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Thursday 16 November 2017

Words for the Music 011: KIRSTY MacCOLL


KIRSTY MacCOLL
10 October 1959 – 18 December 2000
 
 



 IN THESE SHOES?
KIRSTY MacCOLL
Live on Later With Jools Holland, 2000
from the 2001 Instinct Records LP  
Tropical Brainstorm





 
IN THESE SHOES?



 

I once met a man with a sense of adventure
He was dressed to thrill wherever he went
He said 'Let's make love on a mountain top,
Under the stars on a big hot rock'

I said 'In these shoes?  

– I don't think so'

I said 'Honey, let's do it here'


So I'm sitting in a bar in Guadalajara
In walks a guy with a faraway look in his eyes
He said 'I've got a powerful horse outside
Climb on the back I'll take you for a ride
I know a little place we can get there for the break of day'

I said 'In these shoes?  

– No way José'

I said 'Honey, let's stay right here'


No le gusta caminar
[Doesn't like to walk]
No puede montar a caballo
[Can't ride a horse]
Como se puede ballar?
[How can you swing?]
¡Es un escandolo! 
[It's a scandal!]


Then I met an Englishman
'Oh' he said 
'Won't you walk up and down my spine?
It makes me feel strangely alive'

I said 'In these shoes?  

– I doubt you'd survive'

I said 'Honey, let's do it' 



No le gusta caminar
[Doesn't like to walk]
No puede montar a caballo
[Can't ride a horse]
Como se puede ballar?
[How can you swing?]
¡Es un escandolo! 
[It's a scandal!]



No le gusta caminar
[Doesn't like to walk]
No puede montar a caballo
[Can't ride a horse]
Como se puede ballar?
[How can you swing?]
¡Es un escandolo! 
[It's a scandal!]



No le gusta caminar
[Doesn't like to walk]
No puede montar a caballo
[Can't ride a horse]
Como se puede ballar?
[How can you swing?]
¡Es un escandolo! 
[It's a scandal!]



 
 
Words and music 
K MacColl and P Glenister
© 2001 Ocean Songs/Chrysalis Music Publishing/
Warner Chappell Music Ltd




 

 

As someone who wasted a large part of his youth attempting to write catchy and literate pop songs I can only marvel at the talent and dexterity of the late and much lamented British songstress Kirsty MacColl.  While In These Shoes? may not rank as one of her of most iconic tunes, it demonstrates everything that made her such a beloved recording artist following her rise to prominence during the mid 1980s –– passion, wit and a flawless delivery combined with a devastating sense of humour.  (Her father was folksinger Ewan MacColl, whose compositions include The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face and Dirty Old Town, so it's probably reasonable to assume that adding words to melodies to create memorable, well-crafted songs was a gift she was born with.)

The hook of In These Shoes? is not, as it generally is in the majority of Western pop songs, the chorus which, in this case, surprises and then delights the listener by being delivered in Spanish.  Instead, the hook is the title itself, repeated three times with different tag lines which manage to be simultaneously provocative and hilarious.  This, the listener is warned, is not a woman to be trifled with.  This is a serious fashionista who knows men want her but will never compromise her 'look' to satisfy their expectations.     

Sadly, MacColl's life was cut short on 18 December 2000 when she was killed by a speedboat while scuba diving with her sons off the Mexican island of Cozumel.  The boat, owned by a supermarket tycoon named Guillermo González Nova, had illegally entered a restricted diving zone, travelling directly toward her at speed estimated by several witnesses to be in the vicinity of 18 knots per hour despite Nova's subsequent claim that it was only travelling at a speed of 1 knot per hour.  After saving the lives of her teenaged sons by pushing them out of the path of the boat, MacColl was sliced in half by its propeller, killing her instantly.  

Although Nova was the only one of the 6 people aboard the powerful 31 foot cruiser who was legally licensed to drive it, responsibility for the accident was shifted to Cen Yam, his 28 year old deckhand who eventually received a 34 month sentence for culpable homicide, not one day of which he served after paying a fine equivalent to the sum of £67.  Nova continued to insist that it was Yam and not himself who was in control of the boat when MacColl was killed –– a claim hotly disputed by the singer's mother Jean who waged a campaign, which was ultimately unsuccessful and ended in 2009 after she was advised that nothing more could be gained by pursuing it, to make him admit his guilt and issue an apology to the family.  (It is important to note that Jean MacColl did not ask Nova for financial compensation, only for the admission of wrongdoing plus the apology.)

What made MacColl's death particularly tragic was that it was not the inevitable rock star death caused by a surfeit of drugs and alcohol, triggered by some form of well-publicized and/or untreated personality disorder.  Hers was an unnecessary and entirely preventable death caused by a corrupt billionaire scumbag who bribed and lied his way out of having to pay the penalty for his grossly negligent behaviour, proving yet again that there's one law for the wealthy of this world and another law for the rest of us. 

Thankfully, we have the many recordings Kirsty MacColl made both as a solo artist and as an in-demand backing singer to keep her memory very much alive.  

Viva Kirsty!
 

 
Use the link below to visit Freeworld, the KIRSTY MacCOLL website, where you can read more about her music, her life and her enduring creative legacy:
 
 

 

 

 

The biographies Sun on the Water: The Brilliant Life and Tragic Death of Kirsty MacColl by JEAN MacCOLL and Kirsty MacColl: The One and Only by KAREN O'BRIEN were published in 2008 and 2013. 

 

 

Special thanks to everyone who takes the time to upload music to YouTube.  Your efforts are appreciated by music lovers everywhere.

 

 

You might also enjoy:

 

 
Words for the Music 009: VICTORIA WOOD

 

 
Words for the Music 007: RICKIE LEE JONES

 

 
Words for the Music 008: LORENZ HART

 

 

Last updated 14 October 2021 §  

 

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