
Clifford Thies provides his top-ten list of Cold War songs, and it is a treat. But it is more than delightful. Itโs a knockout.
When I discovered the list, I eagerly looked to see where Thies put the Beatlesโ โBack in the USSR.โ He put it at #2, behind Bob Dylanโs โA Hard Rainโs a-Gonna Fall.โ
Paul McCartney said that the 1968 songโs BOAC airline passenger from Miami Beach to the USSR is a Russian spy returning home after an extended mission in the United States. As evidenced on the songโs Wikipedia page, interpretations vary. A shiftiness allows for seeing it as a parody of the songs it imitates. Alternatively, it can be seen as a homage to those songs and thankfulness for Western freedom and its culture and, correspondingly, a criticism of unfreedom.
McCartney howls: โBack in the US, back in the US, back in the USSR.โ
When the lyrics tell of things USSR and the spy sings, โYou donโt know how lucky you are, boy,โ does he mean a boy back in the US? I see the song that way. When the spy sings, โBeen away so long I hardly knew the place. Gee, itโs good to be back home,โ it seems ironic. Why would it be so good to be back home if you now hardly knew the place?
The spy tells of how the Ukraine girls knock him out, and leave the West behind, while the Moscow girls make him sing and shout โThat Georgiaโs always on my mi-mi-mi-mi-mi-mi-mi-mi-mi-mind.โ Those lyrics recall โGeorgia on My Mind,โ an old song made newly famous in 1960 by Ray Charles, who was born in Georgia. Maybe it is the US state of Georgia thatโs on the spyโs mindโitโs not far from Florida where the airplane departed from. Maybe the once-lucky boy should have defected while he had the chance.
McCartney said he sung the verses with his Jerry Lee Lewis voice. The bridge, telling of girls by country region, harmonizes and is gloriously Beach Boys, after the classic โCalifornia Girls,โ also using โwarmโ and โsouth.โ The underlying tunefulness of โBack in the USSRโ celebrates the songs that it draws from, while certain sounds give it all an ironic feeling.
As far as the lyrics go, the main referent is Chuck Berryโs โBack in the USA.โ Both โBack in the USAโ and โBack in the USSRโ start with the narrator returning home by touching down on an international runway. Chuck Berryโs song is a simple expression of love. He doesnโt tell of girls, but like McCartney and like the Beach Boys, Chuck gets around:
New York, Los Angeles, oh, how I yearned for you
Detroit, Chicago, Chattanooga, Baton Rouge
Let alone just to be at my home back in ol’ St. Lou.Did I miss the skyscrapers, did I miss the long freeway?
From the coast of California to the shores of the Delaware Bay
You can bet your life I did, till I got back to the U. S. A.
Berryโs song says simply: โIโm so glad Iโm livinโ in the USA.โ The Beatles song, however, begins with a dreadful flight, the vomit bag on his knee, and feels a little queasy throughout.
โBack in the USSRโ was released six months after the Warsaw Pactโs invasion of Czechoslovakia. My interpretation seems to agree with the Sovietsโ. The Wikipedia page says:
Although the Beatles were never allowed to perform in the USSR, Elton John was permitted to visit the country in 1979 in a historic concert tourโฆ He sang โBack in the U.S.S.R.โ as his closing song throughout the tour, ignoring an official request after his opening show that he not do soโฆ In the 1980s McCartney was refused permission to perform in the USSR.
Meanwhile, Stateside, on July 4, 1984, the Beach Boys performed โBack in the USSRโ in Washington, DC and were joined by Ringo Starr. Ringo told a reporter: “Happy Birthday [America] … Sorry we lost.”
In his 2016 autobiography, Good Vibrations, Beach Boy Mike Love said: โโBack in the U.S.S.R.โ was a helluva song, and itโs lasted longer than the country.โ
But, joking aside, Thiesโs list is worth an hour of contemplation. The set of ten is a noble effort against tyranny. Take a listen. Lord knows where things are headed.
Share This Article

Post on Facebook

Post on X

Print Article

Email Article




