Grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
Don't be afraid to try the newest sport around
(bust your buns, bust your buns now)
it's catchin' on in every city and town
you can do the tricks the surfers do, just try a
quasimodo or the
coffin too (why don't you)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
You'll probably wipeout when you first try to shoot the curve
(bust your buns, bust your buns now)
takin' gas in a bush takes a lotta nerve...
those hopscotch hodads and pedestrians, too, will bug ya...
shout cuyabunga! now and skate right on through (why don't you)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
You can do the tricks the surfers do, just try a
quasimodo or the
coffin too (why don't you)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
So get your girl and take her tandem down the street
(bust your buns, bust your buns now)
then she'll know you're an asphalt athlete.
a downhill grade, man, will give you a kick,
but if the sidewalk's cracked, ya better pull out quick (why don't you)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
(skateboard with me, why don't you skateboard me?)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
(skateboard with me, why don't you skateboard me?)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
(skateboard with me, why don't you skateboard me?)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...
(skateboard with me, why don't you skateboard me?)
grab your board and go sidewalk surfin' with me...(fade out)
A couple of notes (from [email protected]): this song uses some words, slang and phrases that were popular with surfers back when the song was a hit on the radio (late 1964). doing a quasimodo (named after the hunchback of notre dame character) or the
coffin were two maneuvers a surfer could perform on a board. for example, doing the
coffin was to lie on your back on your board and ride it in with your arms folded over your chest, eyes closed, as if you were lying dead in a coffin. takin gas" means the same as "wiping out" -- as in, "my board flipped out from under me and the next thing i knew i was
takin
gas! and, since skateboarders were surfing on concrete or asphalt, you were liable to bust
your
buns if you fell. also, sidewalk surfers (skateboarders) faced the hazards of pedestrians as well as kids playing
hopscotch on the sidewalk -- hopscotch-hodads -- hodads being a term similar to grommet or dweeb that surfers used to describe a beginning (novice) surfer or an annoying surfing wannabe. and, lastly, in the song, jan berry uses the surfing battle cry cuyabunga! (a slight variation on cowabunga!) -- a word that, today,
still surfaces occasionally.
from: david cassells
- :
- Ride The WIld Surf
- Drag City
- Carnival of Sound
- Miscellaneous
- Surf City
- Non-Album Releases
- Port to Paradise
- Beach Party By Georges Lang, Vol. 2
- Hits of the 60s, Volume 1
- The Best of Jan & Dean
- Billboard Top Rock & Roll Hits: 1963
- 1963
- Super Box of Rock, Volume 3
- Best of the Sixties
- Greatest Hits
- Nr. 1 Hits 1969-1991
- Hard Rock Cafe: Surf
- Classic Rock Surf City
- The Sound of Summer, Volume 2
- Teenage Idols