gle, da sam stavio "gume na kotačima, jak motor" pojeo bi ih sve za doručak. al ja sam pravi domaćin, fini gospodin. nek se dječica igraju...
NME
“I’ve been caught stealing once when I was five / I enjoy stealing, it’s just as simple as that.”
Perry Farrell came clean about his kleptomania in the very first line of ‘Been Caught Stealing’, although it wasn’t the first line if you’re a dog. Jane’s Addiction sampled a hound at the outset of the song, perhaps giving chase to Farrell as he runs off with your milk.
“In the time of chimpanzees I was a monkey.”
No lyric conveys outsiderdom in such an amusing way as this one by Beck on the hit song ‘Loser’. Artistry, pure and simple..
“I don’t believe in an interventionist god / but I know darling that you do.”
Somehow Nick Cave manages to combine the wildly romantic with the nerdy and weirdly theological at the outset of ‘Into My Arms’.
“Oh what an ordinary day / Take out the garbage, masturbate.”
It might have sounded like a throwaway description of a Groundhog situation, but this one line received more column inches than any other Annie Clark has written thus far. Thankfully St Vincent’s genius is so vast that people find plenty of other things to talk about her too.
“Here’s comes Johnny Yen again / with the liquor and drugs.”
‘Lust for Life’ by Iggy Pop has become synonymous with the movie Trainspotting, but that certainly doesn’t make it any less brilliant. The Johnny Yen of the opening line is a reference to William Burroughs’ The Ticket That Exploded in case you were wondering.
“It was Christmas Eve babe / in the drunk tank / an old man said to me / won’t see another one.”
The ultimate aggressive duologue in song arrived in 1987 between Shane MacGowan and Kirsty MacColl, but the surprise Christmas smash Fairytale Of New York is more than a song, it’s the great American novel played out over four minutes.
"Hey ho, let's go! Hey ho, let's go! Hey ho, let's go! Hey ho, let's go!" ("Blitzkrieg Bop")
For many fans of pop music, not necessarily punk, this chant defines the Ramones. The group was animated in its persona and attitude, and these words play along with the act -- and tend to define American punk rock within the mainstream. Even if that's not necessarily the case. In any regard, this basic fist-pumping mantra is highly unforgettable.