mej@ptsfa.UUCP (Mary Johnson) (11/08/84)
(Resubmitted to the net because several sites got only the first 2 lines of the initial submission.) This song was written by Nigel Russell as a parody of a Black field holler (a song used to lead and set the rhythm for a working group). White Collar Holler (c) Nigel Russell (CAPAC) Well, I rise up every morning at a quarter to eight Some woman who's my wife tells me not to be late I kiss the kids goodbye, I can't remember their names And week after week it's always the same And it's Ho boys, can't you code it (Yeh!) And program it right Nothing ever happens in this life of mine I'm hauling out the data on the Xerox line Then it's code in the data, give the keyboard a punch Then cross-correlate and break for some lunch Correlate, tabulate, process and screen Program, printout, regress to the mean Chorus Then it's home again, eat again, watch some TV Make love to my woman at ten fifty-three I dream the same dream when I'm sleeping at night I'm soaring over hills like an eagle in flight Chorus Someday I'm gonna give up all the buttons and things I'll punch that time clock til it can't ring Burn up my necktie and set myself free 'Cause no-one's gonna fold, bend, or mutilate me Chorus Stan Rogers sings this song on his album "Between the Breaks......... Live!". The album (on the Fogarty's Cove label) is available from Cole Harbour Music, 14 Hess Street South, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, L8P 3M9. Net etiquette requires that I post a warning about one of the songs on this record - Harris and the Mare. Stan Rogers wrote fine songs of men's feelings about their work and experiences, but his view of women was traditional and conservative. The song Harris and the Mare is an attempt to present a justification for killing; it will offend women, and those men who reject the idea that masculinity is defined by violence. Mary Johnson {ihnp4,ucbvax,cbosgd,decwrl,amd}!dual!ptsfa!mej