THESEUS:


Gather around!

Give me your ear.

And I’ll tell you a story

So bloody and gory,

You won’t fall asleep for days!

(At least, not in your bed . . .)


I was traveling down the road to Athens.

The trip had already been horribly long

And my feet were beginning to hurt

From the rocks and the gravel.


I was hoping to finally get to Athens.

But sadly, the sun was beginning to set

And the forest was getting too dark

For a person to travel.


But just around the bend I met a man,

And he said, “Hello!”


“My name is Procrustes!

(And you look tired!)

Do you need a place to stay?


“I have a room!

Kick off your shoes!

We’ll share a meal!

We’ll have some booze!

But best of all . . .


“I have a wonderful,

Comf’table,

Marvelous,

Glorious

Bed!


“And you . . .

. . . will fit perfectly in it!”


Now, while I had been on the road to Athens,

I had the good fortune of meeting a girl

Who had told me she thought I’d do well

To have some kind of warning.


She had told me that on the road to Athens,

There lived in a house a peculiar old man

Who would welcome in guests,

But they never survived until morning.


For when they went to lay down in his bed . . .


The cuffs clicked

And the trap snapped shut,

Pinning them in bed

While the ropes stretched

And the chains pulled taut,

Stretching out their limbs.

Then Procrustes would enter

And walk to the pulleys

And pull . . .


And tendons would snap

While the guests lay there screaming

And writhing in pain

While their cartilage tore!


But not just content

To pull limbs from their sockets,

Procrustes did more . . .


With a hammer,

He pounded their limbs

And he shattered their bones

And he flattened their flesh

‘Til the bed fin’lly fit!


But I knew that that wouldn’t be me,

For you see,

I was tall . . .


And Procrustes had two beds.

And one was smaller.

So when taller guests lay down . . .


And the cuffs clicked

And the trap snapped shut,

Pinning them in bed,

And the ropes stretched

And the chains pulled taut,

Stretching out their limbs.

Then Procrustes would enter

Dramatic’lly drawing his sword . . .


And he’d chop off their toes

And he’d hack off their fingers

And saw off their feet

Which would fall to the floor!


And while spurts of blood arced

From the stubs of their ankles,

Procrustes did more . . .


With a hatchet,

He severed their limbs

And he splintered their bones

And he sliced off their flesh

‘Til the bed fin’lly fit!


But I knew that that wouldn’t be me,

For you see,

I’d been warned . . .


So I did it to him!




As part of the Songwriting Cycle that I started in September of 2010, I was challenged to write a song from the point of view of a character from Greek mythology.  At first, I thought it would be a rich source of ideas.  Turns out?  It was a lot harder to arrive at this song than I first thought . . .


The biggest problem?  I already knew about a lot of songs from Greek myths!  I love Adam Guettel’s album, Myths and Hymns.  I love Stephen Sondheim’s musical, The Frogs.  Plus, there’s Disney’s Hercules.  That kind of ruled out a huge swath of the mythological canon.


I thought about Medusa, but I couldn’t really arrive at a succinct story that I wanted to tell through her eyes.  I thought about a song from Andromeda’s perspective, but hers is such an unenlightened story...  I thought about Tantalus.  Echo and/or Narcissus.  Cerberus.  The Hydra.  But nothing really called to me.


And actually, Procrustes didn’t really appeal to me at first, either.  The song needed to be a point-of-view song, and I always heard Procrustes’ song as more of a “The Ballad Of...” kind of thing.


But then, once it finally occurred to me to have Theseus sing the song, suddenly I could sing the kind of song I had envisioned in my mind, and it started to come together much better . . .




On a musically-geeky note?  I love how the piano part echos what’s going on in the song.  It starts out with a jaunty walking figure.  But while Procrustes is busy stretching his victims, the piano part has the right hand stretching to reach a series of intervals of a minor ninth that ascend chromatically away from the left hand.  And when Procrustes switches to hacking up his guests, the piano part mirrors that with the right hand hacking away at chords all separated from each other by at least an octave.  It’s fun to play.  Fun to sing.  Fun to imagine.  (I can’t believe I wrote a lyric that included the line, “Spurts of blood arced from the stubs of their ankles” . . .)



;-)

Download “The Ballad of Procrustes.mp3

(Want the sheet music?)