Words and music by al smyth
Copyright 2008
Based on the unreleased movie "Cocksucker Blues"
see footnotes for how the verses reference the movie
1. In the hotel she was lying on the bed
2. Study's shown it will surely help yer head
3. TV out the window...
4. Cards on the side
And I'm lonesome fer her tonight
1. Last one down, up in room 255
2. Stuck down south George McGovern is in his prime
3. Country Music on the 8-track
4. Curtains block the light
And I'm lonesome fer her tonight
Well I'm lonesome with the boredom, 1972, they were singing the Cocksucker Blues
1. Call the service try to get a healthy fix
2. By the order not discretion as was wished
3. Well, they’ll bust you just for papers…
4. ..there’s an M.T. in my room
And I'm lonesome fer her tonight
Well I'm lonesome with the boredom, 1972; they were singing the Cocksucker Blues
Well I'm lonesome with the boredom, 1972; they were singing the Cocksucker Blues
FOOTNOTES/CROSS-REFERENCE TO THE MOVIE
Verse1
1. This is based on scene(s) of this naked chick in Keith’s room
2. Based on a scene of Charlie Watts sitting bored watching an aspirin commercial on TV
3. The famous scene of Keith and Bobby Keys throwing a TV out the window
4. Scene of Keith and road crew playing poker
Verse 2
1. Again a poker scene reference
2. A scene which shows G. McGovern on TV, and the stones are on tour down south
3. A reference to the times and the music (sometimes heard in the background)
4. Which they tend to do in hotels – especially in the eyes of grainy black and white footage
Verse 3
1. A scene where Keith calls room service for a random selection of fresh fruit
2. Keith keeps trying to tell the lady to just use her discretion, but the ‘by the book’ hotel staffer keeps on telling him exactly how many apples of what not come per order of apples
3. A scene where Mick Taylor comes in a while smoking a joint with a road crew and a naked chick (Keith is passed out in the bed nearby) says that where they are at (Deep South) they will bust you just for papers.
4. Get it? ‘M.T’ sounds like ‘Empty’ … clever, heh?