Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 1708
Length: 7:22
Plays (last 30 days): 0
Surrounded by four walls that ain't so pretty
His parents give him love and affection
To keep him strong, moving in the right direction
Living just enough, just enough for the city
His father works some days for fourteen hours
And you can bet he barely makes a dollar
His mother goes to scrub the floors for many
And you'd best believe she hardly gets a penny
Living just enough, just enough for the city
Da da da...
His sister's black but she is sho'nuff pretty
Her skirt is short but Lord her legs are sturdy
To walk to school she's got to get up early
Her clothes are old but never are they dirty
Living just enough, just enough for the city
Her brother's smart he's got more sense than many
His patience's long but soon he won't have any
To find a job is like a haystack needle
Cause where he lives they don't use colored people
Living just enough, just enough for the city
Da da da...
Living just enough, for the city, whoa
Living just enough, for the city, whoa
Da da da...
His hair is long, his feet are hard and gritty
He spends his life walking the streets of New York City
He's almost dead from breathing in air pollution
He tried to vote but to him there's no solution
Living just enough, just enough for the city
Yeah, yeah, yeah
I hope you hear inside my voice of sorrow
And that it motivates you to make a better tomorrow
This place is cruel no where could be much colder
If we don't change the world will soon be over
Living just enough, stop giving just enough for the city
Da da da...
WOW. Your Talking inner city Blues Dude. I guess you got that off your chest.
WOW. Just enough!
I don't think the vignette is suggesting that he was literally arrested for being black, and I'm not sure where you get that idea (except for the racial slur the guard uses when he puts him in the cell). Yes, people often use the term "arrested for the crime of being black" but that expression is just a sardonic nod to the systemic racial injustice in America's legal system. For example, even though black Americans and white Americans smoke cannabis at nearly the same rate, black people in America are four times likely to be arrested for possession of weed. Look into the history of crack criminalization and the reasons why it carries a much harsher sentence for possession than cocaine, even though they are essentially the same thing, just in a different form.
In jumping to "arrested for being black" you skipped over a lot of the nuance of that bit. We don't know exactly why the guy was jailed, but it begins with him arriving in NYC, but he isn't just immediately arrested; when he gets off the bus it sounds like he starts going through a bad neighborhood, where he's offered drugs, harassed and threatened. Only after that do we hear police arrest him, then it jumps to his trial, sentencing, and incarceration. I would say he was arrested because either he quickly fell into a bad crowd and was involved in criminal activity such as using or selling drugs, or he was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. It's not contrived, it's just a scene in the middle of the song that accents the idea that living in the city can be tough, especially for a person of color.
So basically, he arrives in New York City and is immediately arrested and put in jail for 10 years for (ostensibly) being Black? Not saying something like that hasn't *ever* happened, seems a bit contrived, no?
I don't think the vignette is suggesting that he was literally arrested for being black, and I'm not sure where you get that idea (except for the racial slur the guard uses when he puts him in the cell). Yes, people often use the term "arrested for the crime of being black" but that expression is just a sardonic nod to the systemic racial injustice in America's legal system. For example, even though black Americans and white Americans smoke cannabis at nearly the same rate, black people in America are four times likely to be arrested for possession of weed. Look into the history of crack criminalization and the reasons why it carries a much harsher sentence for possession than cocaine, even though they are essentially the same thing, just in a different form.
In jumping to "arrested for being black" you skipped over a lot of the nuance of that bit. We don't know exactly why the guy was jailed, but it begins with him arriving in NYC, but he isn't just immediately arrested; when he gets off the bus it sounds like he starts going through a bad neighborhood, where he's offered drugs, harassed and threatened. Only after that do we hear police arrest him, then it jumps to his trial, sentencing, and incarceration. I would say he was arrested because either he quickly fell into a bad crowd and was involved in criminal activity such as using or selling drugs, or he was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. It's not contrived, it's just a scene in the middle of the song that accents the idea that living in the city can be tough, especially for a person of color.
Anyone know if L'il Stevie (Wonder) ever crossed paths with Brother Ray (Charles)? Imagine that!
Yep. Here they are playing this song together: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W130l1uoTY0
Updated link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W130l1uoTY0
Very cool.
Hopefully the same performance. Calypsus's link is obsolete now.
When this tune came out NYC was is seriously bad shape. The city went through a magnificent transformation starting in the mid 90s. New York experienced a true "golden age" becoming a paradigm of what urban life could be, cultured, safe, and with a vital economic base. With the pandemic, it took a big blow, sadly backsliding towards the old ways: corrupt and incompetent pols, increasing crime, rising homelessness, riots and looting, and a souring business climate. One can only hope Mayor Adams is successful with his campaign promises of halting the slide and turning the city around. The country is better off with a healthy NYC.
I Agree! I hope so too! NYC was really nasty in the '70s !It got a lot better for a couple of decades. It went into a deep decline again, during the last 5 or 6 years.
I just now rated it an 8... then bumped it to a 9.
OK - It's a 10 for sure
Anyone know if L'il Stevie (Wonder) ever crossed paths with Brother Ray (Charles)? Imagine that!
IDK. That would have been totally cool!
When this tune came out NYC was is seriously bad shape. The city went through a magnificent transformation starting in the mid 90s. New York experienced a true "golden age" becoming a paradigm of what urban life could be, cultured, safe, and with a vital economic base. With the pandemic, it took a big blow, sadly backsliding towards the old ways: corrupt and incompetent pols, increasing crime, rising homelessness, riots and looting, and a souring business climate. One can only hope Mayor Adams is successful with his campaign promises of halting the slide and turning the city around. The country is better off with a healthy NYC.
Broken windows theory.
Rock-solid 9.
c.
oh yeah, absolutely classic track! 10+
when you actually read the lyrics, those are some bad ass words
maybe tougher...bleaker than Marvin Gaye's stuff
I just now rated it an 8... then bumped it to a 9.
Oh MY !
actually, the references to New York City are now terribly dated, unless you refer to a city occupied by laid off investment bankers as "mean streets".
And now in 2021, New York City is back to the 70's.
Such a great song full of that old school funk energy
Hey ! you look hip man ! $5
Absolutely one of the all-time great cuts off one of the all-time great albums. (Embarrassed to admit it, but to this day whenever I go into the city I still say, "wow, New York, just like I pitchered it!" That line is etched in my head forever.) Another incredible cut from this album that's played far too little is "As."
with you all the way RJ
Good lordy, these two are going to sing together? Has anyone heard the like!?
Way to wash away the Monday blues with two of the most talented artists in existence. Thank you RP!
(Yeah, yeah, yeah; I also own and cherish Talking Book and Songs in the Key of Life, but they don't come close to Innervisions.)
No kidding and I have The Who,e version only a couple of times
:) just put it on 7 after a few seconds to 8. Now i have 6min to think about a 9
It is precisely as long as it needs to be, no longer and no shorter.
And second of all...?
You and the rest of us should write a song so brilliantly right on.
It is precisely as long as it needs to be, no longer and no shorter.
For me, it can!!
Yea, I'm with you.
"The Most Dangerous City in America."
What, Detroit? ;-)
Glad to hear this get rotation again, been too long since I played my vinyl of this album... Time to bust out the new stylus and give it a spin this weekend I think.
I second that...this was Stevie at his peak for sure.
My god this song is so incredibly annoying!
First of all it's way too long.
Second, the ultimate crappy trumpet sample is truely the worst sound i've heard in a very, very long time...
Note: Take the "is" word as my opinion, didn't know how to put it differently...
A single line that was permanently etched in my neural network years ago. Every once in awhile out it comes as a total non-sequiter. Of course, few in my present company ever understand the oblique cultural reference. Maybe that's what makes it so much fun to uncork every so often. The last time was a couple of months ago as we were about to take on Satan's Cesspool (The American River) in inflatible watercraft.
Also, this track sounded GREAT when blasted from stageside speakers at outdoor EMU concerts back when (Dave Mason, Santana, Peter Frampton....).
My office in NJ has a good view of the skyline. About once a month, I say something like "just like I pictured it" and only the old fogies get it.
It's Stevie's Cookie Monster voice at the end that I find silly.
Cookie Monster voice! Damn, you just ruined 36 years of Stevie for me, but at least I got a laugh out of it.
Yep and still....
actually, the references to New York City are now terribly dated, unless you refer to a city occupied by laid off investment bankers as "mean streets".
and still.
Yep and still....
a great track yet on this very, very fine album it's not even among the top 3.
"The Most Dangerous City in America."
and still.
I'm thinking Prince could pull off a good interpretation of this track.................
How much do I need to donate to get a track taken out of the rotation, or at least reduced in frequency of play by an order of magnitude? <grin>
-Timo
(Listening to Lush on SomaFM until I see the RP now playing ticker change to something else!)
I think, actually, that it is "pitured".
A single line that was permanently etched in my neural network years ago. Every once in awhile out it comes as a total non-sequiter. Of course, few in my present company ever understand the oblique cultural reference. Maybe that's what makes it so much fun to uncork every so often. The last time was a couple of months ago as we were about to take on Satan's Cesspool (The American River) in inflatible watercraft.
Also, this track sounded GREAT when blasted from stageside speakers at outdoor EMU concerts back when (Dave Mason, Santana, Peter Frampton....).
I love this album, but all of Stevie's 70's stuff is beyond belief. He's had more excellent songs than most artists can ever dream of. A true maestro!
What? I love that bit! Whenever I visit NY, I can't help thinking "Skyscrapers! And eveythang..."
It's Stevie's Cookie Monster voice at the end that I find silly.
Bummer it's still entirely relevent today.
There's always been an underclass, throughout history. Nothing new about that. Colors, races & creeds may change, but there will always be many livin' for the city.....