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Difference between revisions of "Johnny Ryall"
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
− | *[https://paulsboutique.info/Johnny_Ryall Paul's Boutique Samples and References List] | + | * [https://paulsboutique.info/Johnny_Ryall Paul's Boutique Samples and References List] |
− | *[ | + | * [https://www.adioslounge.com/deconstructing-johnny-ryall/ Deconstructing "Johnny Ryall"] |
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[[Category:1989|Ryall, Johnny]] | [[Category:1989|Ryall, Johnny]] | ||
[[Category:Songs|Ryall, Johnny]] | [[Category:Songs|Ryall, Johnny]] | ||
[[Category:Rock|Ryall, Johnny]] | [[Category:Rock|Ryall, Johnny]] |
Latest revision as of 05:48, 30 May 2025
Subject of the titular song from the Beastie Boys' acclaimed 1989 album Paul's Boutique. According to the lyrics, Ryall, a homeless man who hung out on Mike D's stoop, was a former rockabilly star from Memphis who claimed to have written "Blue Suede Shoes." He's described as:
A rockabilly star from the days of old
He used to have teeth all filled with gold
A platinum voice, but only gold records
On the bass was Boots on the drums was Checkers
Luis Vuitton with the Gucci guitar
In reality, according to Dan LeRoy's Paul's Boutique: 33 1/3, "Johnny Ryall" was a real homeless man, but his backstory was created by Mike D's roommate and tour manager, Sean Carasov, who said the homeless man "looked like the fifty-miles-of-bad-road version of Chet Baker" (79). The band occasionally referred to the character's exploitation by the music industry in their own battles with their labels.