Makes sense, right? Whatever the verb here, it should be in the past tense, not present. And nothing makes "pretend" more plausible than "began" (well, nothing I can see in the lyrics.) But pretend it is, and quite clearly enunciated, as pop lyrics go.
Moments later, as I was shaking off my long-standing delusion, Block revealed that she too had mondegreened* the lyrics. "Are the leaves all down?" she asked Patchett, who lives in Nashville. "All the leaves are down," Patchett replied. But no: It's "All the leaves are brown," to go with the gray skies (though the image of bare branches is nice too).
Will mondegreen creation dwindle when we all get our music via earbuds rather than crackly radios? Or is the listening mind just too inventive to stop making its own kind of sense, given half a chance? I'm rooting for the mondegreens; like eggcorns, they're too entertaining to be sacrificed for mere accuracy.
*I see that this verb is out there, in active and passive forms. I'll vote for active, since mondegreening is something we do, not something the song does to us.
Thanks for the new word - I love it and its origin.
ReplyDeleteWell, I always thought that I began to pray!
ReplyDeleteHuh. I've heard "began to pray" all these years too.
ReplyDeleteSame for me with pretend, missed that for years, but brown leaves I got.
ReplyDeleteI'm inclined to say "created a mondegreen" instead of making a verb out of it, but I still resist making "looked it up on Google" a verb.
I had a Paul Simon mondegreen that I still prefer to the actual lyric - it's from "Cool Cool River" on _Rhythm of the Saints_.
ReplyDeleteThe lyric I heard was, "I believe in the future - I mail in my card." I thought it was a very clever and economical way to show a comically tiny level of confidence in humanity - basically, "There's enough of a chance that we'll survive as a species that I'll register this gadget I just bought and get a free extended warranty."
I also liked that when the line was echoed later in the song - "I believe in the future we will suffer no more" - it had shifted grammatically, and I'm a sucker for echoes that do that. (Nat King Cole's "When I Fall In Love," e.g.: "..the moment that I *feel that* you *feel that* way too...")
But it turns out that the "real" lyric is, "I believe in the future I may live in my car." Pretty pedestrian (ha!) - I still prefer mine.
Interesting! I've always heard 'began' too. And isn't it 'walked' into a church?
ReplyDeleteI always knew it was "brown," but until this moment I too thought it was "I began to pray" -- and lord knows how many times I've heard the song (one of my favorites). I wonder what songs I'll be getting wrong for the rest of my days?
ReplyDeleteI've always heard it as "began to pray" too, but pretend does make more sense. But I've always heard "all the leaves are brown".
ReplyDeleteAlso, not to nitpick to much, but the verse isn't "Went into a church, and I pretend to pray" but "Stopped into a church/I passed along the way/Well, I got down on my knees/and I pretend to pray".
And it is between the kneeling and the praying that the verse switch from past to present (after that, the preacher "likes" and "knows").
Of course -- "Stopped into a church." Further proof that you can't quote anything from memory. That is, I can't! Thanks, Brn -- I fixed it.
ReplyDeleteHowever, a shift from past to present between "[began/pretended] to pray" and the preacher's "likes" and "knows" would be normal; the actions are in a specific past, the attitudes in a generalized present. It's the shift within the past narrative that's confusing (not just to me, I'm glad to see).
And come to think of it, I also hear the opening words as "Although leaves are brown"; you know, even though the weather's bad, I've been out for a walk. Anybody else?
I had never heard of the generalized present before, so I had to look it up. You are probably right about that. To me seemed is as if the writer is telling this story as if we are kneeling there beside him.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite mondegreen is still "Excuse me while I kiss this guy", especially since the college where I work uses Purple Haze as an unofficial anthem.
Incredible, I've just watched the video (www.youtube.com/watch?v=dN3GbF9Bx6E) and it took at least 5 attempts before I could even see them saying pretend! It was so fixed in my mind that they were saying began that I was watching them say it too.
ReplyDeleteI like my newly learnt word, mondegreen, is there a visual equivalent?
My favourite has always been Depeche Mode's Just Can't Get Enough, the chorus of which I have never been able to hear as anything but "Just can't get it up", which makes the song quite, quite different.
ReplyDeleteThat's funny. I've had trouble with some other songs, but "California Dreamin'" isn't one of them. "Pretend" and "brown" are both very clear to me, particularly in Cass's repetition of them.
ReplyDeleteI always heard 'began'.
ReplyDeleteGoogle the lyrics:
all the leaves are brown
and the sky is grey
I've been for a walk
on a winter's day
I'd be safe and warm
if I was in L.A
California Dreamin'
on such a winter's day
stopped into a church
I passed along the way
well, I got down on my knees
and I pretend to pray
you know the preacher likes the cold
he knows I'm gonna stay
California Dreamin'
on such a winter's day
all the leaves are brown
and the sky is grey
I've been for a walk
on a winter's day
if I didn't tell her
I could leave today
California Dreamin'
on such a winter's day x3
I just listened to the song, and 'pretend' is very clear. 'began' in the past tense just made more sense to me.
ReplyDeleteWeirdly, the most persistent mondegreen in the lyrics hasn't even been mentioned. I believe it's supposed to be "The preacher locks the door," but no one seems to remember it that way at this point, indicating "likes the cold" (which makes much less sense) instead.
ReplyDeleteIt was only a little while ago that I realized that the first line of the chorus of Joni Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" (aka "Paved Paradise") is "Don't it always seem to go" and not "Vo-de-o-de-o-do-do".
ReplyDelete