Day-old bread, an’ we wan’ go home, as this Dave Coverly Speed Bump cartoon of 3/1/24 has it:
day-old as a pun on day-o, which then licenses the full-out substitution of day-old bread for daylight come
And so the Jamaican dock-workers’ Banana Boat Song — famously recorded by Harry Belafonte in 1956 — is hijacked for baked goods.
(Thanks to Susan Fischer for passing this Coverly cartoon on to me)
Then, in my 5/23/14 posting “Piercing”, on a piece of Stan Freberg’s comedy routine of 1957:
[“Piercing, man, piercing’] comes from musical comic Stan Freberg: his “Banana Boat Song” of 1957 [a riff on Harry Belafonte’s hit song], which you can view here:
The routine has two players: a lead singer (1, sung material is in boldface; otherwise, everything is spoken) and a beatnik bongo drummer (2, speaking only):
1: Daylight come and
Me wan go home
2: My ears, man, like my ears
1: Day.
2: No, hold it, man
1: Me say day-o
2: It’s too shrill, man
2: It’s too piercing
1: Well, I don’t see why
2: No, it’s too piercing, man
It’s too piercing
1: Well, I got to do the shout
2: No, man, it’s too piercing
To this day, 67 years later, the word piercing tends to evoke a really loud day-a-ay-o for me.

August 4, 2024 at 6:10 am |
For reasons that are entirely mysterious to me, the fans of some baseball teams (the Yankees, in particular) occasionally break out in the opening phrase of this song.
August 4, 2024 at 6:45 am |
Odd — and news to me, but I’m a sports idiot. Surely the explanation is somewhere out there, but how to find it?
August 4, 2024 at 8:27 am |
Back in college in the mid 1950s, I translated Carmen Navium Bananārum into Latin:
O numerator, numera bananas!
Venit lux et exire volo.
Deo, deo,
Venit lux et exire volo!
Nocte laboro deglutito rumae,
Pono bananas dum veniat lux!
Venit lux et exire volo!
Fascis pulchra bananarum,
Celat mortiferam tarantulam nigram!
Venit lux et exire volo!
Fascis pes sex septem octo!
Fascis pes sex septem octo!
Venit lux et exire volo!
August 4, 2024 at 8:30 am |
😀 😀 😀
August 5, 2024 at 6:29 am |
“Deo” is a nice touch.