Gone Wrong
, no
Paradise
ahead.
Big Trouble
: he doesn’t like the
Company She Keeps
;
he’s been
Caught in the Act
with someone else. They become
Passive Friends
. ‘
Admit
You’re Shit
’, the
Iron Maiden
says with
Dirty Looks
. The
Lover Speaks
: ‘
Oh Well
’
he concludes.
However, by far the most inventive and colourful naming, and the most produc-
tive, evokes the
surrealism of science fiction, of fantasy and modernist poetry. The
roots of inspiration may well lie in the psychedelic visions of the hippy drug culture
of the 1960s, but the witty deviation of the incongruous collocations is eye-catching
and mind-bending, like the concepts of Metaphysical poetry. Undoubtedly there
is the same kind of ‘poor man’s poetry’ that Eric Partridge and others have associ-
ated with slang, in names like the following:
Angels in Aspic, Aztec Camera, Ballistic
Kisses, Bone Orchard, Dead Pan Tractor, Digital Dinosaurs, Electric Prunes, Exploding
Seagulls, Flaming Mussolinis, Fourteen Iced Bears, Green Telescope, Groovy Chainsaw,
Immaculate Fools, Laughing Apples, Lemon Kittens, Lovin Spoonful, Liquid Gold,
Magnolia Siege, Leather Nun, Mind Over Muesli, Pink Noise, Glass Ties, Prefab Sprout,
Reverend Sunshine, Sad Cafe, Singing Sheep, Soup Dragons, Spandau Ballet, Stone
Roses, Suede Crocodiles, Velvet Underground, Voice of the Beehive
and
Wishbone Ash
– a real
Zodiac Mindwarp!
ISSUES TO CONSIDER
As a follow-up to Wales’s entertaining paper, readers interested in general issues
connected with the language of popular music might wish to consult Trudgill (1983)
and Simpson (1999). Both of these articles explore, from a sociolinguistic perspec-
tive, the singing styles adopted by pop and rock musicians. Keeping within the same
field of discourse, Steen (2002a) is an insightful anlaysis of metaphor in the lyrics of
Bob Dylan’s song ‘Hurricane’.
More suggestions follow:
❏
Wales’s article concentrates on a field of discourse
that is transient by nature,
where fashions change almost overnight and where an artist’s popularity is
measured by weeks and not years. What then is the current ‘state of play’ as far
as naming techniques used in rock and pop go? Are the practices identified by
Wales still in evidence or are other techniques now used in the names of contem-
porary pop and rock groups? Do different decades have different characteristic
naming practices, for example?
❏
The array of stylistic strategies which Wales uncovers relates exclusively to pop
and
rock bands, but how widespread are these naming strategies in other musical
sub-genres? Are the same tendencies found in the names of, for example, jazz
or folk groups? And if not, why not?
❏
Do the names of albums and singles receive similar stylistic treatment to those
of bands? Is there, for example, a correlation between having a ‘wacky’ band
name and giving an album a comparably wacky title? Or can there be too much
stylistic wackiness in pop music naming practices?
160
E X T E N S I O N
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