Pinocchio

Album: Exploding Trees & Airplane Screams (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • Patterson Hood, best known for co-founding the Drive-By Truckers, has made a career out of telling sprawling, messy, deeply Southern stories - tales full of flawed heroes, hard luck, and bad decisions made with the best of intentions. But on Exploding Trees & Airplane Screams, his first solo album in over a decade (and fourth overall), Hood turns inward, trading big-picture storytelling for something smaller, more intimate. Instead of writing about the South at large, he dives into his own past, mining childhood memories for inspiration.

    Among these recollections is this song about his childhood obsession with Pinocchio, the 1940 Disney film that, like many things aimed at children, is somehow both magical and deeply unsettling.

    "The band has been in such a good place that I hadn't really thought about doing anything outside of the Truckers anytime soon," Hood admitted. "I decided if I ever was going to do another solo record, I wanted it to be pretty different than the band, as different as it can be."
  • Hood considers "Pinocchio" one of the best songs he's ever written. In it, he weaves childhood anxieties with literary storytelling, reflecting on the strange, lonely business of growing up. The inspiration came from his own childhood fascination with the Pinocchio movie, which he watched obsessively, much to the bewilderment of his own children who now find the film unbearably creepy.

    "They're probably right," Hood conceded to Uncut magazine. "The kids turn into donkeys, for goodness' sake! But there was something about that creepiness that was attractive to me then. I was a weird kid."
  • Musically, "Pinocchio" is lighter than some of the album's other tracks, a wistful country ballad. But the lyrics are dark, reflective, and laced with the kind of wry humor that comes from looking back and realizing how little sense everything made at the time.
  • Of course, Hood is not the first musician to be drawn to the Pinocchio story, which follows a wooden puppet who dreams of becoming a real boy but mostly just makes terrible choices and is repeatedly punished in disturbing ways. Originally written by Italian author Carlo Collodi in 1883, the tale was adapted by Disney in 1940 into what would become one of the most beloved (and nightmare-inducing) animated films of all time.

    Pinocchio has inspired several songs, reflecting different interpretations of the character and story across genres and eras:

    1940 "When You Wish Upon A Star" by Cliff Edwards
    Written by Leigh Harline and Ned Washington for Disney's 1940 animated film Pinocchio, Cliff Edwards performs this iconic song as Jiminy Cricket in the film. It won the Academy Award for Best Original Song and has become a symbol of Disney's legacy.

    1940 "I've Got No Strings" by Dickie Jones
    Featured in Disney's Pinocchio, this playful song is sung by Pinocchio himself, expressing his joy at being free from puppet strings. It highlights themes of independence and self-discovery.

    1978 "In Search Of Peter Pan" by Kate Bush
    From her album Lionheart (1978), this song references Pinocchio in its final verse, quoting "When You Wish Upon a Star." Bush often draws inspiration from magical and fictional elements, including Disney's portrayal of Pinocchio.

    2008 "Pinnochio Story" by Kanye West
    A deeply emotional, improvised track from his 808s & Heartbreak album in which West compares his life of fame and wealth to Pinocchio's longing for something real.

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