Post by Julie on Mar 12, 2005 12:45:49 GMT -5
The Wrong Band
I think it's perfectly clear we're in the wrong band Ginger is always sincere just
not to one man she called me up and she said you know that I'm drowning it's the
dog trainer again he says that he thinks that she needs more hands
I think it's perfectly clear we're in the wrong band Senator let's be sincere as much
as you can he called her up and he said the new prosecutor soon will be wanting a
word so she's got a soft spot for heels and spurs and there's something believin in
her voice again said there's something believin instead of just leavin
And she got her cigars from the sweet fat man I think it's perfectly clear we're in
the wrong band Heidi says she'll be sincere as much as she can I called her up and
I said you know that I'm drowning put on your raincoat again cause even the
sun's got a price on it and there's something believin in her voice again said
there's something believin instead of just leavin
She said it's time I open my eyes don't be afraid to open your eyes maybe she's
right maybe she's right maybe she's right
I think it's about putting yourself in someone else's shoes as well as not judging someone. We are too harsh on humans these days and in this song we are taught to relax and take in what we don't understand. "it's time open your eyes" and she's says, "don't be afraid to open your eyes"
Here's Tori's description of it:
"There was this hooker in D.C. that I knew, and she'd been having a fling with one of the governors. She got in too deep and thought her life was threatened, so she fled to Japan where she was protected by one of the hierarchy over there. I never heard from her again. It just all came back to me when the Heidi Fleiss thing hit and I started thinking about what that world is about. People don't think of hookers as people, but I quite like them. I find their story really interesting, and when people start judging [them], they should just shut up because they have no idea what it's like to be on the other side."
-- Tori; Illinois Entertainer, 08/94
"Orchards are simple a peach tree says 'some of me will be juicy and some of me will be dry I'm not growing for you I grow because thats what I do' you always hear some person complain about how dry their peach is and the peach says 'it's not our fault you have no understanding on the proper use for dry peaches."
-- Tori; Under The Pink Songbook
“Sex is only safe for men... The Wrong Band, that’s what it’s about. The Wrong Band, with Heidi and Ginger and me, we’re all professionals in The Wrong Band. My character, although I say she, who’s really written about a woman that I knew that had to leave for Japan. She left to be protected, because she was involved with somebody in the house years ago. This was years ago. She got in too deep. She just knew too much, and she was really afraid they that they were going to kill her, they were going to ser her up and kill her. She went to Japan to be protected by another powerful man, but she didn’t have too many choices at that point, and he was powerful enough to hide her in Japan. I never heard from her again. I don’t know what happened. And I knew her for three years. You just get in too deep, and when the Heidi [Fleiss] thing came out - whatever you do to open your mouth or cause it or whatever it is, it’s just kind of a shame that, again, it’s that control of the Patriarchy. That goes back to God again.” [Baltimore Sun - January 1994]
“This is for all my friends who are whores. Well, this is a true story. When I worked in clubs in DC, I became friends with a whore. And she’d come in a few times a week for a few years. She was a hooker, but you wouldn’t know. She looked like an assistant to some- body on Capitol Hill. That’s what all the good ones look like. Anyway, she was involved with a Congressman. And she got in over her head, and she knew too much, and she had to flee. The hooker had to leave. She was, let’s say, rescued by a big Japanese underworld magnate. She fled, and he protected her, and I never heard from her again.” [BAM - March 11, 1994]
“In The Wrong Band, the hooker’s saying ‘I have a voice here that’s worth believing. I got in over my head.’” [B-Side - May/June 1994]
“I and so many Christian women were taught to despise Mary Magdalene, because she was a prostitute. Because of that we had great problems coming to terms with the prostitute in ourselves, which again, is something the Church teaches us to deny, and something in the song, The Wrong Band, is about when I sing, ‘Ginger is always sincere, just not to one man.’”
I think it's perfectly clear we're in the wrong band Ginger is always sincere just
not to one man she called me up and she said you know that I'm drowning it's the
dog trainer again he says that he thinks that she needs more hands
I think it's perfectly clear we're in the wrong band Senator let's be sincere as much
as you can he called her up and he said the new prosecutor soon will be wanting a
word so she's got a soft spot for heels and spurs and there's something believin in
her voice again said there's something believin instead of just leavin
And she got her cigars from the sweet fat man I think it's perfectly clear we're in
the wrong band Heidi says she'll be sincere as much as she can I called her up and
I said you know that I'm drowning put on your raincoat again cause even the
sun's got a price on it and there's something believin in her voice again said
there's something believin instead of just leavin
She said it's time I open my eyes don't be afraid to open your eyes maybe she's
right maybe she's right maybe she's right
I think it's about putting yourself in someone else's shoes as well as not judging someone. We are too harsh on humans these days and in this song we are taught to relax and take in what we don't understand. "it's time open your eyes" and she's says, "don't be afraid to open your eyes"
Here's Tori's description of it:
"There was this hooker in D.C. that I knew, and she'd been having a fling with one of the governors. She got in too deep and thought her life was threatened, so she fled to Japan where she was protected by one of the hierarchy over there. I never heard from her again. It just all came back to me when the Heidi Fleiss thing hit and I started thinking about what that world is about. People don't think of hookers as people, but I quite like them. I find their story really interesting, and when people start judging [them], they should just shut up because they have no idea what it's like to be on the other side."
-- Tori; Illinois Entertainer, 08/94
"Orchards are simple a peach tree says 'some of me will be juicy and some of me will be dry I'm not growing for you I grow because thats what I do' you always hear some person complain about how dry their peach is and the peach says 'it's not our fault you have no understanding on the proper use for dry peaches."
-- Tori; Under The Pink Songbook
“Sex is only safe for men... The Wrong Band, that’s what it’s about. The Wrong Band, with Heidi and Ginger and me, we’re all professionals in The Wrong Band. My character, although I say she, who’s really written about a woman that I knew that had to leave for Japan. She left to be protected, because she was involved with somebody in the house years ago. This was years ago. She got in too deep. She just knew too much, and she was really afraid they that they were going to kill her, they were going to ser her up and kill her. She went to Japan to be protected by another powerful man, but she didn’t have too many choices at that point, and he was powerful enough to hide her in Japan. I never heard from her again. I don’t know what happened. And I knew her for three years. You just get in too deep, and when the Heidi [Fleiss] thing came out - whatever you do to open your mouth or cause it or whatever it is, it’s just kind of a shame that, again, it’s that control of the Patriarchy. That goes back to God again.” [Baltimore Sun - January 1994]
“This is for all my friends who are whores. Well, this is a true story. When I worked in clubs in DC, I became friends with a whore. And she’d come in a few times a week for a few years. She was a hooker, but you wouldn’t know. She looked like an assistant to some- body on Capitol Hill. That’s what all the good ones look like. Anyway, she was involved with a Congressman. And she got in over her head, and she knew too much, and she had to flee. The hooker had to leave. She was, let’s say, rescued by a big Japanese underworld magnate. She fled, and he protected her, and I never heard from her again.” [BAM - March 11, 1994]
“In The Wrong Band, the hooker’s saying ‘I have a voice here that’s worth believing. I got in over my head.’” [B-Side - May/June 1994]
“I and so many Christian women were taught to despise Mary Magdalene, because she was a prostitute. Because of that we had great problems coming to terms with the prostitute in ourselves, which again, is something the Church teaches us to deny, and something in the song, The Wrong Band, is about when I sing, ‘Ginger is always sincere, just not to one man.’”