What Is The Worst Line Stephin Merritt Has Written?

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A year ago I didn't know who this Merritt character was. Now I consider him probably one of the most important figures in the history of The Pop Song. As with most of the songwriters that I most admire, I think his prime talent is melodic. Yet he is also admired (and disliked) for his lyrics.

It strikes me that there are at least two distinctive genres of Merritt lyric, which I'll crudely dub

a) 'Surrealism': original, expressive, striking phrases - many instances on first Magnetic Fields LP Distant Plastic Trees;

b) 'Pastiche': lyrics that inhabit a generic mode or existing verbal idiom, either 'subversively' or quite passively; many cases on last Magnetic Fields LP 69 Love Songs.

The two modes are rather different, but I don't think he often puts a foot wrong in *either*. Or does he? Are there any Merritt lines which are - contrary to the sense of him as profoundly intelligent, calculating, controlling, precise, and assured in his judgement - bad, misjudged, ill-advised misfires?

the pinefox, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I, on the other hand, feel that Merrit is perhaps the most overrated performer of last twenty years, and I think that in time people will look back and cringe at the unholy, turgid mess that is 69 love songs. 3 good tunes per disk? if that. He's all smug, soulless craft masquerading as pop genius. And that aint po-mo, my friend, that's just fucking tedious.

His earlier stuff is pretty good, though.

Anyway, pick and choose any lyric you want. Probably the most irritating is the facetious and pointless "papa was a rodeo", but any of his "clever" pastiches would do.

Hymie, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"i know you've had more loves than mata hari..."

that one does its best to ruin "as you turn to go," but thankfully it's not match for the other lines and the loveliness of the whole thing. it just strikes me as him trying to be overly clever when there's no need for it in the song.

fred solinger, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Hymie: with respect, if 'his earlier stuff is pretty good' and he is still relatively obscure (as I think he is), it seems unlikely that he's also 'the most overrated performer of the last twenty years'. Perhaps just about mathematically possible.

Fred: I agree 100% - I had quite forgotten the clunk with which that line falls. That was exactly the kind of example I was trying to think of - where he seems to think he's written a line that's in the usual vein and up to standard, but somehow the aesthetic antennae were switched off.

the pinefox, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I suppose "all of them" would be the bitchy answer.

Ally, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

...or the one that gave him the confidence to write a second one.

Engineer Brains, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

agree all of them. A most overrated artist, Sounds like a severely constipated contemporary version of Leonard Cohen on the few tracks I have heard. I don't understand the fawning of this dreadful music, and the sycophantic dissecting of the music/lyrics. The voice severely grates!!!! and the music is maudlin dirge dull.. never mind the bloody lyrics! Where's Tanya ? we need here for this thread!

DJ Martian, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"acoustic guitar, you can have your own car..."

... he could write "symphony orchestra, you can have your own town" in the next CD " 15,000 chords about love and one hate song"

Marcos Zurita, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I would add something, but I guess I already did.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Aw, I dunno Ned. It's trendy to be part of the hype, but it's always trendier to be part of the backlash. And pretending to be above both is trendiest of all (plus no fun).

For me the 'petunia' line on "The Night You Can't Remember" is pretty ghastly. I've no time for people who dislike SM cause of 'artifice', but as Pinefox suggests he can't win them all.

And Tanya's already said her piece on the subject. Ouch.

Tom, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

It occurs to me that lines like "reno dakota, I'm no nina rota, I don't know the score" have to be, at some level, hip-hop influenced. The wordplay of Cole Porter and such never scored points for drawing metaphors to quite such outrageous extremes.

Sterling Clover, Thursday, 1 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"The death of Ferdinand de Sausurre". Has no real thematic link with Saussure's work : breathtakingly pretentious namedropping. And *so* smug. Only Momus commits more diabolical crimes, but unlike Merrit he ultimately comes across as a likeable prat.

Actually Merrit's posturing claim to like "Bubblegum and Experimental music *and nothing in between*" sticks in my craw almost as much.

I agree with Hymie that the earlier stuff was good though, "Summer Lies" actually has some feeling in it. Pinefox, you reckon Stephin M is not well known? where are you hiding? check music sections of any press anywhere in the world and squirm at the fashion victims' hagiography bandwagon rolling down that ol' road marked "sell by date approaching".

Pete Dyson, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Yes, yes, of course, you can't have clever-clever name-dropping *and* feeling at the same time, how foolish of me to forget.

The bubblegum and experimental music thing was a great soundbite and something I can heartily sympathise with to boot. But it's obviously not true: he's an indie boy at heart. I think as an aspiration, though, it hits the spot.

Tom, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Fair play Tom, but take "the Book of Love" off 69 Love Songs - that's soulful and emotive to my ears as well as being a little bit clever clever. but "Saussure" is just cold and in its smugly pseudo-cerebral aspects almost on a par with that greasy, hideous monstrosity, the D*vine C*medy. Not that there's anything wrong with that, I just don't like it, that's all.

Susan Amway's voice was nicer (i.e. possessing more feeling whether mouthing dirty clever clever epithets or not) than Claudia's too in my opinion.

Interesting that this thread is raising hackles so much. Magnetic Fields - love 'em or loathe 'em, you can't ignore 'em!

Pete Dyson, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

The problem, Tom, is not that you *can't* have intelligence and feeling at the same time. The problem (my problem) is that, too often, the Magnetic Fields' material gives me a feeling of intellectual engagement at the expense of emotional engagement.

And the bubblegum / experimental thing strikes me as a fairly standard hatred of the middlebrow, which it seems remains a fashionable form of snobbery amongst the high-minded.

Stephin Merritt has an extraordinary way with words. He's one of many pop personages who I wish would write books which I'd probably love, instead of music which I don't much like. You could ask me why I demand a feeling of emotional engagement from music and not from literature, but I wouldn't be able to answer the question sensibly.

Tim, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

The big question -- is there that much difference between the two, and if not, then what the hell falls "in between"? Pretty much just indie, I suppose -- except then there's indie-pop and indie- experimental and then...

This whole category thing always confuses me.

Sterling Clover, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Getting back to the original question, 'The people on the street were made of meat' is pretty bad. A few things on 69 Love Songs as well; most of 'I don't believe in the sun' is pretty annoying, saved only by the last line. I think Merritt does sacrifice emotion for intellectuallism on a few occassions, but he gets it right enough of the time to be considered one of the greats.

Ally C, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Oh, I agree that it's standard anti-middlebrow snobbery, but it's also a snobbery I share at a knee-jerk level, so as a statement I rather like it.

Obviously there's nothing I can do to make people emotionally engage with 69 Love Songs like I do: all I can do is assure them that it - and the same goes for many of the Magnetic Fields' other records - engages me like few other albums. I just wanted to resist the implication - which I'd detected, perhaps wrongly, elsewhere in the thread - that 'intellectual' or 'clever' songwriting could not also be heartfelt.

Tom, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Eh? "I Don't Believe In The Sun" is *excellent*. It's hard to think of a single line that beats the overwhelmingly emotional yet somehow deadpan brilliance of "astronomy will have to be revised." On the other hand "How Fucking Romantic" seems to be made up entirely of annoying lines. Intentionally perhaps, but I've never held that music that's intentionally bad is necessarily better than music that's accidentally bad.

Incidentally, most of my favourite Stephen Merrit lines come from "Memories Of Love" - especially "some are brilliant, some are awful/some are summer fluff/some are epic Russian novels/memories of love". Fantastic.

Tim, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

For my money, the problem is statements like these:

"The problem, Tom, is not that you *can't* have intelligence and feeling at the same time."

Bollocks! If you believe that, go off and listen to The Troggs for the rest of time. Who says the two are mutually exclusive? No doubt some male specimen with a small hypocamus and poor left brain/right brain connection who *is* unable to feel and think at the same time.

I agree, that the are not the same thing. But they are not mutually exclusive.

Me, I *like* Stephen Merritt's too clever by half wordplay. But I'm one of those overly intellectual emotionally stilted indie kids that everyone likes to slag off for that sort of thing.

The only thing worse than an artist being totally over-hyped is when everyone jumps on the "let's slag off X artist cause he's hyped" bandwagon. But I've expounded on that subject ad infinitum already...

I'm not going to talk about his worst line, I'm going to comment on my personal favourite, which will probably conjure up more groans than the rest of them.

"Love is like a bottle of gin, but a bottle of gin is not... like... Love."

masonic boom, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Tim, like I said, the last line of 'I don't believe in the Sun' is great, which is the one you mention. Oh, and you're right about 'How fucking romantic', just for the stuff about the dancing bear. Awful.

Ally C, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

>"The problem, Tom, is not that you *can't* have intelligence and >feeling at the same time."

>Bollocks! If you believe that, go off and listen to The Troggs for >the rest of time.

Dear masonic Boom Please re-read Tim's statement. There, you see. He is *not* saying you can't have the two at the same time. That's the same as saying you can have the two at the same time. Presumably your pathetic grip of semantics is why you find Stephins cold-fish wordplay so entertaining.

David Grubbs, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

However, I do have a small hippopotamus which I keep in the bath at home. The mud which the hippo requires does tend to annoy my housemates, but we all enjoy the pretty birds which flutter about, admiring themselves in our bathroom mirrors and feeding on tiny grubs living on and around the hippo's skin.

Tim, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Hello everybody. I'm glad that this question has got some interesting replies; but me, I am still really not sure what I think his worst line is. I think that most of them do the job he is asking them to do. Will have to think on. As it happens, I thoroughly share Tom E's feeling about 69LS and all the rest of it, and find the 'cold intellectualism' critique as relevant as, oh, I don't know, a hippopotamous or something.

the pinefox, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Hippopotomous is a word that never looks like it's spelt right. So is "lucky".

I still think Stephin Merritt is crap, plus he has that whole unusual- spelling-of-name thing that I usually despise (see: Thom Yorke). His songs leave me very cold, by and large - there are a handful of exceptions, but even those I find to be a bit lyrically clunky. His writing style is too *self-concious* for me, like he's very aware at all times how oh-so-clever he comes across to the indie masses.

Which of course isn't anything against the people here who like him, it's a broad generalisation of his fans as "indie masses".

To me, he's like an American Damon Albarn. Take as you will.

Ally, Friday, 2 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

First, let me apologize for the bad spelling and mediocre writing of my last entry. I think I was being dominated by 'emotion' rather than 'intellect'. I had an excuse. I was about to go and see Tim Hopkins.

The charming Pete Dyson said that Merritt was well known, and asked where I was hiding. I have three responses.

1. I have been hiding where I always hide: in a compartment (holding National Insurance card, minicab numbers, chord diagrams, etc) of a wallet which Harriet Wheeler keeps in her back pocket. It has its perks, this life. Really, it's not all bad.

2. It's true that, hiding out as I do, I am very out of touch, and don't read 'The Music Press', etc. Naturally I make no apology for this.

3. Nonetheless, I still think that Dyson is mistaken. OK, it depends what you mean by 'well-known'. Merritt is better known than me, it's true. He's even better-known than Tim Hopkins, except in New York gay circles. He is probably well-known as a figure to many folk that read Freaky Trigger. OK. But that doesn't mean he's *that* well-known. Like I said, a year ago I didn't know who he was (Harriet doesn't seem to have any of his records). And my parents had never heard of him till I clunked out a few of his songs on their piano about 4 months ago. And nobody I work with has heard of him; and nor should they have. I stand by my claim that he is relatively obscure.

Is 'HFR' deliberately bad, and if so, is that plain Bad? It's a good question.

I agree with those who think 'IDBITSun' a work of genius, not one of turgidity.

I don't think I really see why 'You can have your own car' is bad.

My latest nomination for a lax line: 'The tears have stained all the pages / Of my True Romance magazines'. It feels lazy, a received idea, doesn't quite fit the song, just drags it out and fills in time.

the pinefox, Saturday, 3 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

PS

I think that Hyacinths&Thistles contains some of his weakest material (as well as some excellent). And

1. 'Give Me Back My Dreams' is lyrically very average by Merritt standards: for instance, 'whether to cry or scream' is a lazy sort of choice to offer.

2. In 'Kissing Things' the line 'They're not too wide to get around / given the old school try' is pretty incomprehensible to me. I take it that there's a play of some kind on 'old school tie' - but how? To what end? Has he bitten off more English English than he can chew here?

3. 'Outside it could be China' in 'Night Falls Like A Grand Piano'. I'm not sure whether this line is bad, good, or neither. But it's such a non-sequitur.

4. 'Volcana!' from 'Volcana!': sums up the badness of the track.

5. I don't really understand the concept of 'Waltzing me all the way home' either; I mean, the image is not very (to mix metaphors) resonant. And to rhyme 'home' with 'poem' *once* was funny, but...

6. I like 'You x5' as much as many others do; but I don't like the 'Tis tis' element. I know I have said this before.

the pinefox, Saturday, 3 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

"the tears have stained all the pages of my true romance magazines" is one of my favourite sm lines. i like the recognition, referred to as well in the whole concept of "busby berkely dreams," that his romanticized ideals are a media construct at the same time that he mourns their betrayal.

"acoustic guitar" is fairly unbearable the whole way through. cub was never so twee. "she always said that you were the one who could make her move her cute little bum" is the low point of _69ls_.

"i don't believe in the sun" is a great song marred by the corny lyrics (except the last one, of course). "the only sun i ever knew was the beautiful one that was you." yecch.

"i miss doing the wild thing with you" always seemed like a really feeble follow-up to the heartbreaking "come back from san francisco/ and kiss me -- i've quit smoking."

agree with the bit about the petunia.

where are the indie masses who fawn over sm? i haven't met them. since i know almost no one offline who owns one of his albums, i have trouble seeing how he could be a) not obscure, b) some sort of indie lemming cult, or c) comparable to a radio phenomenon like blur.

sundar subramanian, Saturday, 3 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Sundar: >>> his romanticized ideals are a media construct at the same time that he mourns their betrayal.

In theory that's great; you put it well. I love roughly the same idea when he writes something like 'We used to hold hands in the movie show, but we'll never hold hands again'. I just think that in that particular line in 'BBD' it's superfluous and clunking, rather than eloquent and stimulating.

>>> "acoustic guitar" is fairly unbearable the whole way through.

I think that is way over the top. The playing, singing and melody are splendid, for three things.

>>> "she always said that you were the one who could make her move her cute little bum" is the low point of _69ls_.

Yes, possibly. It's too 'dirty' for me.

>>> don't believe in the sun" is a great song marred by the corny lyrics.

Sorry, I totally disagree. I think it's A Great Song.

>>> "i miss doing the wild thing with you" always seemed like a really feeble follow-up to the heartbreaking "come back from san francisco/ and kiss me -- i've quit smoking."

I agree. Well spotted.

>>> agree with the bit about the petunia.

Yes - maybe this point has something.

>>> i have trouble seeing how he could be a) not obscure, b) some sort of indie lemming cult, or c) comparable to a radio phenomenon like blur.

Me also. We agree. He is not any of those things. He is Relatively Obscure.

the pinefox, Saturday, 3 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

listening to _get lost_ yesterday, i remembered how clunkily "i know all the saddest people/ most of them are dead now" follows "i can show you sadder poetry/ than you ever dreamed there could be" in "save a secret for the moon."

sundar subramanian, Monday, 5 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

There have been plenty of interesting answers to this question (thank you), but not *that* many credible contenders for bad lines (especially given how many Merritt has written). I think this is probably telling.

I guess that one reason I asked the original question was to try to get at and explore the difference between Merritt and other 'great lyricists'. And I think it tells us something about his peculiar kind of quality that he's penned fewer clunkers than, say, Dylan or Morrissey. Maybe we could say that he's more precise and calculating than them; maybe that he's taken fewer risks; maybe that his way of occupying a genre actually makes it easier to pen appropriate (if not necessarily scintillating) lines. A pretty great lyricist as they go, I think - but in a way which, as with so much else about this character, is very peculiar.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 13 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

two years pass...
I think tha "Mata-Hari" line is great!

daavid (daavid), Friday, 27 February 2004 03:57 (twenty years ago) link

old thread, whoa. i think Tim F is right about "how fucking romantic"

the surface noise (electricsound), Friday, 27 February 2004 04:01 (twenty years ago) link

If I could be bothered to read all the posts in this thread, I'm sure I'd find that it's probably been mentioned already, but I hope that at some point Merritt can get over his own sense of cleverness and pop irony and just write some songs that might actually be remembered thirty years from now by people other than, well, us.

maypang (maypang), Friday, 27 February 2004 04:11 (twenty years ago) link

He doesn't have access to the markets that would allow him to be heard by people that aren't us. Tho it would be nice if Britney would hire him as a songwriter.

Sym (shmuel), Friday, 27 February 2004 04:26 (twenty years ago) link

Everyone saying that all the lines in "I Don't Believe In The Sun" are bad except for the last one are probably right except that the pay-off of the last line is so subtantial that it travels back in time and retroactively justifies everything that went before it.

I'm pretty sure there's a Buffy episode that performs the same trick but I can't remember which one it is right now.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 27 February 2004 05:36 (twenty years ago) link

I don't mind that song's lyrics at all. It's probably one of the best songs he's ever written. See above comments for reference point.

maypang (maypang), Friday, 27 February 2004 05:46 (twenty years ago) link

Yeah I totally agree - that's what I mean!

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Friday, 27 February 2004 05:47 (twenty years ago) link

Ppl on this thread appear to have overlooked that many of the lines Merritt writes are bloody funny (e.g. the little petunia one). And that much of the humour/pleasure in 'em lies in the audaciousness of the rhymes. Also that "Saussure" is probably self-directed, being about the same alleged human shortcomings of poststructuralism that MF's own irony/pastiche/pomo gets accused of.

plebian plebs (plebian), Friday, 27 February 2004 07:52 (twenty years ago) link

arr.

mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 27 February 2004 09:39 (twenty years ago) link

I LOVE Merritt and his lyrics -- esp. those on "Get Lost" and "Charm of the Highway Strip" (much prefer the earlier synthphonies than the uke/toy piano/guest cabaret stylings of the 69 Love Songs era).
That said, this is one of the worst lines in any song ever, I think:

From "Desert Island," off "Holiday":

"We'll develop muscles / from cracking coconuts / Let our clothing drop off / feel each other's butts"

Even as a goof it's horrendous.

Ben Boyer (Ben Boyer), Friday, 27 February 2004 18:13 (twenty years ago) link

Jeez, I can't believe all the Merritt hate on this thread.

morris pavilion (samjeff), Friday, 27 February 2004 21:25 (twenty years ago) link

We hate because we care.

maypang (maypang), Friday, 27 February 2004 21:26 (twenty years ago) link

two weeks pass...
"I could totally get over you, if I wanted to, but I'm not sure I do."

"don't want to cry a tear for you, not a single tear for you, so excuse me if I do."

"reach for my prescription from my pocket and instead I grab your locket."

"your biography is an irresistible cartography of the possible or... the impossible? I'm not sure."

"so I'll take to coloring books and suffer all your withering looks, thinking bout you all the while."

cozen (Cozen), Sunday, 14 March 2004 21:30 (twenty years ago) link

eight months pass...
I was going to revive this to see if the last LP affected it: and look, wee Cozen already revived it, months ago.

the bellefox, Friday, 19 November 2004 15:48 (nineteen years ago) link

And so did other people.

the bellefox, Friday, 19 November 2004 15:49 (nineteen years ago) link

You know, I bought 69 as I liked the concept. And the execution was way better than I had any right to expect. But it also means that I have no need for more MagFi CDs. I did download 'take ecstacy' tho.

Surely there's a "Search/Destroy" thread just for the 69 set?

mark grout (mark grout), Friday, 19 November 2004 15:54 (nineteen years ago) link

THe line is Papa Was A Rodeo, where he says "Diesel gas". Diesel fuel is not gasoline, they are two different things.

Jeff-PTTL (Jeff), Friday, 19 November 2004 17:51 (nineteen years ago) link

every damn line is awful, the man's a pompous, self important wanker

Porkpie (porkpie), Friday, 19 November 2004 18:34 (nineteen years ago) link

I think just for writing the song "Smoke and Mirrors" he is pretty much a hero. Anybody who is as prolific a writer as he is is going to have some lines sneak in that bug people or fall flat, but I think that's just a reflection of how good he is when he's really on.

Drew Daniel (Drew Daniel), Friday, 19 November 2004 18:44 (nineteen years ago) link

seventeen years pass...

An unexpected revival inspired by poster Imago:

This thread is literally almost 21 years old. I fear that much of it is callow. But I just found myself thinking "what's the worst Merritt song, that would be a good question" and then thinking "... I think we had a whole thread like this".

He may now have issued lines and songs worse than he had 17-18 years ago!

the pinefox, Monday, 21 February 2022 21:42 (two years ago) link

This is a contender for a relatively bad song lyric, from c.2012:

I'm going back to the country
City life's too slow
I'm sick of that 120 BPM funk and disco
I'm doing a one-eighty
Break out the fiddle tunes
I'm still that barefoot lady howling up at full moons
And I'm gonna fly back to Wyoming
And never more my friends I'll go a-roaming
I'm gonna fly back to Laramie
Let Laramie take care of me till they bury me
I'm going back to the country
The big city's too small
I don't need more than one tree house but there's none at all
I'm hanging up the tire swing
A hammock in the yard
I'll hear an angel choir sing as I wing countryward
And I'm gonna find me a country boy
And have a couple country kids, Leanne and Leroy
And we're gonna wind down those country roads
And sing and play the dulcimer till this world explodes

the pinefox, Monday, 21 February 2022 21:47 (two years ago) link

And I fear that I will also nominate this from 2020:

She's got the biggest tits in history
She loves to show them 'round
They're bigger than her chickadees
They each weigh half a pound
She told me she's got more of them
But I've seen only three
And those were, I'm quite sure, the biggest tits in history
Your average tit weighs half an ounce
That's if you feed them well
But she's got ways to make tits bouncy baby boys from hell
She majored in biology
She knows whereof she speaks
You know her tits are happy from their smiling little beaks
She's working for the government
She's breeding them for clones
To use them on the battlefield
For intercepting drones
Her mother did the same work
It's all through her family tree
And that's why Lola's got the biggest tits in history
Tits in history
Tits in history

the pinefox, Monday, 21 February 2022 21:48 (two years ago) link

"You know her tits are happy from their smiling little beaks"

seems especially bad.

the pinefox, Monday, 21 February 2022 21:49 (two years ago) link

should be "by their smiling little beaks" surely

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 21 February 2022 23:31 (two years ago) link


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