Lady Godiva's Operation
1968 song by the Velvet Underground From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Lady Godiva's Operation" is a song by the Velvet Underground from their second album, White Light/White Heat (1968). The lyrics of the first half of the song, sung by John Cale, describe Lady Godiva; the lyrics of the second half, sung by Cale alternating with Lou Reed, are full of oblique, deadpan black humor and describe a botched surgical procedure, implied to be a lobotomy.[1] Cale plays electric viola while Sterling Morrison plays bass, an instrument that he disliked, despite his competent abilities.[2][3]
"Lady Godiva's Operation" | |
---|---|
Song by the Velvet Underground | |
from the album White Light/White Heat | |
Released | January 30, 1968 |
Recorded | September 1967 |
Studio | Scepter Studios, New York City |
Length | 4:56 |
Label | Verve |
Songwriter(s) | Lou Reed |
Producer(s) | Tom Wilson |
The song was covered by the Fatima Mansions as a single.[4]
Lou Reed said of the song in 1973: "Listen to the lyrics of my early songs, 'Lady Godiva's Operation' was about a trans-sexual."[5]
Personnel
- John Cale – lead vocals, electric viola, medical instrument vocal noises
- Lou Reed – co-lead vocals, electric guitar
- Sterling Morrison – bass guitar, backing vocals, medical instrument vocal noises
- Maureen Tucker – percussion
References
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