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List of answer songs


An answer song is a song that refers directly or indirectly to another song, or is meant as a reply to another song: these are not songs which simply refer to other artists or to songs in general, or include samples or riffs from other songs. The lyrics refer directly to another particular song. Songs are listed in alphabetical order.

Songs that refer to themselves should be listed at List of self referential songs.


Contents

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

See also External links


A

  • "Amsterdam" by Guster contains the lyrics "From your red balloon you were / a super high tech jetfighter," a reference to "99 Luftballoons" by Nena.
  • "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.
"We'll dance off both our shoes,
When they play those Jelly Roll Blues"

B

  • "The Ballad of Dorothy Parker" by Prince includes the line "'Oh, my favorite song,' she said / And it was Joni singing 'Help Me, I Think I'm Falling.'"
  • "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

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.
  • "Could It Be I'm Falling In Love" by The Spinners refers to their song "I'll Be Around".
"If you need me, I'll be around."

D

  • "Daddy's Home" by Shep & 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
  • "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.

E

  • "Extraordinary" by Better than Ezra includes the following lines, each at the end of one of its two verses:
Just like that AC/DC song
Come on, baby, shake me all night long
. . .
But just like that Barenaked Ladies song
I'm hot like wasabi
When I'm next to your body

F

  • "Fuck U Right Back" by Frankee answers Eamon's "I Don't Want You Back (Fuck It).

G

"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"
"I told you about strawberry fields
you know the place where nothing is real"
. . .
"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."
. . .
"I told you about the fool on the hill
I tell you man he's living there still"

H

  • "He'll Have to Stay" Jeannie Black answers "He'll Have To Go" by Jim Reeves.
  • "Hey, Mr. DJ, I Thought You Said We Had A Deal" by They Might Be Giants refers to their previous songs "The World's Address", "Rabid Child", and "Chess Piece Face", using an "I told you 'bout" construction similar to the inter-song references in The Beatles' "Glass Onion".
  • 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.)

I

  • "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 (obviously) an answer song to Rod Stewart's "Maggie May".
  • "I'm Sorry (But So Is Brenda Lee)" by Ben Vaughn refers, of course, to Brenda Lee's "I'm Sorry"
  • "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's Sinatra "I Did It My Way" in the line "like Frankie said I did it my way".

J

  • "Jet Boy, Jet Girl" by Captain Sensible and the Softies inludes the line "We made it on a Ballroom Blitz," referring to the Sweet hit "Ballroom Blitz."
  • "Judy's Turn To Cry" by Lesley Gore refers to "It's My Party" ("It's my party and I'll cry if I want to...") also by Lesley Gore:
"'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'.

K

L

M

"I guess, Michael Jackson was right, "You Are Not Alone""
"Frankie Lane, he was singing 'Jezebel', I pinned an Iron Cross to my lapel"
"So we are dancing close, the band is playing 'Stardust', balloons and paper streamers floating down on us"

N

"Then he joked 'hey man,
your name isn't Stan, is it?
We should be together!'"
  • "No Pigeons" by Sporty Thieves is an answer song to "No Scrubs" by TLC.

O

P

  • "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.
  • "Play It All Night Long" by Warren Zevon is about living in the rural South and includes the line "Sweet Home Alabama / Play that dead band's song." This refers to "Sweet Home Alabama" by Lynyrd Skynyrd (see below) and the plane crash that killed Ronnie VanZant and two other band members.

Q

R

"Radio's playing some forgotten song, Brenda Lee's 'Coming on Strong'"
  • "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".
"It was a beautiful day, the sun beat down, I had the radio on, I was drivin'. Trees flew by, me and Del were singin' little 'Runaway', I was flyin'."

S

"Johnny was a school boy when he heard his first Beatles song. 'Love Me Do', I think it was and from there it didn't take him long. Got himself a guitar, used to play every night. Now he's in a rock & roll outfit, and everything's all right."
"It's like that Phil Collins song, y'know, 'In the Air Tonight', you could've saved me from drowning"
  • "Stephen, 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 .
All summer long we were grooving in the sand
Everybody just kept on playing "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band"
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

T

Just like Ronnie said, "Be my little baby"
"Roy Orbison singing for the lonely. Hey that's me and I want you only"

U

V

  • "Van Halen" by Nerf Herder refers to several different Van Halen albums and songs by name.
"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?"
  • "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"

W

  • "Walkin' To New Orleans" by Fats Domino refers to his earlier hit "Ain't That A Shame".
"There's a young man in the corner playing "Crazy" all night long"
  • "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".
  • "Writing To Reach You" by Travis refers to Oasis's "Wonderwall".:
"The radio is playing all the usual
What's a Wonderwall anyway?"

X

Y

  • "Yarra Song" by Billy Bragg contains a short section from Jean Kenbrovin and John Kellette 's "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles".
  • "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

Z

See Also

External links


Last updated: 10-24-2004 05:10:45