The Boys Light Up

Album: The Boys Light Up (1980)
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Songfacts®:

  • This song is about a prostitute, and apparently a very good one: "She's got 15 ways To lead that boy astray, he thinks he's one and only." In the second verse, it's clear that she uses a vibrator as the men really can't do the job properly to satisfy her needs. >>
    Suggestion credit:
    Mark - Wee Waa, Australia
  • The lyrics stretch the English language a bit: "Dorseted" (found in many incorrect lyrics sheets as "dorsettive"), originates from Dorset Gardens, a hotel in Melbourne's suburb of Croydon. It's used by James Reyne to rhyme with "Corseted," meaning straight-laced, uptight or rigid-minded. From the noun corset.
  • The song was initially banned from some local radio and TV stations due to its explicit lyrics. Due to other shows broadcasting it, the ban was relaxed. >>
    Suggestion credit:
    shaidar - Bendigo, Australia, for above 2

Comments: 14

  • Man from MelbSunnyside beach!
  • Ben from BrissyThanks Eric. Makes so much more sense now. “That flat in Surfers Paradise”.
  • Anonymous from SydneyThe Reyne brothers were sons of an Australian ambassador to an African country. They would sneak out of their bedrooms when their parents held dinner parties and listen to diplomats discussing a slutty diplomat's wife who gave them free oral sex.
  • Tony from Mount ElizaEric from Boston, you nailed it. Spot on mate. I'm very proud to live where these guys Grew up.
  • Jess from CairnsI think it is about a middle class couple who seem happy but have secrets. The husband gets his trousers down with the hostess on the business flight, while the wife is secretly an escort, saving money to leave him and get a flat in Surfers paradise with an ocean view. She is popular with the MPs who like her blow jobs. She gets her own pleasure from her little helper in the drawer, before watching the mid day show.
  • JoanCame here because I've always been curious about the song and now I see it in a whole new depressing light. It just sounds so upbeat, but it's really about unhappy suburbanites in Melbourne screwing around because they cannot find fulfilment. An interesting quote from Reyne in 2003: ""Well, really? It's about fellatio, but[...] it was also about the sort of burgeoning, you know, kind of... new middle class, the new money and the new money aspirational... uh... class". The nouveau riche in Melbourne.
  • Rob from Brisbane - Land DownunderEric from Boston is right on the money - the "Mothers Little Helper" Valium confusion is people referencing a Rolling Stones song - not Boys Light Up. The hummers is fellatio "Fellatio - Felliato - where for art thou Felliato" - sorry couldn't resist.
  • Eric from Boston"The Boys Light Up" satirizes middle-class life in James Reyne's "mountain home", Mount Eliza. As he has said in interviews, it was inspired by the salacious stories he would hear at his parents' cocktail parties about who was doing who. It portrays the hollowness ("what a cheap tent show") of the new aspirational class that was rising in Melbourne at the time. As Matt said, many of these couples were together more for status and opportunity than love and commitment. Some of their screwing around was for thrills ("hopes are up for trousers down") or to stave off boredom and loneliness ("that lovely she's so lonely") or to gain mutual advantage ("the hummers [b--wjobs] she's been giving and the money that they've saved").

    What it's not about: The song is NOT about prostitutes, marijuana, valium or yobbo culture. "Mother's little helper" is a vibrator, which is why "her back is arched". The chorus is just a reference to a saying that Reyne and his friends had back in high school, when they would slyly smoke cigarettes in order to appear tough and impress girls.
  • Gracie from AdelaideI agree Laura. I always thought the Mother's Little Helper was valium, which was actually marketed as such. Also, why would the lady being so 'corseted' refer to her being uptight when the very next line makes it clear she is anything but! I think that line is meant to be a bit more literal and simply implies that she is very sexual. I also agree with Matt, she isn't a prostitute but an unhappy housewife/trophy wife. James Reyne stated as much in an interview in 2010 on the ABC in Australia, where he said that the song in part, referenced a party that his parents were at where his teacher was caught with someone else's wife. He also confirmed that the 'hummers' she's been giving referred to fellatio - one of the many reasons the song almost didn't get air play when it was first released.
  • Laura from Canberra, AustraliaActually I don't "Mother's little helper" refers to a vibrator, but to Valium which many, many years ago was referred to and even labelled as "Mother's little heper". It was often used by housewives to fend off depression...and apparently they used to crush it up and snort it hence "blow by blow"
  • Matt from Melbourne, AustraliaSee, I never saw it as a song about a prostitute, but more about a husband and wife who are married more for convenience and profit than love. They put on a good show in public so he gets his promotion and they get their nice house, but really they don't love each other and both are unfaithful.
  • Nady from Adelaide, Australia"Oooooooooooh Errol, I would give anything just to be like this" weeeeeeeee go Aussie Crawl oioioi
  • Kev O'carroll from Helensburgh, ScotlandWhen Brit music was at an all-time low in the mid to late eighties, this lot were a hugely welcome breath of fresh air to me and a few others lucky enough to hear them. Sadly they were largely unheard of outside of Oz. The singer and main songwriter James Reyne continued after the band broke up, with a highly successful solo career which continues to this day....again, sadly largely unheard of outside of his native country. Check out albums by the Crawl - "Semantics", "Crawl File", "Sons of Beaches" are all brilliant, especially their single "Errol" - a homage to boyhood local hero Errol Flynn.
  • Gerry Walsh from Melbourne, AustraliaAussie Crawl,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Brilliant.
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