She's a Woman
Jeff Beck Lyrics


Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴  Line by Line Meaning ↴

Woman,
You know you,
Woman,
You gotta be,
Woman,
I've got to feeling alone,
When you're talking to me, see right through me,
I've got to feeling alone

She's a woman, you know what I mean,
You better listen, listen to me
She's gonna set you free oh oh yeah

You've come looking for me, like I've got to set you free
You know I can't free nobody,
You've come looking for me, like I've got to set you free,
I can't be nobody.

She's a woman you know what I mean,
You better listen,listen to me,
She's gonna set you free oh oh yeah

Woman,
You know you,
Woman,
You gotta be,
Woman,
I've got to feeling alone,
When you're talking to me, you see right through me,
I've got to feeling alone

She's a woman, you know what I mean,




You better listen, listen to me
She's gonna set you free oh oh yeah

Overall Meaning

The lyrics of Jeff Beck’s song "She's a Woman" portray a man's deep yearning for a woman who possesses the power, the aura, and the charisma of true womanhood. He addresses her as a woman and admits that he feels alone when she talks to him, as she can see right through him. He understands the potency of her femininity and urges his listeners to pay attention and listen to him, as she has the power to set them free.


The man understands that this woman is more than just a female; she is a force to be reckoned with. The song's lyrics are a celebration of the enigmatic and magical quality that true feminine power brings to the world. The vocalist underscores this quality, and as a listener, you can't help but feel drawn to this woman's irresistible charms.


The lyrics are punctuated by a groovy guitar riff and a smooth bassline that adds to the song's overall hypnotic and engaging vibe. Jeff Beck's "She's a Woman" is a powerful ode to the female spirit and the essence of true womanhood.


Line by Line Meaning

Woman
Addressing the woman and acknowledging her presence


You know you
Recognizing that the woman is aware of her own qualities


Woman
Reiterating the presence of the woman


You gotta be
Implying that the woman possesses attributes necessary to meet a certain standard


Woman
Affirming the woman's importance


I've got to feeling alone
Expressing a sense of loneliness in the absence of the woman's company


When you're talking to me, see right through me
Indicating that the woman is perceptive and can easily understand the singer's true emotions and intentions


I've got to feeling alone
Reiterating the feeling of loneliness


She's a woman, you know what I mean
Stating that the woman possesses qualities that do not require explanation


You better listen, listen to me
Implying that the artist has valuable insight to share


She's gonna set you free oh oh yeah
Indicating that the woman will liberate the listener in some way


You've come looking for me, like I've got to set you free
Addressing someone who seeks assistance or guidance, implying that the artist cannot provide a solution to their problems


You know I can't free nobody
Acknowledging that the singer lacks the power to alleviate another person's struggles or burdens


You've come looking for me, like I've got to set you free
Reiterating the singer's inability to provide solutions to another person's struggles


I can't be nobody
Insinuating that the singer cannot pretend to be someone they are not in order to provide another person with comfort or guidance




Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: John Lennon, Paul McCartney

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

Allan Cerf

@tswrench I'm a professional musician with really good relative pitch. But you don't have to have those qualities - you just have to listen TO youtube - to hear it borne out. Like THIS video where you find yourself commenting. This is precisely the same set of notes as the album version Beck's cover of She's a Woman. LOL. Tell me what notes and in which bars Jeff plays something different?

The Beck that played at the Seattle Center Coliseum was in his prime and played the songs note for note. Indeed JAN HAMMER improvised far more than Jeff. Immensely more. And I counted it as a good thing.

His Ronnie Scott Gigs on You Tube are quite good, but he's not in his absolute zenith as a player. Often musicians aren't as good in their sixties. At Ronnie Scott's Jeff's tapping for instance is not as good as before - though tapping is not a huge part of his technique - thank God! So some of the playing from 2007 forward is different - a tad diminished at times. Not to say he didn't have some great nights, still...but a slightly diminished technique is not improvising.

If you compare the amount of improvising Clapton for example does, Beck is a tiny fraction of that.

I agree he may change the rhythms up...if you can find one example on youtube where he goes off with a variation on a melodic theme - please let me know. If he re-harmonizes, Goodbye Pork Pie Hat, or Star Cycle - I'd love to hear it in all seriousness.

Jeff is, according to Simon Phillips and Jan Hammer and many others who played with him on/off for years - and according to me and most folks, a "follow the melody guy." People LIKE to hear what's on the recordings, me included. And Jeff poured so much energy (I almost wrote pours until I remembered he's died, which is quite sad) into his arrangements, well, here is what he said tswrench:

He said that his arrangements, his 'parts' are so demanding that he has to pay attention to what he's playing. What's on the records is demanding enough.

Anyway, you're lucky if you saw him six times playing very different parts to the records. I don't mean to argue. If anyone can point to any Beck performance that doesn't mainly VERY closely, follow the melodic lines on the records, I'd love to hear them.

I think we both agree the man's playing was phenomenal and enjoyable.

Take care.



tswrench

@Allan Cerf -- Uh-huh. Whether you're a professional musician or no, who cares? I was eulogizing one of my favorite guitar players and respectfully observing his passing. I think it's obvious that that IS the point. In that context it's hard to see your point as being one worth making--at all. And yet, that didn't deter you. Way to read the room.

So, you feel you've detected some misstatement in the original post concerning my use of the word 'improvisation,' as it applies to Jeff Beck's playing. That, in turn, triggered you to do a little dyspeptic dance designed to validate your point at the expense of mine. Frankly, your drive-by is not appreciated. You wasted a lot of perfectly good white space to contentiously blurt out answers to questions no one was asking.

I took some music theory courses in college, and I play (that's how I know when one of my favorite guitarists is playing note-for-note or not.) So, what is improvisation if not playing what you feel like playing in the moment? It's spontaneous creativity away from manuscript and rote memorization, no? I imagine you might relish the opportunity to put a finer point on it, but I'm really not interested in picking fly shit out of pepper with anyone over this. I just wanted to pen a personal tribute to a great musician who influenced millions over the course of a career that spanned over 6 decades.

Notwithstanding your personal views, here's what the following query, 'Was jeff beck a great improvisational guitarist,' yielded right out the gate:

"He was known for his improvising, love of harmonics and the whammy bar on his preferred guitar, the Fender Stratocaster. 'Jeff Beck is the best guitar player on the planet,' Joe Perry, the lead guitarist of Aerosmith, told The New York Times in 2010."

Beck is solidly ensconced in every list of "10 Best Rock Improv Guitarists" I looked at (and I'm not even into that shit--how quickly we forget the axiom that correctly says--it's all subjective).

Sorry for the surliness (I've had better days)

Good luck



All comments from YouTube:

Aiden

We just lost Jeff Beck about an hour ago. A tremendous loss for the music world. Jeff was one of the greatest guitar players to ever live.

Larry Russell

😭

Teresa Thomley

God bless him love him, man

Tom Fletcher

When we was young, Mate. We've lost a Great One.

シーホース

私も悲しいです。😭from japan

Jess Hansen

A Titan .

25 More Replies...

Fugettaboutit

He's probably the most gifted of the guitar heroes from his era. When he's into it, he's without equal.

kathy2trips

Which is all the time!

Fugettaboutit

@kathy2trips At least when he's not obsessed about the next hot rod he's going to build.

Keith Finkel

Agree 100%. As a guitarist myself, I can tell you he is the hardest to copy. His phrasing, tone and attack are all so uniquely his.

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