Any Old Iron (song)

"Any Old Iron" is a British music hall song written by Charles Collins, Fred E. Terry and E.A. Sheppard. Harry Champion sang it as part of his act, and recorded it in 1911.

Possible meanings

While the meaning of the song may seem obscure, writer Howard Bradshaw has claimed that the song has a hidden meaning in gay subculture. "Iron" is a short form of "iron hoof", rhyming slang for poof, a slang term for a homosexual. The green tie, as the psychologist Henry Havelock Ellis noted, was a badge for homosexuals. Finally wrist watches and not watch chains were the fashion among gay men who "dressed in style" - which is why the singer "wouldn't give tuppence" for a watch chain. In other words, the song may reveal, despite the green tie, that the person is probably not gay.[1][2]

Other versions

  • In 1957, Peter Sellers recorded a rendition in a voice he created for The Goon Show, Willium "Mate" Cobblers. It reached No. 17 in the UK Singles Chart that year.
  • It was performed on The Muppet Show by Kermit the Frog, joined by Fozzie Bear, two whatnots, and the audience. [Season 2, Episode 14 (Elton John)]
  • It was performed by Roger Daltrey, accompanied by The Chieftains, in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1992. A recording of the performance appears on the album An Irish Evening.
  • It was included in The Boy Friend, a 1954 musical by Sandy Wilson.
  • It was also sung by Lonnie Donegan.
  • In one episode of Are You Being Served?, "The Hand of Fate", Mr. Mash cannot find the owner of a shipment of 27 galvanized buckets, and starts singing the song and accompanying himself by rattling the buckets around.
  • The Barron Knights used the tune and some of the lyrics of the song in a satire on punk, in the late 1970s.
  • The band Snuff included the song as a previously unreleased track on their 2005 compilation: Six Of One, Half A Dozen Of The Other 1986-2002.
  • British comedian Bill Bailey, along with the BBC Concert Orchestra, as part of his live show "Bill Bailey's Remarkable Guide to the Orchestra", mixed the song in as part of a "Cockney Arrangement" of the "William Tell Overture".
  • Somerset band The Wurzels sample the song's melody in their song Blackbird
  • The song was used, with different lyrics, in television advertisements for Hammerite and Smoothrite paint.[3]
  • There is a sequence in the movie "Yellow Submarine" when the real Beatles are confronted with their look-alikes trapped in a blue glass sphere, inspiring John to go off on an abstruse invocation of Einstein's Theory of relativity, to which Paul's response is to sing "Any old Ein! Any old Ein! Any any any old Einstein!"
  • Scunthorpe United F.C. ("The Iron") have adopted this song, and it is played before all of their home games.
  • In Top Gear Series 18, Jeremy and James sing the song in jest as Richard drives the old style Morgan 3-Wheeler through a corner.
  • There is a scene in the movie "Chaplin" where Charlie and Syd meet just before Charlie's audition for Mr. Karno. Charlie and Syd greet each other by singing the chorus to "Any Old Iron".
  • In the 2001 Steven Spielberg movie A.I. Artificial Intelligence, while the rejected robots are being chased by the bikers for a "Flesh Fair", the commander of the illuminated hot-air balloon is repeatedly saying over a loudspeaker "Any old iron".

References

  1. "Hidden subversion in music-hall lyrics - The Guardian - guardian.co.uk". www.theguardian.com. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  2. Berger, Harris M.; Carroll, Michael Thomas (14 August 2018). "Global Pop, Local Language". Univ. Press of Mississippi. Retrieved 14 August 2018 via Google Books.
  3. Hammerite advert on YouTube
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