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Things from the past hit you from nowhere?

Have you ever had those days or even short moments of thought where something from the past just “BAME” hits your thoughts.  I mean something that was not really all that significant but “BOOM” it is there and your kind of immersed in it for the moment.  In fact can’t get rid of it once it gets stuck in there.

That happened today as I was working on something totally unrelated, that thought just “POW” was there and I couldn’t get rid of it.  I had to do an internet search to find the origin of the words from the song “MELLOW YELLOW”.  Crap, Now I can’t get the damn song out of my mind. It was real popular for a little while way back when,  but the artist really never made much else.  Anyway here is the wiki on it – strange stuff and I remember hearing all those rumors about dried bananas, but oh well…

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the Coca-Cola branded soft drink, see Mello Yello.
“Mellow Yellow”
Single by Donovan
from the album Mellow Yellow
B-side “Sunny South Kensington” (USA)
“Preachin’ Love” (UK)
Released 24 October 1966 (USA)
February 1967 (UK)
Format 7″ single
Recorded September 1966
Genre Pop music
Length 3:42
Label Epic 5-10098
Pye 7N 17267
Writer(s) Donovan
Producer Mickie Most
Donovan UK chronology
Sunshine Superman
(1966)
“Mellow Yellow”
(1967)
There is a Mountain
(10/1967)
Donovan USA chronology
Sunny Goodge Street
(1966)
“Mellow Yellow”
(1966)
Epistle to Dippy
(2/1967)

Mellow Yellow” is a song and single release by Donovan. It reached #2 on the Billboard charts in the U.S. in 1966.

The song was rumored to be about smoking dried banana skins, which was believed to be a hallucinogenic drug in the 1960s, but this rumor has since been debunked. According to Donovan’s notes accompanying the album Donovan’s Greatest Hits, the rumor that one could get high from smoking dried banana skins was started by Country Joe McDonald in 1966, and Donovan heard the rumor three weeks before “Mellow Yellow” was released as a single. (According to The Rolling Stone Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll, he admitted later the song made reference to a vibrator[citation needed]; an “electrical banana” as mentioned in the lyrics.) The phrase “mellow yellow” appears on page 719 of the first American edition of James Joyce’s Ulysses, where it is used to refer to Mrs. Marion Bloom’s buttocks, but it is not known if Donovan got the phrase from there.[1]

The record had a “Beatlesque” feel to it, and was sometimes mistaken for a Beatles song. Donovan, in fact, was friends with the Beatles.Paul McCartney can be heard as one of the background revelers on this track — but contrary to popular belief, it is not McCartney whispering the “quite rightly” answering lines in the chorus, but rather Donovan himself. Donovan had a small part in coming up with the lyrics for “Yellow Submarine” and Paul McCartney played bass guitar (uncredited) on portions of Donovan’s Mellow Yellow album.[2]

R&B and jazz singer Georgie Fame recorded his own version with a distinctively different arrangement reminiscent of the Count Basieorchestra.

Cadbury used a modified version of the song to promote their Caramello Koala chocolates (“They call me Caramello… Koala”).

The song was also used in a series of television commercials to promote the use of butter.

In France, Lipton used a modified version of the song to promote their tea (“They call me Lipton Yellow”).

In 1999, “Mellow Yellow” was sung by a group of young adults — among which were then-unknowns Alex GreenwaldRashida Jones andJason Thompson — in Gap’s “Everybody in Cords” commercial directed by Pedro Romhanyi. The music mix was done by the Dust Brothers.[3]

Chart positions were #2 (USA) and #8 (UK).

One of the oldest coffeeshops in Amsterdam is called “Mellow Yellow”.[4]

In Episode 17 of the 5th Season of Scrubs, JD figures out the song is about liver disease (not quite rightly).

Jimi Hendrix made a reference to this song in his song Bold As Love.

Frank Zappa referenced the song in his number “Absolutely Free” on the album We’re Only In It For The Money (1967).

Here is another one – look at the title of this post and say “no where man”.  BOOM there is another one of those damn songs – go look that one up on your own.  – WD0AJG

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