Yardbird is a slang word for the chicken, usually after having been prepared as a meal. Apparently jazz saxophonist Charlie Parker loved fried chicken, which earned him the nickname “Yardbird,” or most commonly, “Bird.” “Anyone seeking an understanding of American music,” writes
Michael Jarrett, “could start by pondering the chicken” (287). Or even, I might add, human culture itself: the excellent PBS documentary,
The Natural History of the Chicken (2000) suggests that we must understand the chicken through the stories we have told about it. The chicken isn't simply an animal, but a sign of something other than itself: chickens, like all animals, are symbols representing different relations to larger reality. In other words, any number of issues surround the role of the chicken in human culture: sex, class, race, identity, and other issues. Hence it follows that songs about chickens aren't really about chickens. The name of a couple famous rock bands invoke the chicken, suggesting its importance at least to a few of that music's practitioners. Chicken Shack, Christine Perfect’s first band, named themselves after Jimmy Smith's highly esteemed album released in 1960,
Back at the Chicken Shack, the record that popularized the Hammond B-3 organ for a generation of rock musicians. The name of the British quintet, The Yardbirds, also invokes the chicken. Although the band's name would seem to be an homage to Charlie Parker, it also may be an allusion to yet
another meaning of yardbird, an untrained military recruit or prison convict. The Yardbirds may have counted on the connotations prompted by this other meaning of the word, to suggest, according to Mike Jarrett, "an outlaw aesthetic that seemed explosive and undisciplined" (287).
A 12-Piece Box Of Tunes And Albums:
The Beastie Boys – “Finger Lickin’ Good” (
Check Your Head)
Mel Brown –
Chicken Fat (1967)
Cab Calloway – “Chicken Ain’t Nothin’ But a Bird” (
Are You Hep to the Jive? 22 Sensational Tracks)
Ry Cooder –
Chicken Skin Music (1976)
Steve Goodman – “Chicken Cordon Bleus” (
Somebody Else’s Troubles)
King Kurt –
Big Cock (1986)
Little Feat –
Dixie Chicken (1973)
Charles Mingus – “Eat That Chicken” (
Oh Yeah)
Jimmy Smith –
Back at the Chicken Shack (1960)
Southern Culture on the Skids – “Eight Piece Box” (
Peckin’ Party)
Big Joe Turner – “The Chicken and the Hawk (Up, Up and Away)” (
Big, Bad & Blue: The Big Joe Turner Anthology)
Link Wray – “Run Chicken Run” (
Rumble! The Best of Link Wray)
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