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- #21
So here it is...
The "Georgia brown", as I heard it, refers to a sexual position where the woman's lying on her back....
-- with one leg up in the air and the other flat. Possibly the upraised one might be positioned on the opposite side of the lover's head, creating more tightness and put them both on the same side of his head.
As for why it would take that particular name -- no idea. Presumably named in the state of Georgia. Perhaps it's the State Sexual Position. Perhaps it should be.
And I may be contriving more meaning to the lyrics than there are. But within the song it would serve as a nod-and-a-wink to those in the know, while appearing innocuous to the casual listener.
Anyway that's what I heard, couldn't find corroboration here. But pass it on, we'll make a myth out of this thing yet.
The "Georgia brown", as I heard it, refers to a sexual position where the woman's lying on her back....
(lyrics: "I don't lie ... not much)
-- with one leg up in the air and the other flat. Possibly the upraised one might be positioned on the opposite side of the lover's head, creating more tightness and put them both on the same side of his head.
(lyrics: "two left feet")
As for why it would take that particular name -- no idea. Presumably named in the state of Georgia. Perhaps it's the State Sexual Position. Perhaps it should be.
And I may be contriving more meaning to the lyrics than there are. But within the song it would serve as a nod-and-a-wink to those in the know, while appearing innocuous to the casual listener.
Anyway that's what I heard, couldn't find corroboration here. But pass it on, we'll make a myth out of this thing yet.