It's a great song it probably doesn't have a meaning. Credited to Lennon–McCartney but written primarily by John Lennon, it was finished in the studio by Lennon and McCartney.
This song sounds like a song about a young people who do criminal acts. Actually I find it quite funny though to watch everyone freaking out trying to discover what they mean". I think it's about getting to know your divine self. I have a spark but not a fire on this one. I heard that the original title of this song was "Hey Bullfrog" however Paul was supposedly tripping on lsd and began barking like crazy while John was fininshing writing it and John was so amused by this that he changed the title of the song and recorded Paul's rediculous barking and that is whats heard at the end of the song A few days before the group recorded the track, Paul … Hey Bulldog und George Harrisons It’s All Too Much wurden eigens für den Film Yellow Submarine geschrieben, für den ansonsten auf bereits existierende oder unveröffentlichte Songs zurückgegriffen wurde. The word “ bullfrog ” is in the lyrics, but “ hey bulldog ” is only repeated at the end of the recording after Paul decided to bark like a dog during their vocal overdub, both of them singing into the same microphone. Bull God, you have horns in your head that are called Foreamen. I have thought for decades that the song is about Brian Jones. The bulldog is england, and the "some kind of innocence" that is "measured out in years" concerns: (a) empire; and (b) a long history, both of which lennon is saying are nice laurels but you (england) have sat on them for so damn long you are regressing into a socialist mire of self-loathing, sweaty hands and general loser-ship. It's random stuff in their lives at the time. I got the impression that this song is about someone telling a friend that they (the friend) think too much of themselves, and that they have actually deteriorated into something of a loser, and that's why they're lonely. You think you know me but you haven't got a clue- true words as we have not gone inside to know our "true" selves.
Es existieren Coverversionen, unter anderem von Ween, Gomez, Rolf Harris, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Firewater, Skin Yard und Fanny. Bull God.
But, that someone says that they still have great respect for their friend and that they'll talk to the friend if they feel lonely. This apparently spurred John on to start singing “ Hey bulldog ” which was then harmonized by Paul afterwards.
In other words, you can talk to me, when said, is standing at the door of your mind and knocking!
" Hey Bulldog " is a song by the English rock band the Beatles released on their 1969 soundtrack album Yellow Submarine.
Listen to your fears is our cosmic self waiting thru infinity for us to wake to our divine nature. For many years, "Hey Bulldog" was a relatively obscure and overlooked song in the Beatles' catalogue; it has since been reappraised by fans and a number of critics and musicians as one of the band's best rockers. He asked if the songs have meanings he said" no they don't so everyone can just settle down. Have you even listened to the song?
It was included on the Yellow Submarine album. We were on a ladder so there was never any sense of stepping down a rung, or even staying on the same rung, it was better to move one rung ahead. A few days before the recording session on 11 February 1968, During these sessions, a film crew photographed the Beatles recording the song at The song was used in a segment of the animated film I remember (it) as being one of John's songs and I helped him finish it off in the studio, but it's mainly his vibe. The best moment is Lennon´s is screaming in the end, at the same time as the guitar is playing the same notes again and again, as if nothing has happened, hysterical, great music! Hey Bulldog Lyrics: Sheepdog / Standing in the rain / Bullfrog / Doing it again / Some kind of happiness is measured out in miles / What makes you think you're something special when you smile For Amen. We've done that.' In the Beatles’ catalog, “Hey Bulldog” is a bridge between the psychedelic excesses of 1967 and the rock and roll revivalism they would pursue on the White Album and Let It Be. That's us. Hey Bulldog is a song by John Lennon and Paul McCartney (see Lennon/McCartney). I will research two items and get back to y'all but here is what I think:All lyrics are property and copyright of their owners.
The song’s original title was Hey Bullfrog. You guys look waaaaay too far into this. Written by John Lennon, the song is a straightahead rocker featuring a seductive boogie … Johan from Stockholm, Sweden Hey Bulldog is a masterpiece by Lennon, from spring 1968. I saw an interview with Larry Kane and John Lennon. It was regarded as a throw away by Lennon, and was given to United Artists for Yellow Submarine to fulfill the required four new songs for the animated film's soundtrack. We always tried to make every song different because we figured, 'Why write something like the last one? A wigwam is the same thing as a teepee. This song is about Paul's bulldog. There's a little rap at the end between John and I, we went into a crazy little thing at the end. This song is the first of Lennon's compositions that may be characterized as "lyrical impressionism," the most glaring / salient example of which is "I Am the Walrus." All lyrics provided for educational purposes only. It had a working title of "She Can Talk To Me".