Rocket
Jackie Brenston Lyrics


Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴  Line by Line Meaning ↴

You may have heard of jalopies
You've heard the noise they make
But let me introduce you to my Rocket '88
Yes it's great, just won't wait
Everybody likes my Rocket '88
Baby we'll ride in style
Movin' all along
V-8 motor and this modern design
Black convertible top and the gals don't mind
Sportin' with me, ridin' all around town for joy
Blow your horn, Raymond blow your horn

Step in my Rocket and don't be late
Baby we're pullin' out about a half-past-eight
Goin' on the corner and havin' some fun
Everybody in my car is going to take a little nip




Ooh, goin' out
Oozin' and cruisin' along

Overall Meaning

The song "Rocket 88" by Jackie Brenston is a classic blues tune that celebrates the thrill of a fast hot rod automobile that was popular in the 1950s. The lyrics are simple yet catchy, with an upbeat rhythm that galvanizes the spirit of the era. The first stanza introduces the car as a Rocket 88 that is better than a jalopy, with a V-8 motor and modern design that delivers an exhilarating ride. The singer is proud of his car and everyone seems to love it. The chorus repeats the phrase "Baby we'll ride in style, movin' all along" which highlights the spirit of adventure and excitement that a fast car can bring.


The second stanza is about the details of the car, and Brenston describes the black convertible top and how the girls like to ride with him. The music shifts to a more melodic tone as Brenston sings about the joys of cruising around town, honking the horn and having fun with friends. He invites listeners to join in and have a good time, promising a little nip of alcohol to go along with the fun. The final line of "oozin' and cruisin' along" captures the free-spirited excitement of being on the open road, riding in a fast car.


Line by Line Meaning

You may have heard of jalopies
You might have come across old cars that make horrible noises


You've heard the noise they make
You know how loud and unpleasant the sound of those old cars is


But let me introduce you to my Rocket '88
Let me acquaint you with my own car, the Rocket '88


Yes it's great, just won't wait
It's really amazing and doesn't wait for anyone


Everybody likes my Rocket '88
Everyone appreciates my car - it's that good!


Baby we'll ride in style
We'll travel in luxury and elegance


Movin' all along
We'll keep moving forwards


V-8 motor and this modern design
It's got a powerful V-8 engine and a contemporary outlook


Black convertible top and the gals don't mind
The roof can be removed, and the ladies love it too


Sportin' with me, ridin' all around town for joy
They enjoy being with me, and we have fun cruising in the city


Blow your horn, Raymond blow your horn
Honk the horn, Raymond, honk it loud!


Step in my Rocket and don't be late
Get in the car without any delays and let's go!


Baby we're pullin' out about a half-past-eight
We're leaving at 8:30 PM


Goin' on the corner and havin' some fun
We're off to a lively place and gonna have a good time


Everybody in my car is going to take a little nip
We're all going to drink something together


Ooh, goin' out
Oh yes, we're going out


Oozin' and cruisin' along
We're smoothly moving and cruising with the car




Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Royalty Network
Written by: JACKIE BRENSTON

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
To comment on or correct specific content, highlight it

Genre not found
Artist not found
Album not found
Song not found
Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@thebrazilianatlantis165

@@VogonPoet67 "Move It On Over" and "Guitar Boogie" are "hillbilly boogie," which became popular in about 1945. Blues with some backbeat had been around in the '20s and '30s. Tampa Red had been playing guitar boogie in about 1940 -- and that wasn't rock and roll either. All the known rock and roll recordings made before mid-1949, such as "Rock The Joint" by Jimmy Preston and "Rock And Roll" by Wild Bill Moore, are by R&B artists. All. That sound was called "rockers" in Billboard in 1949 and Albennie "Rock And Roll" Harris was using that nickname in print that year, the year she recorded the rocker "Jump And Shout." Rockabilly was that rock and roll sound mixed with "hillbilly" (i.e. C&W), and the first known example of rockabilly is by Hardrock Gunter in 1950. Country music was mixed with rock and roll from 1950 onward, whenever it was that was rockabilly (that was the year Haley got interested in doing so too btw, and what he got interested in was e.g. "Rock The Joint" recreated as partly country), and rock and roll had been invented before 1950 by black artists, not country artists.

Elvis, in press conferences in the '50s, said rock and roll was invented by black artists. The nth myth that whenever something important happens white people must have been around too, as it were, was nurtured by the imagination of white writers in the '60s-'80s. But Elvis e.g. knew better.

"no one did" Bill Moore, Wynonie Harris, Roy Brown, Jimmy Preston -- people like that in about 1947-1949, e.g. "We're Gonna Rock" 1947 by Moore. They were professional jump blues musicians making up a new sound to sell to black kids, which is why e.g. the black poet Al Young recalled that some black parents didn't approve of the black-deejayed show "Rocking With Leroy," which was around in 1947 (and Moore recorded a tribute to it in _1947_), years before Freed decided to have a similar show that started in 1951. The initial audience for the rock and roll sound was young black people who wanted to hear something new, which it was.

"Gospel was also influential on early... rock and roll" The rock and roll sound originated as black jump blues performed by black professional jump blues musicians as if it were black gospel as a sacrilegious joke.

"she basically invented the guitar solo"' No, as we know it it was basically popularized in U.S. commercial music by Eddie Lang (Lonnie Johnson's favorite guitarist, he said) when she was about 13. That led by the early '30s to people like Scrapper Blackwell, and T-Bone Walker's favorite guitarist was Blackwell, and T-Bone was a huge direct and indirect influence on the rock-and-roll-era guitarists.

"that many of the godfathers of rock" Chuck began recording for Chess in 1955, which is e.g. 6 years after Chris Powell recorded "Rock The Joint" and Albennie Jones recorded "Hole In The Wall." Chuck was one of the best, not one of the first. (Richard, like Sam Phillips, lied regarding chronology.)

Tharpe's talent was widely admired, and as with e.g. Bill Monroe, what that has to do with whether she was one of the people inventing the rock and roll sound in the late '40s is nothing. Buddy Holly recorded in 1949. But he wasn't into rock and roll yet then, so we don't pretend he was. Tharpe recorded no rock and roll in the late '40s either -- and didn't even approve of sacrilegious jokes.



All comments from YouTube:

@billchew450

Whatever one might think of Ike Turner as a human being, you Can't overstate the influence he had on rock and blues.

@thebrazilianatlantis165

On the contrary, people routinely do.

@sidneycarroll1058

Tina lies a lot,and ought be ashamed of herself,about some of what she said.

@tomasjones3755

Yeah.... I grew up w Ike Jr, when they lived in Ladera Heights [West L.A.]
Ike was noooooo gem, as a human being

@Ap-nv1hk

night hawk how did they do that?

@conchobar

Ike was no worse than your typical rock star. People have a right to hate him, but they need to take their blinders off because they probably love listening to plenty of other wife abusers.

150 More Replies...

@Jakedasnake1066

Rocket 88 is considered by most to be the first rock n roll song because it's the first song that uses distortion to affect the sound of the guitar. When they were driving to the studio to record, the guitar amp fell off the roof of the car, and they had to prop it up with wadded up newspaper, creating that buzz that you hear in the song.

@AllBobsAllTheTime

Great tune but considered "the first rock'n'roll song" because of Sam Philips' relentless p/r work - check out the aforementioned Hucklebuck, The Fat Man, and a couple of great covers: Wynonie Harris Good Rockin' Tonight and Jimmy Preston Oh Babe.

@kennycab3374

Was it Ikes guitar amp that fell off the car?

@eldesgraciado6690

Maybe Ike beat the crap out of the amp. The amp had to perform all messed up.

More Comments

More Versions