Category Archives: 1960s songs

The top 500 best music and songs from the 1960s. Song meanings, lyrics and interpretations from your favorite artists. The Beatles, Beach Boys, Simon and Garfunkel, Dylan. See who rates the highest!

#267 Badge- Cream

I’m thinkin’ ’bout the times you drove in my car/
I’m thinkin’ that I might have drove you too far.

Eric Clapton was in several super-famous bands: Cream, Blind Faith, Derrick & the Dominoes, and he had success as a solo artist. When you combine those bands’ works you get one of the all-time great collections of music. He is a rock contributor up there with The Beatles, Dylan, Elton John and The Stones.

Most of Clapton’s work is heavily based on the electric guitar and “Badge” is no different. The song came about due to a collaboration with George Harrison. They worked together on While My Guitar Gently Weeps. The Beatles got that song, Cream got this one.

Badge Cream meaning
Harrison and Clapton

The intro bass-line in “Badge” is a classic. The song also features piano and does not bring out the electric guitar until the bridge. The bridge sounds very different than the verse like most psychedelic rock.

As far as the lyrics go, they are mostly nonsensical. Or perhaps non-linear is more charitable. It sounds like there was some sort of loving relationship between a man and a woman and she might have become a partier and that no longer interested him. It is hard to tell.

Badge Lyrics

Thinkin’ ’bout the times you drove in my car.
Thinkin’ that I might have drove you too far.
And I’m thinkin’ ’bout the love that you laid on my table.

I told you not to wander ’round in the dark.
I told you ’bout the swans, that they live in the park.
Then I told you ’bout our kid, now he’s married to Mabel.

Yes, I told you that the light goes up and down.
Don’t you notice how the wheel goes ’round?
And you better pick yourself up from the ground
Before they bring the curtain down,
Yes, before they bring the curtain down.

Talkin’ ’bout a girl that looks quite like you.
She didn’t have the time to wait in the queue.
She cried away her life since she fell off the cradle.

written by George Harrison/ Eric Clapton

#265 Fourth Time Around- Bob Dylan

Everybody must give something back
For something they get.

Dylan’s “Fourth Time Around” is interesting in that it sounds like he is explaining to his new girlfriend (“you”) how and why he broke up with his last girlfriend (“her”). The story is preposterous but pretty funny. It sounds like Dylan lived quite the life.

What Dylan tells his new girlfriend is that he went to see this hookup of his and they began arguing about nonsense. She says something to the effect of “everyone gets what is coming to them” and Dylan kind of just stands there twiddling his thumbs, which makes her more angry. He asks her if she would like a stick of gum and that really makes her mad. It seems like she is looking for a fight and he is just trying to de-escalate. So she kicks him out of the house.

Fourth Time Around Meaning
Bob Dylan

Then he remembers he forgot something in her house so he has to go back and bug her again. She goes to get the shirt he forgot, and he looks around the room, sees some peculiar things but notices some nice rum. When she comes back, he asks for some and she says no. He says, “What? I can’t understand you, you should probably spit out your gum.” Well she goes nuclear until she passes out from arguing. He covers her up, and for the hell of it goes and looks through her drawers.

BUT, here is the key, then he gathered all his things and came running to the new girl who gracefully accepted him and loved him. I just have to wonder if this song is really for the new girlfriend or more a funny story for us. I am not certain all those details would be of much interest to a new girlfriend though we find the details enjoyable.

Make sure to listen to the Live version at Free Trade hall. That is the acoustic set right before he went electric. Many of his best performances come from that night.

Fourth Time Around Lyrics

When she said, “Don’t waste your words, they’re just lies”
I cried she was deaf.
And she worked on my face until breaking my eyes,
And saying “What else you got left?”

It was then that I got up to leave,
But she said, “Don’t forget
Everybody must give something back,
For something they get”.

I stood there and hummed, I tapped on her drum,
I asked her how come.
And she buttoned her boot, and straightened her suit,
And she said, “Don’t be cute”.

So I forced my hands in my pockets,
And felt with my thumbs.
And gallantly handed her my very last piece of gum.

She threw me outside, I stood in the dirt,
Where everyone walked.
And, when finding out I’d forgotten my shirt,
I went back and knocked.

I waited in the hallway, she went to get it
And I tried to make sense.
Out of that picture of you in your wheelchair,
That leaned up against…

Her Jamaican rum, and when she did come
I asked her for some.
She said, “No, dear”, I said, “Your words are not clear,
You’d better spit out your gum”.

She screamed till her face got so red,
Then she fell on the floor.
And, I covered her up and then went and looked through her drawer.

And when I was through, I filled up my shoe,
And brought it to you.
And you, you took me in, you loved me then,
You never wasted time.
And I, I never took much, I never asked for your crutch,
Now don’t ask for mine.

written by Bob Dylan

#260 Turn, Turn, Turn- The Byrds

A time of love, a time of hate/
A time of war, a time of peace/
A time you may embrace, a time to refrain from embracing.

Did you know the lyrics from “Turn, Turn, Turn” might be the oldest of any of the songs on the list? Pete Seeger actually borrowed them from the Bible (Ecclesiastes 3:1-8). The message is that there is a time for everything, so do things in their due time…and be patient. Again we have the Byrds adapting a folk song and making it into a Rock song in order to gain a wider audience. Before, we saw them do that with My Back Pages by Bob Dylan.

Turn Turn Turn Meaning
The Byrds

“Turn Turn Turn” has all the signature hallmarks of a Byrds song. The blended melodies with no signature lead singer. The unique guitar sound created by Roger McGuin’s 12-string Rickenbacher- who would go on to be more famous for his work with The Band. And of course, it is a cover. The Byrds could never break through with a transcendent hit of their own to rivals their covers (the closest the got was Eight Miles High). Still, there sound is so unique and influential that we remember their contributions highly.

Turn Turn Turn Meaning
Songwriter Pete Seeger

Turn, Turn, Turn Lyrics

To everything (turn, turn, turn),
There is a season (turn, turn, turn).
And a time to every purpose, under heaven.

A time to be born, a time to die,
A time to plant, a time to reap.
A time to kill, a time to heal,
A time to laugh, a time to weep.

To everything (turn, turn, turn),
There is a season (turn, turn, turn).
And a time to every purpose, under heaven.

A time to build up, a time to break down,
A time to dance, a time to mourn;
A time to cast away stones, a time to gather stones together.

To everything (turn, turn, turn),
There is a season (turn, turn, turn).
And a time to every purpose, under heaven.

A time of love, a time of hate,
A time of war, a time of peace;
A time you may embrace, a time to refrain from embracing.

To everything (turn, turn, turn),
There is a season (turn, turn, turn).
And a time to every purpose, under heaven

A time to gain, a time to lose,
A time to rend, a time to sew.
A time for love, a time for hate,
A time for peace, I swear it’s not too late.

Songwriters: Peter Seeger