‘He’s an excitable boy with a great band’.
I was walking to the shops yesterday and Raspberry Beret came on in my collection. Such was my enjoyment, I wondered why I hadn’t already featured it here. I realised I had been putting it off because I thought it sounded too much, rhythmically and melodically, like another Warren Zevon rocker – Poor Poor Pitiful Me. Oh well, I decided to let Raspberry Beret have its own day in the sun because it’s just so god-dang fun, the drums are so crisp, and Zevon sings his socks off. Also, the lyrics are very much in keeping with the humour and zest of Zevon’s other songs. But guess what?
This is not a Zevon-penned song. Drum roll… Prince wrote it. So here is Zevon doing Prince in what was basically a knock-off rehearsal. I’m not complaining. It has such a crazy tight bar-band rock sound. It seems like they are having the time of their lives recording it.
This version appears on the record Hindu Love Gods by an American band called Hindu Love Gods. That was the only album they released, and it came out in 1990. The band was made up of R.E.M. players Bill Berry, Peter Buck and Mike Mills, along with Zevon, who were also recording his album Sentimental Hygiene at the time. During late-night sessions they recorded a bunch of old blues covers and decided to release them as a separate album under a different band name – Hindu Love Gods.
Wikipedia notes that, according to Zevon and Mills, Zevon’s manager decided to release the album without consulting the musicians, which created a public rift between Zevon and the band.
It’s sad to realise that both Zevon and Prince are no longer with us. Oh, and before I forget, here is Prince’s original version, which is unsurprisingly worlds apart from Zevon’s.
Rock on and enjoy every sandwich.
[Verse 1]
Yeah
I was working part time in a five-and-dime
My boss was Mr. McGee
He told me several times that he didn’t like my kind
‘Cause I was a bit too leisurely
Seems that I was busy doing something close to nothing
But different than the day before
That’s when I saw her, ooh, I saw her
She walked in through the out door, out door
[Chorus]
She wore a raspberry beret
The kind you find in a second-hand store
Raspberry beret
And if it was warm, she wouldn’t wear much more
Raspberry beret, I think I love her
[Verse 2]
Built like she was, she had the nerve to ask me
If I planned to do her any harm
So, look here, I put her on the back of my bike and, uh, we went riding
Down by old man Johnson’s farm
I said, now, overcast days never turned me on
But something ’bout the clouds and her mixed
She wasn’t too bright, but I could tell when she kissed me
She knew how to get her kicks
[Chorus]
She wore a raspberry beret
The kind you find in a second-hand store
Raspberry beret
And if it was warm, she wouldn’t wear much more
Raspberry beret, I think I love her
[Verse 3]
The rain sounds so cool when it hits the barn roof
And the horses wonder who you are
Thunder drowns out what the lightning sees
You feel like a movie star
Listen, they say the first time ain’t the greatest
But I tell you, if I had the chance to do it all again, ooh
I wouldn’t change a stroke ’cause, baby, I’m the most
With a girl as fine as she was then
[Chorus]
(Raspberry beret) Oh!
The kind you find (The kind you find)
The kind you find (In a second-hand store)
Oh, no, no
(Raspberry beret)
(And if it was warm)
Where have all the raspberry women gone? (She wouldn’t wear much more)
Yeah (Raspberry beret)
Aah!
I think I, I think I, I think I love her!
(Raspberry beret)
No, no, no
No, no, no (The kind you find)
(In a second-hand store)
(Raspberry beret)
Tell me
Where have all the raspberry women gone? (And if it was warm she wouldn’t wear much more)
(Raspberry beret)
Ooh, uh, I think I love
References:
1. Hindu Love Gods (album) – Wikipedia



















