And speaking of walking down the street
looking at “girls,” I’ll bet you’re familiar with the Jonathan Richman, Modern
Lovers song “Pablo Picasso.” The lyrics
run:
Well some people try to pick up girls
And get called assholes
This never happened to Pablo Picasso
He could walk down your street
And girls could not resist his stare and
So Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole
I suspect there’s
some truth lurking there amid the absurdity.
There probably was a time when Picasso could pick up girls while
walking in any street. On the other hand
he does seem to get called an asshole pretty often these days, for one reason
or another.
Now,
here’s a thing. Pablo Picasso certainly wrote some poetry,
and if you go online you’ll find a poem of his “A Lonely Road is That I
Walked,” a title which has surely lost something in the translation. It runs as follows:
I walk a lonely road, the one and only
one I’ve ever known.
I don’t know where it goes, but I keep
walking on and on.
I walked the lonely and untrodden road
for I was walking on the bridge
of the broken dreams.
I don’t know what the world is fighting
for or why I am being instigated.
It’s for this that I walk this lonely
road for I wish to be
alone.
So I am breaking up, breaking up.
It is the lack of self control that I
feared as there is something
Inside me that pulls the need to
surface, consuming, confusing.
being called weird I walk this lonely
road on the verge of broken dreams.
And so I walk this lonely road and so
just keep walking still
Now, if you’re at all familiar with the
band Green Day, you’ll see these words are dead ringers for the lyrics to their
(really piss poor if you ask me) song “Boulevard of Broken Dreams.” Did they use Picasso’s lyrics? Were they inspired by them? They Internet is silent on the subject. Or is it some Internet hoax pretending that
Picasso wrote lyrics just like Green Day? I have no idea, but I’d like to know.
Meanwhile I’m glad Picasso didn’t give
up his day job. Here’s a painting better than any
of the great man’s words: it’s titled “Couple Walking” (Couple Voyant).
Incidentally, I believe Jonathan Richman wrote the greatest ever lyrics about the difference
between walking and driving, in (some versions of) “Radio On,” better than anything by Picasso, and certainly better than anything by
Green Day.
I walked by the Stop n shop
Then I drove by the stop n shop
I liked that much better than walking by the Stop n
shop
Cause I had the radio on
Below is Mr Picasso, walking but not picking up many girls.
Below is Mr Picasso, walking but not picking up many girls.