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What
are they saying in Run Like an Antelope?
Rye,
rye, rocco.
Marco Esquandolas.
Been you to have any spike, man?
Set the gearshift for the high gear of your soul.
You've got to run like an antelope: out of control.
Title and Origin: The Dude
of Life wrote the chorus -- "(you've got to) run like an
antelope, out of control" -- in high
school, originally as "run like a space antelope".
The preceding line -- "set the gearshift for the high gears
of your soul" -- was added later (by Tom? Trey?). But there
have been variations: on on 12/8/94 Trey
sang "set the gear shit for the side of this hole" reported
by ZZYZX and Marco Walsh (11/16/98)
6/30/95 he sang "lick the deer shit from the side of this hole"
reported by Dan Nooter (11/16/98).
Verse: Jesmund revealed (9/25/93, 12:14:33)
that the sometimes-mumbled lyrics during the slower, ready-to-take
off part are "Rye, Rye, Rocco, Marco Esquandolas. Been you
to have any spike, man?"
- Tom
Marshall wrote these lines (and wrote or co-wrote much
of Phish's lyrics,
fondly Golgi Apparatus and Chalkdust
Torture) and performed them at three New
Year's Eve shows: 12-31-92,
12-31-93,
and 12-31-94.
- Marco Esquandolas reportedly used to refer to Marc
Daubert, and may now (or may at some time) have referred to
Jon as well. (Indeed, Trey substituted
"Bob Weaver" for Marco Esquandolas at 8-16-98,
after calling Fishman Bob Weaver for that entire tour. And 11/2/96
he said Norton Charleston Heston. Thanks
to Ron Singual.) But the Dude
of Life and his band played at Deerfield Academy in Nov. 98,
performed "Antelope" as the encore, and told William
Barret (when he asked) that Marco Esquandolas was Mike's high
school Spanish teacher.
- Spike: For the last part, you may also hear, "If
you need any spice/spike, I have a little" and might hear
spice, spike, spliff, or spleef.
- Spliff: Trey reportedly used to say "spliff"
-- rhymes with "leaf" (sometimes misspelled spleef)
as pronounced by phans and Jamaicans,
including Jah Roy, who performed with
Phish in early years) referring to small joints (as opposed
to cannabis/tobacco mixes rolled in
cigar leaves and called "blunts"), though pronounced
"spliff" by Europeans referring to joints made with
both cannabis and tobacco and with a cigarette filter rolled
into one end.
- Spike the Herb: A Burlington resident reported (12/16/97)
that spike refers to a Northern Lights
strain local to Burlington (the common alternative being "typical
Vermont purple outdoor"), and that the switch from spliff/spike
to spice came when the band "made the move out of the
bar scene."
- Spike the Spice: Tom Lorenz emailed (12/30/98) about
an all-natural multi-spice seasonging named Spike, "found
at better grocery and health/organic food stores. My wife
and I were turned on to Spike about ten years ago and have
kept it on hand ever since. It goes with practically everything
and comes in both regular and salt-free varieties." Tom
also emailed (1/16/99) the text from the label: "From
the Italian kitchens of internationally acclaimed gourmet
nutritionist, Gayelord Hauser, comes this special blend of
39 flavorful herbs, vegetables and non-irritating exotic spices
with just the right amount of salt crystals. Discover the
taste excitement that has made Spike the favorite all purpose
seasoner with great chefs everywhere. Spike adds a little
magic in every meal."
- Spike is Mike? James Platts-Mills pointed our (4/18/00)
that Mike's nickname is Cactus.
- Charles Brantman point out (4/6/00) that the verb may be
"happen you to have any spike man" or "happen
to have any spike" rather than "been you to..."
- Signal?: One observer suggested that variation
since is some language trigger
to the other members about how the song is going to go; e.g.
"been you to have a little spleef, man?" asks the
others to take the lead, while "if you're needing spleef,
man, i've a little" instructs others that he's taking
the lead.
- On 10/8/99,
Trey just said "sssssssssss". (Thanks
to Keith Putnam.)
Cantaloupe: One popular variation
(from the Cat's Cradle, 11/14/91)
features the "roll like a canteloupe" variation, requested
by James Roberts (a freshman at Duke Univesity at the time) who
had mentioned before the show having seen it before, and whom you
can hear requesting it right before the start of the second set
according to Jennifer Saunders 11/14/98.
Dana Zuul posted a soundclip
to the web, and the lyrics (10/27/96) to rmp:
Set
the gearshift for the high gear of your soul
Then walk through the doors of a supermarket
Wander past the frozen foods section
Go past the baked goods
Slowly walk by the personal products
Meander slowly past the magazine section
Step slowly by the courtesy counter
Walk toward the produce section
Slowly come towards the fruits and vegetables
With the small round fruit in your hand
You've got to roll like a cantelope out of control!!!
Twainalope: Sean Gugnani reported (8/4/98) that toward the
end of chapter one of Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,
"just after receiving a whipping from Tom, a snobbish boy waits
until Tom turns his back and then he heaves a rock at him. After
the rock finds it mark, the boy 'ran like an antelope' to get away."
Antelopes, Grass, and Runways: Kristen Godard sent this
AP story (4/7/99):
There's a Slight Danger to the Antelope, Too
This week an antelope "wound up on the wrong side" of a new, higher
fence designed to keep antelope off the grounds of the Converse
County Airport in Wyoming, "where they like to eat grass and lie
on the warm runway." Airport manager Steve Good "said antelope on
the runway can be dangerous to incoming pilots, especially pilots
from the East who may not be familiar with them" (AP/Casper [WY]
Star-Tribune, 3/30).
See also (or don't) Antelope Greg.
Thanks also to Dan Baggott and Sasha@Rochester.
This page last updated June 01, 2009. All contents © 1992-2007 Ellis Godard. All rights reserved.
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