Song Lyric Sunday | “One Toke Over the Line” – Brewer and Shipley

SLS banner

Song Lyric Sunday was created by Helen Vahdati from This Thing Called Life One Word at a Time and author Jim Adams from A Unique Title For Me is our current guest host. For complete rules or to join in the fun, click here.

The theme for Song Lyric Sunday this week is End/Finish/Over/Stop.

~~~~~~~~~~

“When we wrote One Toke Over the Line, I think we were one toke over the line. I considered marijuana a sort of a sacrament… If you listen to the lyrics of that song, ‘one toke’ was just a metaphor. It’s a song about excess. Too much of anything will probably kill you,” explained Tom Shipley, one half of Brewer and Shipley and co-writer of the song.

The incident that sparked this song happened at the Vanguard in Kansas City, Missouri. The band was playing the show because, in seeking to escape the LA music scene, they started a tour of their Midwest homelands. Shipley reports that he was given a block of hash and told to take two hits. He ignored the advice and instead took three. Shipley recounts in The Vinyl Dialogues, “I go out of the dressing room – I’m also a banjo player, but I didn’t have one, so I was playing my guitar – and Michael (Brewer) came in and I said, ‘Jesus, Michael, I’m one toke over the line.’ And to be perfect honest, I don’t remember if Michael was with me when I took that hit or not. I remember it as ‘not’; I think Michael remembers it as ‘yes.’ And he started to sing to what I was playing, and I chimed in and boom, we had the line.”

Brewer also remembers the occasion. “I just cracked up,” he said. “I thought it was hysterical. And right on the spot, we just started singing, ‘One toke over the line, sweet Jesus,’ and that was about it; then we went onstage.”

Some radio stations refused to play this song because of the drug references, but not everyone got this meaning. In 1971 the song was performed on the Lawrence Welk Show by the wholesome-looking couple Gail Farrell and Dick Dale, who clearly had NO clue what a toke was. Welk, at the conclusion of the performance of the song, remarked, without any hint of humor, “there you’ve heard a modern spiritual by Gail and Dale.”

FUN FACTS:

  • The song peaked at #10 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and #8 Cash Box during the spring of 1971, and was the duo’s only Top 40 hit.
  • Jerry Garcia of The Grateful Dead was brought in to play played steel guitar on the Tarkio sessions. He didn’t play on One Toke Over The Line, but did appear on the B-side, Oh Mommy’ (I Ain’t No Commie).
  • The song is notably mentioned in the opening of Hunter S. Thompson’s 1971 novel, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, and was “sung” by Dr. Gonzo (Benicio Del Toro) in the 1998 film of the same name.
  • One Toke Over the Line appears on numerous compilation albums, making its way onto albums with songs about drugs, hits of the ’70s, and one hit wonders. It remains a major source of income for Brewer and Shipley.
  • Spiro Agnew said the song with its reference to marijuana use was “blatant drug-culture propaganda” that “threatens to sap our national strength,” pressuring the FCC to include the song on its list of music banned from the airwaves because of drug references. (Poor Spiro! He resigned in disgrace and Brewer and Shipley are still collecting royalties! 😀 )

I couldn’t decide which video to use, so you guys get an “old” performance from 1971, a “newer” live performance from 1998, and yes…THE LAWRENCE WELK PERFORMANCE!!! I dare you to watch it without grinning! 😀 😀 😀

Enjoy!

See my Song Lyric Sunday selection for Nesie’s Place!

~~~

 

 

 

Disclaimer: I have no copyrights to the song and/or video and/or hyperlinks to songs and/or videos and/or gifs above. No copyright infringement intended.

One Toke Over the Line

16 thoughts on “Song Lyric Sunday | “One Toke Over the Line” – Brewer and Shipley

  1. OMG! I remember the Lawrence Welk Show and that being on there but I was too young to know what any of it meant. Interpretation at it’s best! I laughed out loud when I watched the first video with their telling the audience the story. Thanks for the info and bringing this back to us. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I think I remember seeing that “Lawrence Welk” performance. I think Myron Floren (the guy with the accordion) would have probably laughed his rear end off if he had said what the song was. How it got on the show, we’ll never know, but obviously ol’ Lawrence was oblivious to it. A little “Champagne and Reefer Music”…

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Maine Crime Writers

Living and Writing in the great state of Maine

Roads Lesser Traveled

Life is just down the road lesser traveled....

Tales Told Different

"I saw the Angel in the marble, and carved until I set him free"

Norns Triad Publications

Weaving Stories Readers Love!

Cátia Isabel Silva

This blog serves the purpose of helping all of those who likes to write to get technical information as well as, having a safe harbor to discuss ideas.

The - So Is Fibromyalgia Real? What I Know Is Real - Blog

What I know IS...it's real...and it's manageable...

5thGenerationgirl

Reaching back to our history in order to move forward with our futures

anonymous gods

Trying to master High-Functioning Autistic Savant syndrome.

Book Review Virginia Lee Blog

Don't forget to like or follow BRVL --http://ow.ly/J17T50xSFZc

Navigating the Change

A Guide for the Menopausal Journey

Suzette B's Blog

Inspiration and Spirituality **Award Free**

Stewartry

Book reviews and general nonsense

Zombie Salmon (the Horror Continues)

A blog about Horror fiction, Horror writing, and Horror criticism...a continuation of The Horror at Open Salon

Stine Writing

Poetry, Positivity, and Connecting!

Dusty Reviews

Pressured to prove his theories or lose funding, Dusty prematurely stepped into the blogosphere and vanished.

Rain'n'books

Feel the rain☔, take a book 🕮and have a cuppa☕

R&R Book Tours

Author Services, Publicity, Book Tours & Other Promotional Events for Fiction of all Types

%d bloggers like this: