She spent twenty years in the Dakota
Every single day it was black in the Dakota
Riot grrrls think you can stop me
And you're forever in her debt
Well I know you haven't sent me
And you haven't sent her yet
She spent twenty years like a virus
They want to burn the witch who's inside us
Well you, you don't fuck with the fabulous four
Or you spend the rest of your life
Picking things up off the floor
She's still alive but I am sure
That all the stars belong to her
On California king-sized beds
She's wrapped in rags inside my head
This is the story, this is the story of someone who's wild
Big black rules, pearl, life
(I don't remember, I forget)
Oh, baby dry your dirty eyes
My water breaks like turpentine
The pee girl burns to be a bride
Your ever lovely suicide
Are they coming for me
Are they coming soon
Hey Jude, hey Jude
Are they coming for me
Judy, Judy
Are they coming soon
(I don't remember, I forget)
The pee girl burns to be a bride
Your ever lovely suicide
I don't remember, I forget



Lyrics submitted by ShiverForMe, edited by scottdoesntknow628

20 Years in the Dakota Lyrics as written by Eric T. Erlandson Courtney M Love

Lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.

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20 Years In The Dakota song meanings
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    General Comment

    This song is ostensibly about Yoko Ono, and the fact that people would think anything else is beyond me. There are at least three Beatles references in it and several references to Ono, and all that is aside from the fact that Courtney publicly said what she had in mind when writing it:

    "People hate her [Yoko Ono], they really do. Did you know that to 'Yoko someone' is a verb in America? It is something that boys say if they’re hanging out with you too much and they’re going to school or they have a band. It’s almost a myth that’s used to suppress women. Y’know, ‘You’re gonna Yoko me. You’re gonna destroy me.’ And this woman put up with racial inequality from Fleet Street, she put up with being accused of breaking up the best band in the world [The Beatles], she put up with people’s idea that she castrated this man and then, worst of all, she had her best friend, her husband, the person she lived for, die in her arms in front of a fortress that she’d hidden herself in for twenty years. And I just feel that the world media should apologize to her because she handled it with so much dignity."

    There you have it folks. It's a song about Yoko, Nancy, Courtney, and all the other infamous female counterparts to male cultural icons.

    scottdoesntknow628on November 26, 2013   Link

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