The person who uploaded the lyrics of Dreadlock Holiday to YouTube (see earlier post) gives the following
line:
I heard a dark voice beside me say
“Would you like something harder?”
When that song was current, I heard the line as ‘...like something
hotter,’ because the context suggests the soliciting of a whore. And therein
lies an important point.
Rock and pop music was invented in America
in the 1950s, and there’s always been a tendency for British singers to effect
a vaguely American accent. It seems to go with the territory and people do it
unconsciously (just as we British kids effected a poor American accent when we
were playing cowboys and Indians.) But English and American speakers pronounce
the double ‘t’ in words ending ...tter differently. The Englishman clips it
more precisely, so ‘hotter’ and ‘harder’ sound quite different. The American,
however – at least to an English ear and especially if the first syllable is
vocally extended – hardens the double ‘t’ so it sounds like ‘d.’ ‘Better’
becomes ‘bedder,’ ‘fatter’ becomes ‘fadder,’ and ‘hotter’ becomes ‘harder.’
So which is it, because the choice between ‘harder’ and ‘hotter’
completely changes the meaning of the last verse?
2 comments:
I've heard better said with the d sound but i've never heard anyone, not even in the south be they rednecks for just southern or appalachian people say fatter or hotter with a d sound. Maybe not such a strong strike with the t but definitely not a d. Hmmmm...
I suggest that's because you're habituated to American speech, so you recognise the difference. I would say that to an English ear - habituated as we are to the much sharper 't' sound - the double 't' nearly always sounds like a 'd.' There's another line in the song that refers to 'a brother from the gutter,' which sounds to my ear like 'gudder.'
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