Rod Race" by various artists.
- "Hey Lloyd, I'm ready to be Heartbroken" by Camera Obscura is an answer to "Are You Ready To Be Heartbroken" by Lloyd Cole and the Commotions.
[edit] I
- "I Already Know" by Noelle, the first reply song to Mario Winans' I Don't Wanna Know
- "I Am The Walrus" by The Beatles makes reference to one of their previous songs "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds"
- "See how they fly like Lucy in the sky, see how they run"
- "I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major General" from The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan refers to an entire G&S operetta by title: ". . . and whistle all the airs from that infernal nonsense, Pinafore!"
- "I Hate Hate Haters" by NOFX was a humorous response to another punk rock song, "I Hate Hate" by the Reagan Youth.
- "I May Just Have To Murder James Blunt" by Mitch Benn is a response to You're Beautiful by James Blunt.
- "I Wanna Be A Homosexual" by Screeching Weasel was a humorous response to another punk rock song, "I Don't Wanna Be A Homosexual" by the Sloppy Seconds.
- "If You Want To Sex Me Up" by TCF Crew is an answer song to "I Want To Sex You Up" by Color Me Badd.
- "(I'll Never Be) Your Maggie May" by Suzanne Vega is an answer song to Rod Stewart's "Maggie May".
- "I'll Save The Last Dance For You" by Damita Jo is the answer song to "Save The Last Dance For Me" by The Drifters. [1]
- "(I'm Not Your) Wild Thing" by Dizzie Dee is a female answer version of Tone Loc's "Wild Thing".
- "I'm Sorry (But So Is Brenda Lee)" by Ben Vaughn refers to Brenda Lee's "I'm Sorry"
- "I'm That Type Of Nigga" by Tony MF Rock is a hardcore reply to L.L. Cool J.'s track "I'm That Type Of Guy" which was deemed as too soft and radio friendly by most hardcore rappers and rap aficionados.
- "I've Never Been This Far Before" by Carroll Baker is an answer song to Conway Twitty's "You've Never Been This Far Before".
- "It'll Chew You Up and Spit You Out" by Concrete Blonde has the same chorus and melody as the same band's "Still in Hollywood".
- "It Still Ain't Easy" by Long John Baldry is a follow up song to "It Ain't Easy" that he recorded 20 years earlier.
- "It Wasn't God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels" by Kitty Wells is an answer song to "The Wild Side of Life" by Hank Thompson.
- "It's My Life" by Bon Jovi refers to Frank Sinatra's "My Way" in the line "like Frankie said I did it my way". It also contains the line "for Tommy and Gina, who never backed down", referring to the couple in the earlier Bon Jovi song "Living On A Prayer".
- The title, "I Wrote Holden Caulfield" by Screeching Weasel, is a reference to the title of Green Day's "Who Wrote Holden Caulfield?"
[edit] J
- "Jealousy" by Club Nouveau answers Timex Social Club hit "Rumours."
- "Judy's Turn To Cry" by Lesley Gore refers to her "It's My Party" ("It's my party and I'll cry if I want to...").
- "'Cause now it's Judy's turn to cry, Judy's turn to cry, Judy's turn to cry-y-y-y-y-y, 'cause Johnny's come back (Johnny's come back, come back) to me."
- 'Julian Cope Is Dead' from the 1986 Bill Drummond album 'The Man' is an answer to the song 'Bill Drummond Said' from Julian Cope's 1984 album 'Fried'.
- 'James Brown Is Still Alive' from Holy Noise is an answer to the song 'James Brown Is Dead' from LA Style.
- 'Who the fuck is James Brown' from Traumatic Stress is an answer to the song 'James Brown Is Dead' from LA Style and 'James Brown Is Still Alive' from Holy Noise.
[edit] K
- "Kick It" is a duet betweeen Iggy Pop and Peaches. Peaches says to Iggy "I'm not sixteen but I got leather boots..." in reference to the Stooges song "Sixteen"-- to which Iggy replies "Aw go fuck your pain away" in reference to Peaches' song by that name.
- "Killing Me Softly" by Lori Lieberman (Roberta Flack, The Fugees), often thought to be the answer song to "American Pie" by Don Mclean, is actually the answer song to Mclean's lesser known song on his American Pie album: "Empty Chairs". See L. Lieberman comments, Oct. 2002., [2]
[edit] L
- "LeRoy" by Claire Hogan includes a verse in which the singer chastises her man for listening to "Shake, Rattle and Roll" (a song made popular by both Big Joe Turner and Bill Haley and His Comets").
- "Let Me Roll It" is the second of Paul McCartney and Wings' answer songs to Lennon's "How Do You Sleep?".
- "Let's Twist Again" by Chubby Checker is a sequel to his song from the previous year "The Twist".
- "Little Joe" was recorded by Red Sovine to refute the song "Teddy Bear's Last Ride", and to show that the little boy from the song "Teddy Bear" was alive and well, and driving a truck of his own.
- "Little Marie" by Chuck Berry is a continuation of the storyline from Berry's earlier recording "Memphis, Tennessee".
- "London Boys" by Johnny Thunders, putting down the Sex Pistols. is an answer to the Sex Pistols' "New York" putting down the New York Dolls. Interestingly, Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols plays guitar on the Thunders song.
- "Loom" by Ani DiFranco is an answer to "Vivid" by Greg Brown (which is an answer to DiFranco's "This Bouquet").
- "Lost to a Geisha Girl" by Skeeter Davis is an answer song to "Geisha Girl" by Hank Locklin.
- "Love Will Tear Us Apart" by Joy Division was written in response to Neil Sedaka's "Love Will Keep Us Together"
[edit] M
- "Mannish Boy", originally "Manish Boy" by Muddy Waters was an answer to (and simultaneously a cover of) Bo Diddley's "I'm a Man".
- "Marshall Mathers" by Eminem refers to "Slim Anus" by Insane Clown Posse
- "'Slim Anus', you damn right slim anus. I don't get fucked in mine like you two little flaming faggots."
- "Major Tom" by Peter Schilling refers to "Space Oddity" by David Bowie
- "Me in Honey" by R.E.M. is an answer to "Eat for Two" by 10,000 Maniacs. The latter song dealing with an unexpected pregnancy from a young girl's perspective; the former song is from the young boy's point of view.
- "Memphis" by PJ Harvey refers to "Morning Theft" by Jeff Buckley, which he wrote about her.
- "but sometimes you've got to send it away to bring it, to bring it back again"
- "My Dick, My Sack" by Too $hort is a male's fellatio-inspired response to Khia's "My Neck, My Back (Lick it)," which is about cunnilingus.
[edit] N
- "Never Again" by Oleander contains lyrics that are a direct reference to "Take It On The Run" by REO Speedwagon ("Heard it from a friend who... heard it from a friend who...")
- "Never Been in a Riot" by The Mekons was written in response to "White Riot" by The Clash.
- "The Night I Fell in Love" by Pet Shop Boys is a parody of Eminem's alleged homophobia and refers to his song Stan (itself referring to a Phil Collins song, see below).
- "Then he joked 'hey man,
- your name isn't Stan, is it?
- We should be together!'"
- "Nineteen Hundred and Eighty Five" is the final Paul McCartney and Wings answer song to Lennon's "How Do You Sleep?".
- "No Pigeons" by Sporty Thievz is an answer song to "No Scrubs" by TLC.
- "No Reason For A Season" by Dr. Ring-Ding and the Senior Allstars is a response to the feud between Alex Desert of Hepcat and King Django of Skinnerbox, attacking both artists and setting Dr. Ring-Ding up as the superior toaster.
- "Not If You Were The Last Dandy On Earth" by The Brian Jonestown Massacre is a parody of "Not If You Were The Last Junkie On Earth" by The Dandy Warhols
[edit] O
- "Oh Neil" by Carole King, in response to Neil Sedaka's hit song "Oh, Carol", a song lamenting their former relationship.
- "Old Hippie (The Sequel)" and "Old Hippie Christmas" by the Bellamy Brothers are follow up songs to their previous song "Old Hippie".
- "Open Season... Is Closed" by Hepcat is an answer to The Stubborn All-Stars's "Open Season".
[edit] P
- "Paying for that Back Street Affair" by Kitty Wells is an answer to "Back Street Affair" by Webb Pierce
- "Peggy Sue Got Married" by Buddy Holly and the Crickets refers to their hit "Peggy Sue." In the later song, Holly relates a rumor that the girl who was once the object of his affections has wed someone else.
- "Pull Over" by Trina refers to, and answers, a number of recent and classic "ass songs," songs that proclaim the beauty of women with large buttocks. Among these are:
- "Thong Song" by Sisqó: "Dumps in the truck, thighs like what / Ain't nann ho' got more booty in the butt / Sisqó made that song when he seen me in a thong th-thong thong thong"
- "Whoa" by Black Rob: "Turn on the cameras start the freak show / This ass even make Black Rob say whoa"
- "Back That Azz Up" by Juvenile: "I got a fat ass playa n***a can't pass up / Juvenile couldn't even back this azz up"
- "Punk Rock 101" by Bowling for Soup makes a crack at "Living on a Prayer" by Bon Jovi:
"Seven years later he works as a waiter She married a trucker and he's never there The story never changes, just the names and faces Like Tommy and Gina they're living on a prayer (spoken, incredulous) Did you just say that?"
[edit] Q
- "Queen of the House" by Jody Miller answers "King of the Road" by Roger Miller
[edit] R
- "The Real Slim Shady" by Eminem replies to "The Bum Bum Song" by Tom Green and "The Bad Touch" by Bloodhound Gang
- "But it's cool for Tom Green to hump a dead moose / My bum is on your lips, my bum is on your lips / And if I'm lucky you might just give it a little kiss"
- "They got the Discovery Channel don't they? / We ain't nothin' but mammals"
- "The Return of Jackie and Judy" by The Ramones refers to their previous song "Judy Is A Punk"
- "Return to Camp Granada" by Allan Sherman follows his earlier hit "Camp Grenada", and details the changes to the camp between visits.
- "R-O-C-K", a 1955 recording by Bill Haley and His Comets, refers to Haley's first major hit, 1953's "Crazy Man Crazy". ("Then Haley came along with a rockin' song: Crazy Man Crazy - crazy news!")
- "Rock Around Stephen Foster" by Stan Freberg parodies both "Rock Around the Clock" and "Shake, Rattle and Roll" while referencing a number of Stephen Foster songs.
- "Roll With Me, Henry" (also known as "The Wallflower") by Etta James is a reply to "Work With me, Annie" by Hank Ballard; it was covered for the pop market by Georgia Gibbs as "Dance With me, Henry". Ballard also recorded his own answer with "Annie had a Baby".
- "Roxanne's Revenge" by Roxanne Shanté is a rap song replying to "Roxanne Roxanne" by U.T.F.O.
- "Revolution" by the Beatles was recorded as an answer song to "Street Fighting Man" by The Rolling Stones.
[edit] S
- "Sara" by Bob Dylan refers to his own song.
- Stayin' up for days in the Chelsea Hotel,
- Writin' "Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" for you.
- "Scars" by Hannah Fury is an answer to "Scarborough Fair" by Simon & Garfunkel, from the woman's perspective.
- "Sequel" by Harry Chapin is a literal sequel to his song "Taxi," continuing the story of the characters from the earlier song.
- "She" by Green Day is an answer song to a letter/poem given to lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong by an ex-girlfriend (the letter/poem was not about breaking-up, but about her self-esteem problems).
- "Shook (The Answer)" by Keshia Chanté is the answer song to "Shook" by Shawn Desman.
- "Slim Anus" by the Insane Clown Posse is a mocking answer to Eminem's song "My Name Is." The ICP song has a response back from Eminem, see above.
- "Snoopy vs. the Red Baron", a 1966 hit by The Royal Guardsmen was followed by three sequels: "Return of the Red Baron","Snoopy for President" and "Snoopy's Christmas".
- "Son of a Bitch" by Lady Saw is an answer to Shaggy's hit "It Wasn't Me", and is written from the perspective of the woman being cheated on. The same backing music is used, as is the distinctive call-and-response chorus.
- "Spring Collection" by The Vapors refers to The Damned's "New Rose".
- Don't like your hair dyed blue,
- Don't like your damned new rose,
- Don't like your casual pose.
- "Stan" by Eminem refers to an urban legend concerning Phil Collins' "In the Air Tonight"
- "You know that song by Phil Collins, In The Air Tonight? About a guy who could've saved another guy from drowning, but didn't, and Phil saw it all and at his show he found him? That's kind of how this is, you could've rescued me from drowning, but now it's too late. I'm on a thousand downers now, I'm drowsy."
- "Steven, It Was Really Something" by The Associates was a riposte to The Smiths' "William It Was Really Nothing", which was allegedly about Associates singer Billy Mackenzie.
- "The Storm" (or was it called "Thunder and Lightning"?) by Miss Thang is an answer song to "The Rain" by Oran "Juice" Jones in 1986.
- "Strong Enough To Be Your Man" by Travis Tritt is an answer song to the Sheryl Crow hit "Strong Enough". In Crow's song, she asks a man if he "is strong enough to be my man". In response, Tritt's song says to a woman that he "is strong enough to be your man."
- "Superstar" by Lydia Murdock answers "Billie Jean" by Michael Jackson, and is written from Billie Jean's perspective.
- "Sweet Home Alabama" by Lynyrd Skynyrd, answers Neil Young's statements in his song "Southern Man" (and his subsequent song "Alabama"):
- Well I heard Mr. Young sing about her
- Well I heard old Neil put her down
- Well I hope Neil Young will remember
- A Southern man don't need him around anyhow
- "Sweet Dreams My LA Ex" by Rachel Stevens answers to Justin Timberlake's "Cry Me A River. The song was intended for Britney Spears to use, but she declined so the song was offered to Rachel.
[edit] T
- "Taxman Mr. Thief" by Cheap Trick refers to "Taxman" by The Beatles
- "Teddy Bear's Last Ride" by Diana Williams and others, is a "non canon" sequel to "Teddy Bear" by Red Sovine. (See "Little Joe" above.)
- "That Makes It" by Jayne Mansfield responds to The Big Bopper's "Chantilly Lace" by suggesting what Big Bopper's girlfriend was saying at the other end of the telephone conversation.
- "The Fiction We Live" by From Autumn to Ashes. It's the reply to the song, "Autumn's Monologue" also by From Autumn to Ashes.
- "There's No 'I' in 'Team'" by Taking Back Sunday is a response to Seventy Times Seven by Brand New.
- "This Land Is Your Land" was written by Woody Guthrie as a socialist response to Irving Berlin's "God Bless America".
- "(Tony This Song is Called) Lou Weed", an ode to Lou Reed by The Dandy Warhols refers to "I'm Waiting for the Man" by The Velvet Underground with the lyrics "Like you're waiting for your man up on Lexington Avenue".
- "Trouble in the Henhouse" by Billy Briggs is a direct response to "Lubbock or Leave it" by the Dixie Chicks.
- "Two Out of Three Ain't Bad" by Meat Loaf is a response to Elvis Presley's "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You."
- "I want you/I need you/But there ain't no way I'm ever gonna love you"
[edit] U
- "The Universal Coward", a pro-Vietnam War song by Jan and Dean, was written in response to Donovan's anti-war song "The Universal Soldier"
[edit] V
- "Van Halen" by Nerf Herder refers to several different Van Halen albums and songs by name.
- "Tomorrow may come, tomorrow may never come again
- Can't you hear Janie Crying? She's Running with the Devil, Lord."
- "Vera" by Pink Floyd refers to "We'll Meet Again" by Vera Lynn (a song which appears in Dr. Strangelove):
- "Does anybody here remember Vera Lynn? Remember how she said that we would meet again some sunny day. Vera! Vera! what has become of you? Does anybody else in here feel the way I do?"
- "Vile" by Example refers to "Smile" by Lily Allen:
- Written from the perspective of the ex-boyfriend (although he was never actually Lily's boyfriend[10]).
- "Vivid" by Greg Brown is an answer to "This Bouquet" by Ani DiFranco.
- "Volcano Girls" by Veruca Salt refers to "Seether" by Veruca Salt, and mimics the "Glass Onion" reference to "I am the Walrus":
- "I told you 'bout the seether before
- You know, the one that's neither or nor
- Well here's another clue if you please....
- The seether's Louise"
[edit] W
- "Walkin' With A Mountain" by Mott The Hoople incorporates the chorus of The Rolling Stones' "Jumpin' Jack Flash"
- "When Do I Get To Sing 'My Way'?" by Sparks refers to Frank Sinatra's "My Way".
- "(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais" by The Clash refers to "Midnight To Six Man" by Pretty Things.
- "Why Must I Be Sad?" by They Might Be Giants, apparently a song about an Alice Cooper fan, has the titles of nine Cooper songs and three albums in it (plus one more that was the title of both a song and an album). It also states that the narrator "understand[s] what Alice said".
- "Why Won't Adam Sandler Let Us Sing His Song?" by Australian Jewish-punk band YIDcore is about Sandler denying them the rights to record his "Chanukah Song."
- "Will the Real Slim Shady Please Shut Up" by Emily Ellis is in response to Eminem's "The Real Slim Shady". Originally people thought it was Christina Aguilera who recorded it, although Aguilera gave her approval. The song disses Eminem about all the things he rapped about her and other perverseness. [3]
[edit] X
[edit] Y
- "Yes I'll Hold Your Hand" was an "answer song" to the Beatles' I Want To Hold Your Hand.
- "You Love This Ass" by Avenue D refers to, and is somewhat a female reaction to "Baby Got Back" by Sir Mix-A-Lot.
- "You Should Really Know" by The Pirates is an answer to "I Don't Wanna Know" by Mario Winans. Both tracks feature heavy sampling from the same Enya track
- "You Were Right" by Built to Spill takes canonical lines from rock and roll lyrics and either says you were right or you were wrong. For example, "You were wrong when you said everything's going to be alright. You were right when you said, all that glitters isn't gold. You were right when you said, all we are is dust in the wind." Etc.
- "Your Generation" by Generation X is an answer song to The Who's "My Generation" and suggests that the sentiments expressed in the original song were irrelevant to the youth of the late-1970s.
- "You've Changed" by Keyshia Cole refers to Jay-Z song, "Songcry". Giving the woman's side of the story dealing with a relationship.
[edit] Z
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- http://www.everyhit.com/answer/ List of Answer Songs at EveryHit.