>tomorrow's lecture focusses on representations of sex. This morning I was >trying to work out precisely *when* metaphor/slang became dispensable in >lyrics about sex. I'm not talking about the 'heavy breathing' stuff by Jane At least since sometime in the late 19th century (probably earlier if things like the Carmina Burana--the original Goliards not necessarily Orff--are any indication). Jelly Roll Morton's "The Murder Ballad" and others recorded in the late 30s for the Library of Congress are as completely explicit as any rap today and much more than the Kate Bush tracks (examples at http://www.doctorjazz.freeserve.co.uk/locspeech3.html). Much of this was composed decades earlier but that's hardly the only example (there are others by the Drifters, Harmonica Frank Floyd, Alberta Hunter and more) but for obvious reasons these types of songs weren't documented very well. Even if you're talking about music for a mass audience instead of the local roadhouse it's still not that clear. Songs that today might seem draped in metaphor could to contemporary audiences seem very blunt. Lang ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu