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There's been a murder...

Bryan Burnett | 20:02 UK time, Monday, 18 October 2010

Tuesday's Get It On has the potential to be one of the darkest ever editions of Get It on. Murder is the theme and I'm wondering whether we can get away with two hours of songs about folk getting bumped off! We could feature anything from old murder ballads to more light-hearted items like Sophie Ellis Bextor's killer dancefloor hit.

From Poison Arrow to Killing Me Softly With His Smile, get in touch with your deathly ditties....

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Say what.... Dead Men Tell No Tales ~ Motorhead

  • Comment number 2.

    Hurricane - Bob Dylan

    A bit long maybe, but wow, another of the very best by the maestro!

    Tells of a murder in New Jersey, but whodunnit? Rubin Carter was the man who Dylan reckoned was falsely accused, unfortunately Carter spent another decade in prison, before the lawmen came to the same conclusion.

    "...to live in a land where justice is a game....."

    Paul from Ayr

  • Comment number 3.

    Funny enough one of my most recent mix cd's was "Murder", so brings together a recent theme as well:

    License To Kill - Bob Dylan
    If Looks Could Kill - Camera Obscura
    You Have Killed Me - Morrissey
    Murder In The Darl - Boo Hewerdine
    Dead Man's Suit - Cherry Gohst
    Death Or Glory - The CLash

    I wish I had suggeseted

    Girls - Death In Vegas

    for instrumental night.

  • Comment number 4.

    Pulp Down By The River or
    Pulp Death Goes To The Disco
    long shots.
    if they're too "eh?", similarish songs:
    Richard Marx Hazard
    Sophie Ellis Bextor Murder on the Dance Floor

    U2 Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me
    Cutting Crew I Just Died In Your Arms Tonight
    Manic Street Preachers singing the MASH theme Suicide Is Painless
    The Smiths Hang The DJ

    Ever the optimist, seeing as I can't remember hearing SOAD being played on the show before - this one is really worth a listen. Put aside any preconceived notion of what you think this might be if you've heard their stuff before and don't like it. In common with many other "heavy" bands, they can actually craft meaningful and melodic tunes with equally powerful lyrics. The "Where Have All The Flowers Gone?" of ethno-metal.
    System Of A Down Soldier Side

  • Comment number 5.

    Turn around and you can die of fright In The Shadows ~ T. Stranglers

  • Comment number 6.

    'Word Up' .... Korn

    How to spectacularly murder a wonderful original ...

  • Comment number 7.

    Little Sir Hugh - Steeleye Span - Keep your ball out of my garden.

  • Comment number 8.

    The henri hannah campaign for lesser played Beatles tracks:

    Bungalow Bill - the Beatles

    or

    Run For Your Life -the Beatles

    but Bungalow Bill would be best....I think Undercover of the Night by the Rolling Stones is about a murder?

    regardez vous

    henri

  • Comment number 9.

    THE SHAKIN' PYRAMIDS ~ PHARAOH'S CHANT... see ´óÏó´«Ã½4 @ 21.00 tonight for some Hammer!

  • Comment number 10.

    Henri- what about another Beatles classic
    Maxwell's Silver Hammer
    My primary school headmaster (he must have been a bit radical) taught this as a "how to learn guitar" tune.

  • Comment number 11.

    Yep crazy murderous Beatles:

    Beatles - Happiness Is A Warm Gun

  • Comment number 12.

    #3 'Aisha' - Death In Vegas ("I'm a serial killer").

  • Comment number 13.

    'Lost Art of Murder' ... Babyshambles

  • Comment number 14.

    'Murder Polis' ... The Mode

    Fine Scottish fare ...

  • Comment number 15.

    norrie - great one!
    Their songs have a more notorious connection with murder, though
    Helter Skelter apparently got Charles Manson fuelled up in his warped mindset and eventual killing spree. I don't even like the song to defend it, but it shows how people can completely get the wrong end of the stick if they want to.

  • Comment number 16.

    ...And another call to hear Willie DeVille's superb version of 'Hey Joe' please.

  • Comment number 17.

    I believe one of them was murdered.

  • Comment number 18.

    Last one - don't want to hog the blog.
    Studied a bit of Kurt Weill whilst I was a student. Lotte Lenya - his wife - sang a fair few of his compositions. Wish I'd suggested her for tonight!! She wasn't a singer or looker by today's (anytime's??) standards, but she had something really hard-edged, vicious and menacing about her that probably reflected how she felt about the times they were living in rather than how she was.
    Lotte Lenya Mack The Knife

    A wee postscript - she is possibly more famous for playing Rosa Klebb in the James Bond film "To Russia With Love". Which is a real pity. There was more to her than that.

  • Comment number 19.

    If anyone suggests Bohemian Rhapsody I'm gonna have a big Henri style rant and go away again....

    Mazzy*

  • Comment number 20.

    Don't go again...I was ever so lonely while you were away!

  • Comment number 21.

    don't worry, no one suggest Bohemian Rhapsody.

  • Comment number 22.

    yep, I thought of Happiness Is A Warm Gun but always understood it was about drug culture and sexual congress, but who's to say - it's five bits of songs compiled into one, an old Beatles trick. It would be great to hear, with the rare appearance of a sax.

    Helter Skelter does have that unhappy connection and is now associated with a real and brutal murder.Bryan probably won't play it on murder night on the grounds of good taste, the same way he wouldn't play Arnold Layne on hobbies night.

    If my memory is correct,McCartney wrote it after hearing Pinball Wizard (all to do with fairgrounds/arcades etc) and wanted it to sound like the biggest noise in the world. He succeeded up to a point. I think it's a great track.There was a club near the Garage in Sauchiehall Street that ran a night called 'Helter Skelter' in the mid 90's - turned up loud, it's surprisingly dancable.

    I will confess to having no great fondness for Maxwell's Silver Hammer,though I remember it being quite popular when Abbey Road was released, it still gets quite a lot of air play now and everybody knows it - apart from maybe Graham Stewart - so it'll be the one Bryan picks, no doubt.

    It has already been stated that you can play the Beatles two nights in row.The captain can confirm.

    regardez youse

    henri



  • Comment number 23.

    that was: don't worry, no one will suggest Bohemian Rhapsody.

    as Glen rightly points out, presumably, we can request anything by John Lennon.

    I suggest You Can't Catch Me - John Lennon a Chuck Berry song from the Rock n Roll album.

    Lennon used the song as the basis for Come Together and recorded the original to buy off a court action from Berry's publishers. It's appropriate for another reason: it's a number they played in Hamburg.

    Apparently, John long believed he would meet a violent death as karma for the brutal mugging of a sailor who had befriended the group in Hamburg. John was convinced he'd killed he bloke.

    regardez youse

    albert goldman

  • Comment number 24.

    Jesus H Christ! Anyhow, moving along...

    The Crusher ~ T. Novas 'GIO 3rd time of asking'

    Love Me ~ The Phantom

  • Comment number 25.


    Good suggestion at #2 "Hurricane", and can I also mention "Lily, Rosemary & the Jack of Hearts" - probably longer, but a mini-film script!

    On the same artist would "Knockin on Heaven's Door" not qualify?

    And finally, nobody's mentioned "I shot the sheriff"... Bob Marley or Eric Clapton would be fine.

  • Comment number 26.

    Shot in the Back of the Head - Moby

    Eve of Destruction - Hot Tuna (thanks for reminding me, Glen)

    Jack the Ripper - the Revillos

    Smoking Gun - Robert Cray

  • Comment number 27.

    #25, Thanks Norma, and is that a theme suggestion? "Songs that play like a video in your mind"? I'll get my Dylan suggestions ready.....

  • Comment number 28.

    #27

    Travelling Wilburys Tweeter & The Monkey Man

    I think the undercover cop ends up dead.

  • Comment number 29.

    #28

    hmm just had to google that one, what an impressive line up of writers, and yet chunks of it sound like they were written by Brooss!

    Oh yeh, the cop lost out!

  • Comment number 30.

    Dylan was having a playful dig.....

  • Comment number 31.

    #22

    Brian Jones (also murdered, allegedly) played sax on You Know My Name (Look Up The Number).

    The murder rate in the Stones and Beatles averages 22%.

  • Comment number 32.

    #19

    I think there should be more big Henri style rants.

    And, since I've long hated Olga's favourite, 'Torn Between Two Lovers' this is the ideal opportunity to hear:

    Delilah - Tom Jones

    regardez youse

    henri

  • Comment number 33.

    and Smiffy says she wants to hear:

    Ruby (Don't Take Your Love To Town) - Kenny Rogers

    It's a song she used to listen to when she was a gal, she thought it sexy and exciting. Don't know which aspect she found sexy and exciting,(age 9) but it was long ago and far away...

    regardez youse

    henri

  • Comment number 34.

    Mercy mercy me / Marvin Gaye
    Only musician to be murdered by his namesake

    Armed and extremely dangerous / First Choice
    Don't kill it Carol / Manfred Manns earthband
    A murder of One / Counting Crows (ha clever eh?)
    Death Wish / Herbie Hancock
    Back Stabbers / O'Jays
    Bang bang you're dead / Dirty Pretty things
    Shot by both sides / Magazine

  • Comment number 35.

    So, murder, then:
    Miss Otis Regrets - The Pogues and Kirsty MacColl, from the
    Red Hot And Blue AIDS benefit album
    John Hardy - George Thorogood
    Delilah - Tom Jones, or Alex Harvey, or...

    And I guess you get to finish with "Bohemian Rhapsody"? There are lots of covers---Hayseed Dixie, the Flaming Lips, Bad News. There's no particular reason to play the original.

  • Comment number 36.

    Of course there are more ways to get bumped off than by murderous baddies:

    * The Pogues - The Band Played Waltzing Matilda
    * Johnny Cash - 25 minutes to go (Folsom Prison version please).

    But for classic mrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrdrrrrrrr there's no beating:
    * Tom Lehrer -

    And just what was Billy Jo MacAllister dumping off the Tallahatchie Bridge?

  • Comment number 37.

    #35

    You could also go for Alex Harvey's "There's No Lights On The Christmas Tree Mother, They're Burning Big Louie Tonight" as a segue from my Cash suggestion.

  • Comment number 38.

    TUESDAY

    Gimme Shelter - Rolling Stones

    Rape! Murder!
    It's just a shot away


    32-20 Blues - Eric Clapton

    (more Billy Preston on piano than EC on guitar, but well worth a listen)

    Tom Joad - Woody Guthrie

    Tom Joad got out of the old McAlester Pen
    There he got his parole
    After four long years on a man killing charge


  • Comment number 39.

    To my mind, Johnny Cash's best song about murder has to be Cocaine Blues...a rollickin' ride through a drugs n booze fuelled cautionary tale. Would be great to hear it.

  • Comment number 40.

    'The Ghost Who Walks' - Karen Elson (Mrs Jack White)

  • Comment number 41.

    Murder – Bryan Ferry’s covers of Bob Dylan

  • Comment number 42.

    just listened again to last nights show having missed it initially. Really good and a bit different.

    BTW in a new twist on the whodunnit theme the various getiton blurbs have listed killing me softly with his smile in the headers for tonights theme. And here was me thinking it was the song who did it. :-)

  • Comment number 43.

    If killing me softly is played it would be good to hear the Luther Van Dross version. Only one that could give Ms Flack a run for her money IMO.

  • Comment number 44.

    Hang Me Good: The Porch Song Anthology
    The Devils Right Hand: Steve Earle
    The Foggy Dew: The Dubliners
    The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll: Christy Moore
    Two Island Swans: Christy Moore
    Burning Times: Christy Moore
    Smoking Gun: Robert Cray
    Hey Joe: Jimi Hendrix
    Blaze Of Glory: Jonb Bon Jovi
    Hurrican: Bob Dylan
    Pride: U2

  • Comment number 45.

    'Abraham, Martin and John' - the original version by Dion.

  • Comment number 46.

    #34 Paolo, what about the original
    DON’T KILL IT CAROL from DIAMOND OF DREAMS by MIKE HERON

    YOU CAN’T KILL ME from CAMEMBERT ELECTRIQUE by GONG

    MATTY GROVES from LIEGE AND LIEF by FAIRPORT CONVENTION

    STRANGE FRUIT from THE CHURCH WITH ONE BELL by JOHN MARTYN

    MURDER ON THE DANCE FLOOR from READ MY LIPS by SOPHIE ELLIS BEXTOR (I know none of the others will, but If this gets played, it’s GONG, if not, it’s FredTheFish, or both……eh.., or GONG, FredTheFish and SOPHIE, Whatever, I ain’t giving up just yet Bryan)

  • Comment number 47.

    The Valentines - 'Guns Fever (Blam Blam fever) about gun crime in Jamaica...great ska track.

  • Comment number 48.

    - The Real McKenzies

    Fred's not Gong
    And Fred's not bowed
    Get Sophie's song on
    And play it loud!

  • Comment number 49.

    #46 Never heard it Fred. Maybe tonight.......

    #45 Ah now why didn't I think of that song when I suggested Marvin Gaye earlier. The murdered singing about three murderers.

  • Comment number 50.

    "Murder (Or A Heart Attack)" by the Old 97's -- the only song I know in which the singer is willing to risk being murdered to get his runaway cat back.

    "Poor Man's Son" - Bruce Robison (or his brother Charlie Robison's better-known but not-as-good cover)

    Kirsty MacColl's "El Paso" or "Miss Otis Regrets" (with the Pogues), both of which have multiple people getting killed....

    Rich in North Carolina

  • Comment number 51.


    Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down) - Nancy Sinatra




    Plus a great opportunity for

    Night Chicago Died - Paper Lace

    Surely to goodness?

  • Comment number 52.

    #37

    It's all in the execution.

  • Comment number 53.

    #41

    The sound of a clown who cried in the alley?

  • Comment number 54.

    MR. ALBERT FISH (WAS CHILDREN YOUR FAVORITE DISH?) from GRIM REALITY (or indeed, almost anything) by MACABRE

  • Comment number 55.

    I don't know what's worse - the cannibalism or the grammar.

  • Comment number 56.


    The Wedding List - Kate Bush

    Mad mental & magnificent!

    :o)

  • Comment number 57.

    re #27 paul's suggestion about "songs that play like a video in your mind", -
    The Beatles "She's leaving home" springs to mind, and also Keith West's "Excerpt from a teenage opera" (!!!)

    - maybe not such a good idea after all!

  • Comment number 58.

    #41

    I disagree FF. I think Ferry does a great job with Dylan's stuff.
    I think the person who most murders Dylan is Dylan himself.

  • Comment number 59.

    #57

    Pretty much any song with a narrative works.

    The Braggster is a master at this, thinking of
    * The Saturday Boy
    * Levi Stubbs' Tears
    * Walk Away Renee
    * 14th of February
    and indeed, St Swithin's Day was David Nicholls' acknowledged inspiration for the novel (and ): .

    And of course so is Dylan, and Fish, and Lennon, and The Streets...

  • Comment number 60.

    Ooh ooh, there's a suggestion for tonight:

    * Billy Bragg - Levi Stubbs' Tears
    One dark night he came home from the sea
    And put a hole in her body where no hole should be


    She does survive though, so can we include attempted murder? It's certainly a dark, dark song.

  • Comment number 61.

    "I Just Shot John Lennon" T. CRANBERRIES...

  • Comment number 62.

    #61
    Bela Lugozi's Dead?

  • Comment number 63.

    Béla Lugosi even!

  • Comment number 64.

    #62 Good one Capn.

  • Comment number 65.

    Bring Me The Dead Of Bela Lugosi

  • Comment number 66.

    Queen - there's a band you don't hear too often.

  • Comment number 67.

    with the possible exception of Dignity, Bohemian Rhapsody is the worst record I've ever heard......

    ........okay Maria - it's time for the big Henri style rant.

  • Comment number 68.

    OK, time for a rant, well if Henri can..

    #41,#58, Adam, Fred, I disagree with you BOTH!!! As a Dylan fan I have to admit to liking Ferry's version of Hard Rain better than Bob's and there are many songs where he's bettered by some very good singers.....however, IMO that's because he's written such a huge number of songs in different genre's, not all best suited to himself.
    That still leaves hundreds where he excels, where his passion for the subject really shows, such as the one that DIDN'T get played tonight!!!

    not that i'm bitter, there's always tomorrow....

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