Louie, Louie
Oh, no, you take me where ya gotta go
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, baby
Louie, Louie
Oh, baby, take me where ya gotta go
A fine little girl, she waits for me
Me catch the ship across the sea
Me sailed that ship all alone
Me never think I'll make it home
Oh, Louie, Louie
Oh, no, no, no, take me where ya gotta go
Oh, no
Louie, Louie
Oh, baby, take me where ya gotta go
(Fuck!)
Three nights and days I sailed the sea
Me think of girl constantly
On that ship, I dream she there
I smell the rose in her hair
Louie, Louie
Oh, no, me gotta go
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, baby
Louie, Louie
Oh, baby, me gotta go
Okay, let's give it to 'em, right now
Me see
Me see Jamaica, the moon above
It won't be long me see me love
Me take her in my arms and then
I tell her I'll never leave again
Oh, Louie, Louie
Oh, no, me gotta go
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, baby
Louie, Louie
Oh, baby, me gotta go
I said me gotta go now
Let's hustle on out of here
Let's go!
About This Song
"Louie Louie" by The Kingsmen is a primal expression of longing and sexual frustration wrapped in deceptively simple garage rock that became one of the most controversial songs of the 1960s. Beneath its surface narrative of a sailor departing from a lover lies a raw exploration of masculine desire and the ache of separation, delivered through Jack Ely's famously slurred, almost incomprehensible vocals that sparked nationwide rumors of hidden obscenities. The song's power comes not from lyrical sophistication but from its elemental three-chord structure and driving rhythm that captures the restless energy of young desire with an urgency that feels barely contained. The Kingsmen's sloppy, garage-band production-complete with a missed drum cue and Ely's strained vocals fighting against the low-tuned microphone-created an authentically rough sound that perfectly matched the song's themes of yearning and frustration. What made "Louie Louie" resonate so deeply was its ability to channel universal feelings of sexual tension and romantic longing through a deliberately primitive musical framework that felt dangerous and subversive to adult listeners. The FBI's actual investigation into the song's supposedly dirty lyrics only amplified its rebellious appeal, making it an anthem for teenage defiance and the emerging counterculture. The track's enduring influence lies in how it proved that raw emotion and energy could triumph over technical polish, helping to establish the template for punk and garage rock decades before those genres were named.
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