Hot Cross Bun Blues
By Turlough
- 1844 reads
Well I woke up this morning, and I went down to Sainsbury’s
For some hot cross buns, I said to the baker woman “please!”
With hunger in my eyes, “Gonna get me two packs of these”
So standin' at the check-out, I tried real hard to scan my buns
Yeah, me at the check-out, I tried to scan those bags of crumbs
Didn't recognise no barcode, self check-out’s done gimme the runs
Standin' in the check-out line, waitin‘ to eat those spicy buns
Standin' there a wastin‘ time, waitin‘ ‘til a supervisor comes
Got the blues for other shoppers, saliva’s drippin’ off their tongues
So I ran down to Tesco, to see if there I’d find success
Saw my baby in the car park, Easter bun crumbs all down her dress
She didn’t pay no check-out woman, just took the buns and ran I guess
Well I’ve had the swamp fever, been doggone crazy with malaria
Cursed with the hangover from hell, drinkin’ rakia in Bulgaria
But nothin’ ain’t so bad, as an unexpected item in the baggin’ area
So I took me up to Lidl, they might have had my spicy cake
Yeah, goin’ up to Lidl, oh babe I made a bad mistake
See this was Tuesday mornin’, just an hour before daybreak
“The van don’t come ‘til lunchtime”, that’s what the Lidl bossman said
“The shelf’s completely empty”, but he offered me some stale white bread
If I don’t get no hot cross bun, oh Lord I might as well be dead
I found me a smoky bar down town, barman poured a shot of liquor
Drank the first one down real fast, drank the second even quicker
Then I really couldn’t take no more, ‘cause I’d been spotted by the vicar
He said “hey boy now you’re doin’ real bad, I think your head’s a bit bananas
All you need is flour and milk, an egg, some spice, a few sultanas
The English recipe’s mighty good, much sweeter than Louisiana’s”
The preacher’s words were wise and good, they shone a light into my soul
Across the road and in the shop, run by Mr Brzęczyszczykiewicz the Pole
These things were all out on display, his sweet woman lent me a bowl
I mixed them up and baked them down, I didn’t have no time to lose
Now my belly’s full I’m satisfied, from my head down to my shoes
And babe I’m gonna sing these words, to Robert Johnson’s Cross Road Blues
Image:
Every image I use is from a photograph I have taken myself.
On this occasion – A supermarket hot cross bun. I took the photograph myself but I didn’t make the hot cross bun myself. I hope this doesn’t infringe copyright laws.
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Comments
Hi Turlough,
Hi Turlough,
Just love the blues. Your words set to
Robert Johnson's Cross Road Blues,
satisfys fruit and spice sensations,
sustains it fuels and fulfils imagination.
Great lyrics Turlough. Oh how I hate those self checkouts. I've said before, I'd rather deal with a human being and keep the people industry going, than a self service till any day of the week.
Jenny.
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Your version of Hot Cross Bun
Your version of Hot Cross Bun Blues has certainly made me Feel a Whole Lot Better! You Made Me Smile (Again!). If I had a Hot Cross Bun left in our fridge/or larder I would have gone and eaten it straightaway without remorse! Unfortunately we do not have one, and takin' your warning seriously I do not think I wish to brave the self checkouts myself today!
Actually I must confess, I haven't actually used one for at least 6 months, and do get worried I have forgotten all of my hard won experience in learning how to use them in the first place. It is so much easier to have someone (a member of staff) who knows what to do, to do it for me. I dread the day when there are no staff left at all and there is no one to help when some robot stands in my way, accusing me of pinching goods because I didn't bag them or scan them or pay for them properly!
I heard rumours that Aldi is starting to bring total mechanism in, but thankfully our local store is still staffed with humans (very efficient ones, but nonetheless they will reply and help, to some degree!).
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I feel your pain my man
I feel your pain my man
because the buns won't scan;
for me it's even worse:
I cannot scan my verse.
I much enjoyed your heartfelt jeremiad, Turlough.
Cheers, Luigi
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made me smile, too, thankyou
made me smile, too, thankyou :0)
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Ah, the divine Robert Johnson
Ah, the divine Robert Johnson.
Thoroughly enjoyed this!
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"Then I really couldn’t take
"Then I really couldn’t take no more, ‘cause I’d been spotted by the vicar.."
A timely, Heavenly intervention by the sounds of things. I had this image of you singing this with a guitar in hand. Might be one for the next reading! A very entertaining piece done with deceptive skill. Bravo, Turlough!
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