Saturday, February 24, 2007

transportation songs: sad but true

The other day I advocated for including directions in songs. Today, I'm highlighting a second song that includes detailed directions, and this completes my anthology of songs with directions in them. If you are aware of other songs with directions, please let me know of them.

The song is Sad But True by the Transplants, whose singer Tim Armstrong's primary band Rancid is one of the Great Transit Bands (post forthcoming). Sad But True, like the other song I profiled, gives directions starting in Berkeley. Berkeley it seems, even in the realm of punk songs, is the center of transportation planning. The route offered by Armstrong is a circuitous one but it eventually takes you to Harmon Street in South Berkeley. Anyone familiar with Berkeley know what's on Harmon St?

In a dream we take a trip
down Shattuck to Durant
up the hill, to the steps, Sproul Plaza and Telegraph
we pass Channing, we pass Derby
we go to Ashby, down to Adeline
take MLK to 54th and go down to Genoa
yeah and follow the BART tracks
to Harmon street, ahhhh Harmon street,
Harmon Street, Harmon Street
it's reoccurring, it's like a dream
I live a thousand times, yeah
and it's always like the very first time

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

What occurs to me is the song Love Potion Number Nine. the refeence to 34th and Vine; that's where the cop took away the singer's bottle of love potion; not exactly directions, but a specif address. Al