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Songs That Made Childhood Magical: “7” by the Alligator King #sesamestreet

Okay, so No. 9 in the “Ten Best Meals I Ever Ate” List is not going to appear today. I’m on the fourth day of a complete fast/cleanse, i.e. no solid food and only lemon-water, honey and cayenne pepper to sustain me. Thus, my long and illustrious history of gastronomic adventure is the last thing I want to expound-upon, at the moment. Instead, we’ll opt for some HazMat pop-culture profiling. For the Goodreads crowd, please accept my thanks for various “Welcome to the community” sentiments. They are much appreciated. I look forward to connecting with such a knowledgeable bunch of book-devourers as both an author and a rabidly tenacious reader myself. Some delicious giveaways will indeed be forthcoming on Goodreads as soon as the promotional itinerary for my Rowan Blaize series is further elucidated. Stay tuned. Meanwhile …

You can COUNT on this song being stuck in your head all the livelong day!
You can COUNT on this song being stuck in your head all the livelong day!

HAZMAT-RETRO HALL OF FAME (MUSIC THAT MADE CHILDHOOD MAGICAL) posted by JONATHAN KIERAN

TODAY’S HONOREE: “7” by the Alligator King of Sesame Street (Voiced by Bud Luckey)

RUDIMENTARY ANALYSIS: Nothing warms the sweet cockles of wistful Kiddie Heart-Land like the memory of a Sesame Street “number song” that you couldn’t get out of your head at age five if you’d even tried. Forget about the fact that you used to you drive your poor mother bananas with endless repetitions of what you had learned. Forget about your mother’s desperate prayers that you would one day employ your knowledge of figures and digits to conquer Wall Street and put her in the most posh Park Avenue spread that money could buy. Irrelevant! These “number songs” were magical, and they were the top of the Toddler Hit Parade, back in the day, before Barney and Sponge-Bob and Ninja Turtles and Tellytubbies came around to rip the innocence of youth from our tender, fluttering souls with all manner of subtle-but-wanton devilry. Okay, so Barney wasn’t all that Evil. Still, none of the others could match Sesame Street’s penchant for producing cartoon ditties that made you want to COUNT until the cows came home! The plight of the Alligator King and his Seven Sons was one of the best, made all the more immortal by the swampy New Orleans ragtime inflections of the great Bud Luckey. What are you waiting for? 7-6-5-4-3-2-1 … SING IT!

DEFINITIVE LYRIC:Said the alligator king to his seventh son, “My son, you win the crown. You didn’t give me diamonds or rubies BUT you helped me up when I was down.”

SEMI-TWISTED “ADULT HUMOR” MOMENT: When the second son gives the Alligator King “seven statues of girls with clocks where their stomachs should be.” Surely this was some sort of perverted metaphor, but our beloved Jim Henson has taken the secret to his grave. Talk amongst yourselves about it, philosophers and sociologists.

EXPERIENCE THE MAGIC: No one can swing like the ALLIGATOR KING!

5 responses to “Songs That Made Childhood Magical: “7” by the Alligator King #sesamestreet”

  1. Reblogged this on Pop HazMat: Cultural Detox in a Spa-Like Setting and commented:

    Jonathan informs us that he is on a writing odyssey for the next few weeks. We will be blogging a Pop HazMat “Best Of” collection until he returns in mid-September. Enjoy!

  2. “A statue of a lady with a clock where her stomach ought to be” is the fifth of Allen Sherman’s “12 gifts of Christmas”. Since he exchanged all his gifts on the 12th day, there would have been 7 of them. Looks like the son hunts bargains like his dad.

    1. I asked somebody why the singer of Allan Sherman’s song exchanged all of his gifts on the 12th day and the answer I got was “They were cheap (bad-quality) and tacky (bad taste) products”.

  3. The ending of the song “The Alligator King” has what TV Tropes calls a literal metaphor at the end when the seventh song “helped his father up when he was down”. The verse plays around with the meaning of down as feeling sad vs the meaning of down as having fallen to the ground.

  4. Ha! Glad you remember one of the best, jazziest educational songs of my early childhood and possibly yours, too. 😄 Your remarks are on-target when it comes to the notions that the writers were trying to communicate to both kids and their parents. There are underlying layers of meaning for normal adults, because adults wrote these classic ditties. Meant for kids, the kids saw the colorful, unusual stuff. The great thing, in my opinion, is that this show (and these old songs) did not talk “baby-talk” to kids, like the awful Barney and Tellytubby shows did later. The tunes didn’t go too far, but walked the tightrope and entertained parents watching the content while never treating kids like babbling idiots. And yes, the gist of this song was the tacky, useless, cheezy gifts the other sons gave to the ‘Gator King, while the littlest gave him the most needed thing: help. If only kids had continued to be taught those differences. (sigh)

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