The Clown Lyrics

[Verse 4]
And right about here things began to change, but really change
Not the least of which our clown changes his act
Bought himself a set of football pads
A yellow helmet with red stripes
Hired a girl who dropped a five-pound sack of flour on his head every night
From maybe twenty feet up
Oh man, what a bit, that just broke 'em up every night
But not like Dubuque
And all those colors, all those yellows, all those reds, all those oranges
A lot of gray in there now, a lot of blue
And all he wanted to do was to make this crowd laugh
That’s all he wanted out of this world
They were laughing alright
Not like Dubuque, but they were laughing
And the dough started to come in
He was playing the big towns

Chicago, Detroit
And then it was Pittsburgh one night
Real fine town, Pittsburgh, you know
About three-quarters way through his act, a rope broke
Down came the backdrop, right on the back of the neck
And he went flat
And something broke
This was it
It hurt way down deep inside
He tried to get up
He looked out at the audience
And you should’ve, man you should’ve, you should’ve seen that crowd
They was rolling in the aisles
This was bigger than Dubuque
This was bigger than Dubuque!

He really had 'em going
But this was it
This was the last one
This was the last one
Yeah
This was the last one
He knew now
Man, he really knew now!
But it was too late
And all he wanted was to make this crowd laugh
Well, they were laughing
But now he knew
That was the end of the clown
And you should have seen the bookings coming in
Man, his agent was on the phone for twenty-four hours
The Palladium, MCA, William Morris
But it was too late
He really knew now!
He really knew
He really knew now
William Morris sends regrets

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About

Genius Annotation

The title track of Mingus' The Clown features Jean Shepard narrating a story about a clown attempting to please the world with his performances. In the process he finds a disturbing fact about humanity.

Mingus' thoughts on the composition

I felt happy one day. I was playing a little tune on the piano that sounded happy. Then I hit a dissonance that sounded sad, and I realized that the song had to have two parts, The story, as I told it first to Jean Shepherd, is about a clown who tried to please people – like most jazz musicians do – but whom nobody liked until he was dead

Q&A

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Credits
Featuring
Produced By
Written By
Narration
Alto Saxophone
Recorded At
Atlantic Studios, New York, NY
Release Date
1957
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