Meat Man Explained

Meat Man
Type:single
Artist:Jerry Lee Lewis
B-Side:"Just A Little Bit"
Genre:Rock
Label:Mercury #0745
Producer:Huey P. Meaux
Prev Title:I'm Left, You're Right, She's Gone
Prev Year:1972
Next Title:He Can't Fill My Shoes
Next Year:1974

"Meat Man" is a Rock 'n' roll song written by Mack Vickery and originally recorded by him in 1970 under the name Atlanta James. The most well known recording was by Jerry Lee Lewis, and was the first and only single off Lewis's 1973 album .

Composition

Variously described as "an incomparably dirty song",[1] "a cartoonish, over-the-top double entre-laden rocker with lyrics that left very little to the imagination,[2] "a ribald celebration of sexual conquests", "the most frankly sexual song of Jerry Lee's career, no small achievement" and "a filthy Mack Vickery tune written with Jerry Lee in mind, ... two minutes and forty seconds of vivid sexual boasts, delivered furiously and convincingly",[3] "Meat Man" listed a range of cities in the south of the United States, and the type of meat the narrator ate there, including lines like “I been down to Macon, Georgia/I ate the fuzz off a Georgia peach/Plucked me a chicken in Memphis/Mama, I still got feathers in my teeth" and "I had a charcoal steak in Dallas and fed my bone to a Fort Worth dog", interspersed with the chorus "They call me the Meat Man, you oughta see me eat ma'am".

While Vickery recorded "Meat Man" under the nom de plume "Atlanta James" to protect himself from charges of smut mongering, Lewis was typically unconcerned about any negative reaction to his version of the song.[2]

Recording

Lewis's version was recorded on 24 September 1973 as part of a session at Trans Maximus inc. studio in Memphis.[4] Producer Huey P. Meaux, who was concerned that Lewis's piano playing was being lost amongst the strings recently added to Lewis's music, miked Lewis' piano so it became central to the sound and feel of "Meat Man".[1]

During the recording session, Lewis threatened to kill a photographer, continually insulted Meaux and constantly drank tequila and swallowed a variety of pills.[5]

Personnel

Personnel included:

Reception

"Meat Man" was one of the few Lewis singles to fail to chart since his return to favour in 1968, although Lewis would later state that it was the only song he could follow “Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On” in his live show.[7] Music historian Colin Escott believed that "Meat Man" was the best song on Southern Roots but due to its content it was obviously destined not to be played on radio and sell in sufficient numbers to chart.[8]

Meaux later said of "Meat Man"; "it was a little too early to pull that song for a single. It might be big today. People don't pay no mind to a few dirty words. In them days they'd say, 'Oh My God, did you hear what he just said?' But me and Jerry Lee both walked on the edge of what we could both do and say without falling over. Sometimes we fell over. I felt that we were saying things that people would like to say but were afraid to say."[1]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Escott, p. 24.
  2. Flynn, p. 67.
  3. Guterman, p. 175.
  4. White, p. 207.
  5. Bragg, p. 377.
  6. Escott, p. 82.
  7. Web site: Crawford . Steve . Mack Vickery – Remembering Nashville's Meat Man . Rock NYC . 7 July 2014 . 28 July 2021.
  8. Escott, p. 33.