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Airline Pop SongsBy Patrick Smith Thanks, I think, to everyone who chipped in with examples of airplane songs. Here were the most common submissions. Remember to check the first list before citing missing entries, and please note the author did not verify titles and lyrics for every apostrophized verb, so please don't bother him with petty inaccuracies... Steve Miller Band Jet Airliner (Yes, well, I suppose it'd be disrespectful to the idea of quintessence to leave this one out, much as I'd like to. The "big wheel" that "keeps spinnin' around" is, one assumes, the first stage turbofan at the front of the engine.) Peter, Paul and Mary Leavin' On A Jet Plane (Same sentiments here.) The Beatles Back in the USSR Gordon Lightfoot (and others) Early Morning Rain Freedy Johnston Western Sky Elton John Daniel Joni Mitchell This Flight Tonight John Conlee California Memory Sarah Harmer Uniform Grey Donovan (and later Jefferson Airplane) Fat Angel The Boxtops (and later Joe Cocker) The Animals Sky Pilot Liz Phair Stratford-on-Guy Chuck Berry Promised Land The Dead Milkmen Air Crash Museum (Maybe it's in Amsterdam, adjacent to the sex and torture Museums.) Mark Eitzel When My Plane Finally Goes Down (Who submitted this? Thanks for the bad karma) Pop Will Eat Itself Nightmare at 20,000 Feet (Were you reading the dry ice story?)
The Clash Spanish Bombs Nick Lowe So it Goes Hüsker Dü Crystal Hüsker Dü Private Plane And in the miscellaneous department, the cover art of the Beastie Boys' 1985 Licensed to Ill record features the tail section of an American Airlines 727. The AA logo is airbrushed over with a Beastie Boys emblem. Hüsker Dü's Land Speed Record features airplanes both front and back, including a DC-8, the same type immortalized in my dry ice story. Sub-Pop records of Seattle once ran an advertisement picturing the wreckage of a plane crash -- the shattered tail of a jetliner resting in the middle of a city street, surrounded by debris and fireman. The coats of the fireman were airbrushed over, so on their backs where it normally would have the block-letter initials of the fire department, it now showed the Sub-Pop logo. The picture is an actual news photograph from December of 1960, when a United Airlines DC-8 collided in mid-air over New York City with a TWA Lockheed Constellation. It's anyone's guess if the Sub-Pop people had any idea of this. This article is part of a collection that originally appeared on Salon.com. Patrick Smith, 38, is an erstwhile airline pilot, retired punk rocker and air travel columnist. His book, Ask the Pilot (Riverhead) was voted "Best Travel Book of 2004" by Amazon.com. Patrick has traveled to more than 55 countries and always asks for a window seat. He lives near Boston. Article added on September 20, 2005
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