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Paul Weller — I Walk On Gilded Splinters
Album: Stanley Road
Avg rating:
7

Your rating:
Total ratings: 1612









Released: 1995
Length: 5:03
Plays (last 30 days): 3
Some people think they jive me
But I know they must be crazy
They don't see dey misfortune
Or else they just a little too lazy

J'suis the Grand Zombie
My yellow belt of choison
I Ain't afraid of no tom cat
That fill my brains with poison

I Walk thru the fire
An I Fly thru the smoke
I wanna see my enemies
At the end of my rope

I Walk on pins and needles
An I See what they can do
I Walk on gilded splinters
With the king of the Zulu

Singing
Come to me giddi come come
Walk on gildid splinters
Come to me giddi come come
Walk on gildid splinters

Till I burn up , Till I burn Up, Till I burn up.

I'm walking to my coffin
Drink poison in my chalice
Pride begins to fade
And y'all will feel my malice

Put gris gris on your doorstep
Soon you'll be in the gutter
I can melt your heart like butter
A-a-and I can make you stutter

Singing
Come to me giddi come come
Walk on gildid splinters
Come to me giddi come come
Walk on gildid splinters

Till I burn up , Till I burn Up, Till I burn up.
Comments (100)add comment
A stand up diamond geezer.
Didn’t realise for years and years that this was a cover (Dr Johns Gris Gris). As a Brit I’m a massive Paul Weller fan. this shows his how wide his inspiration must range. And that tells in his back catalogue from The Jam, The Style Council, and his so work up until now. 
Could definitely use more Weller on RP (Jam too for that matter)!
 alexandersmcmillan wrote:

A good cover, but I'm surprised it has a higher user rating than the original by Dr. John. 




I Agree. Me too! ...wuzzup with that? ...eh?
Gris gris gumbo ya ya.
Just to be clear, this song is originally by Dr. John. I had no idea so many people have covered it.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
People - look up the Paul Weller Live acoustic album Days Of Speed. Just the man and his guitar and by the gods is it good.
I've always wondered what the beeping noise is part way through this.
A good cover, but I'm surprised it has a higher user rating than the original by Dr. John. 
 cosmicjoe54 wrote:

Dr. John's version is better. IMO


Weller's version is still pretty good.
 rbrise wrote:


check out peter Wellers work from the Jam to Style Council to solo...top notch


Peter Weller's work in the original Robocop is also worth a mention.
 catnip wrote:

Great song- a lot of the soupy, swampy mix has to be credited to Brendan Lynch, who produced Weller's early albums (I imagine he produced this one). Very compact sound, very good. Weller did a show on Greater London Radio for a couple of hours, which featured a quarter of an hour of Lynch's mixing, which is one of my favourite DJ sets (don't look for it, it's on a C90 in my cupboard...)


Don't you tell me what I can and can't do! Now, where do you live?
 cosmicjoe54 wrote:

Dr. John's version is better. IMO



Dr. John lived this song.
Saw him live in Detroit, what a fantastic show!

Lucy Rose was the opening act and her band was great. 
Dr. John's version is better. IMO
I am a Weller fan. All the way back to The Jam. Thanks BillG for reaching wide. This is strong
Wow, I did not know Weller had covered this. I'm not generally a Weller fan, and I don't like the original song much either, but this ROCKS.
Not hitting me today. Meh.
I love that bit at the end. Almost a jam, going into something more.... shall we say... exciting than before. 
Love the drumming especially in the bridge.
Nice cover Mr. Weller
 justin4kick wrote:

There's online proof of the cover you mention. 

http://www.covermesongs.com/2019/06/five-good-covers-i-walk-on-gilded-splinters-dr-john.html

I was a bit surprised of The Flower Pot Men covering this somewhat obscure track but there seems to be more than one band using that name. Some of you may remember the sixties hit Let's Go To San Francisco. So no, it's not them.

That will do for useless information for today, I guess.
 

Hey thanks!!! So nice to hear again, I actually heard this before hearing any other version including Dr. John's.

 https://youtu.be/CJIiY2EMtKA

 thewiseking wrote:
not too sure bout this Weller Feller. He should stick to bug music. Dig the Johnny Jenkins/Duane Allman version instead
 

check out peter Wellers work from the Jam to Style Council to solo...top notch
 TuneAgeWhereWoof wrote:
Whoa!  was that Vinyl skipping on my ears!?
 
Haven't heard this before, so I cannot tell whether Bill actually ripped this from vinyl and it actually skipped at the end, or  it's just part of the recording 
Probably the latter though…
not too sure bout this Weller Feller. He should stick to bug music. Dig the Johnny Jenkins/Duane Allman version instead
This is very nice and I really like Paul Weller but I got scared by one of the sounds (splash cymbals?). I thought the water was boiling over the pasta cooking pot and was spilling on the gas hob! Phew, all under control.
Never knew he murdered this one. All the atmosphere is gone from this pub band version of the song.
 aelfheld wrote:

Literally.
 Yes, literally. But I think Paul owns this figuratively.

 Old_Pat wrote:
Dr John owns this
 
Literally.
i find weller very boring .. its as if i have heard it all before but done better by better songwriters
Loved Paul Weller's early albums. Wild Wood and the following 2 were 9/10. But recently he has become less melodic, soulful. More whiney and overproduced imho
Great interpretation by Paul Weller, however I prefer the live version of Humble Pie
 SmackDaddy wrote:
anyone recall the version by The Flower Pot Men in the 80s? I can't find any evidence of it online. I have it on cassette tape so I know it exists and wasn't a figment of my imagination. Anyway, it's the best version I've heard.
 
There's online proof of the cover you mention. 

http://www.covermesongs.com/2019/06/five-good-covers-i-walk-on-gilded-splinters-dr-john.html

I was a bit surprised of The Flower Pot Men covering this somewhat obscure track but there seems to be more than one band using that name. Some of you may remember the sixties hit Let's Go To San Francisco. So no, it's not them.

That will do for useless information for today, I guess.
This album is when I finally caught up with Paul Weller. Before that I always one iteration behind him, only liking his previous musical project after he had moved on to the next. My mistake, not his.
 ThePoose wrote:
I am hearing Uncle Frank in the depths
 
 

Yup - sounded like the Grand Wazoo to me too! Excellent track.
I love this cover! Hard to believe it's coming from Someone I only previously knew from The Jam and Style Council. Awesome.
Yeah! Nice cover from a old hawk who is finally seems happy with his genre.
Pretty faithful to the Dr. John version with just a little bit of Humble Pie crunch thrown in.
Cool.
 ExploitingChaos wrote:
Ending got me  :)
 
You are SO right ...
RIP Dr John!
Dr John owns this
Need more Weller
Not ba but you no  Dr. john the night tripper.
Ah, Weller. So much to unpack with this one. If he didn't try so damn hard to be effortless I suppose I'd like his music more (post The Jam). 
Ending got me  :)
Tune !
Give it a 7. Give the original Dr John an 11.
Nice song.
The attainable velocity ranges from eight miles per hour until 15 miles per hour. Best Razor Electric Scooter Charger The velocity restrict also can turn out to be choice standards in sure instances.
Love his voice. 
Did I just hear a bit of Billy Cobham's drum transition from Stratus in there?
{#Dancingbanana_2}Love me some Paul Weller! Enjoyed The Jam's output as well as Paul's evolution as a solo artist. 
Reading the comments for this song... to me they fall into two camps... UK comments think this is great... USA comments refer to other 'better' cover versions.

This might be because Paul Weller is held in great affection in the UK since his time with the Jam (who were a particularly English and 'London  centric' flavour of punk).

For me on pure objective listening (and without nostalgic reverence) this is only an average cover. The Jam were a 'Neo-Mod' sub-genre from London and South East England that did not spread too far from its roots.

The Who successfully captured the original vibe of the Mods - the Jam tried to revive that sub-culture but without the great singer, guitarist, bassist or drummer of their predecessors.

Superb, classic album from start to finish.  I found it a rewarding listen.
No one seems to remember the Marcha Hunt version:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OD-e7Ofklno
I am hearing Uncle Frank in the depths
 
Classic Weller - thanks {#Smile}
this is tight man  9
I thought it was Poppa Chubby...
please play the Johnny Jenkins version with SkyDog on guitar. 
this version? wackness 
...... a bloody BIG fat 9
 DD gypsyman wrote:
OK, Dr John's version of this is good, this is also good, but Humble Pie's live version is even better. Maybe Bill will segue into some Pie?

 
great request!   {#Dancingbanana_2}
anyone recall the version by The Flower Pot Men in the 80s? I can't find any evidence of it online. I have it on cassette tape so I know it exists and wasn't a figment of my imagination. Anyway, it's the best version I've heard.
Great song- a lot of the soupy, swampy mix has to be credited to Brendan Lynch, who produced Weller's early albums (I imagine he produced this one). Very compact sound, very good. Weller did a show on Greater London Radio for a couple of hours, which featured a quarter of an hour of Lynch's mixing, which is one of my favourite DJ sets (don't look for it, it's on a C90 in my cupboard...) "We do it with smoke and mirrors, Paul". Genius.
OK, Dr John's version of this is good, this is also good, but Humble Pie's live version is even better. Maybe Bill will segue into some Pie?
Dr John Witchy Red followed by This! >>>> That little Lemon Parade followed by My Girl thing you did? >>>>>> Long live the segue! Long live RP!!!!!!!!!
 akiml wrote:


Coco was headlining an after party at Jazzfest 2011. What a trip! Guy was trashed out of his mind, but woke up and played some mean blues when up on prch with the other musicians. The party was more memorable than the jazzfest itself- it was REAL!
 
This somewhat apocryphal story of Coco's death was told to me by a good friend who is a semi-regular at the Apple Barrel, where Coco was a fixture at the bar.  The bar tender turned around to find Coco with his head on the bar, and shook him and asked if he was all right.  Coco  raised his head and one finger, declared "next round's on me!", and fell over dead.
This man is awesome live.
 garyalex wrote:

This is a good version as well.  Duane Allman on lead guitar:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ke4HSwBqfy0  

 
Woah, I have this album but haven't listened to it for ages - and I had no idea that was Allman. Thanks for the tip!
 Businessgypsy wrote:
Working my schedule for the second weekend of JazzFest right now! In Dr. John's take on this song, he mentions CoCO Robichaux - who I used to share a rooftop with in the Marigny (a New Orleans neighborhood) over Cafe Brasil. Coco was a shaman and musician, supposedly the inspiration for Dr. John's much freakier recording. Thanks for helping me get stoked!

 

Coco was headlining an after party at Jazzfest 2011. What a trip! Guy was trashed out of his mind, but woke up and played some mean blues when up on prch with the other musicians. The party was more memorable than the jazzfest itself- it was REAL!
Such a great songwriter and musician - great to here him on RP would enjoy even more!
 martinc wrote:
Second the Humble Pie reference from live album
 
This is a good version as well.  Duane Allman on lead guitar:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ke4HSwBqfy0  

Second the Humble Pie reference from live album
Better yet, check out the Humble Pie version.
Check out Dr John's version (I think its the original) That entire album is . . .gilded.
 QueenLucia wrote:


I would think "gild" is correct.  To gild something is to cover it in a thin layer of gold.  A guild is an association of people with similar interests or skills.  That does not make sense in this context.
 
Although I agree with your conclusion, I think Dr. John spelled it "guilded" on his original recording - for some reason.


Whoa!  was that Vinyl skipping on my ears!?
 tallboy1968 wrote:
Is it Gilded or Guilded?  I know this song from Widespread Panic covering it (awesome baseline) but the WSP camp has this as Guilded, while RP has this song as Gilded.  Either way, catchy.
 

I would think "gild" is correct.  To gild something is to cover it in a thin layer of gold.  A guild is an association of people with similar interests or skills.  That does not make sense in this context.
Not nearly enough (by a long shot) Weller on RP. Live,he's as good as he ever was and his current work is superb.So different from one song to the other, dig that funky edgy thing


Is it Gilded or Guilded?  I know this song from Widespread Panic covering it (awesome baseline) but the WSP camp has this as Guilded, while RP has this song as Gilded.  Either way, catchy.
 sharkartist wrote:

I certainly appreciate Weller's work, but give me the Doc for this one.
 
Anyway, it's not unpleasant to hear.

 perryandcaro wrote:
Far too little Paul Weller material on RP. 'Time passes' from Stanley Road and 'Country' from the Wild Wood album, for instance. 
 
For sure.

Yay! the Modfather! I shall now go home and dig out some Weller and play it LOUD! 

Anyone who has not seen him live and has an opportunity to do so, I would really recommend it. 

Nice to hear something new on RP
No one ever remembers the version by The Flowerpot Men in the 80's. Can't even find info in the internet. But dammit I remember.
Far too little Paul Weller material on RP. 'Time passes' from Stanley Road and 'Country' from the Wild Wood album, for instance. 
Working my schedule for the second weekend of JazzFest right now! In Dr. John's take on this song, he mentions CoCO Robichaux - who I used to share a rooftop with in the Marigny (a New Orleans neighborhood) over Cafe Brasil. Coco was a shaman and musician, supposedly the inspiration for Dr. John's much freakier recording. Thanks for helping me get stoked!

Dr. John rules.
This is kewl! And the vocals a bit PG-ish, I think.
Anyone remember the cover of this song by The Flower Pot Men in the 80s? I can never any info on them or their cover. It was really good really different, much more rockin'.

I do like this, first time hearing, but it is a little ploddy.

EDIT

Damn! I just found it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJIiY2EMtKA



Neat.  Before I opened the window I was thinking shades of "Mothers of Invention."
I love this!
Stanley Road is a great work! {#Cool}

At the end of season 4 of 'The Wire', a great montage of scenes was shown, with an overdub of this song ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOgAQbwKqzA&feature=channel). I immediately went on a search to see who this was. While I recognized the song as the old Dr. John tune, I loved this version. Gnashing guitars, great backup singers, and a wonderful recapture of the voodoo mysticism of the original tune. Dr. John's version is a true classic, but Paul Weller's cover deserves at least as much recognition for his spirited remake as for his exposure of the Dr.'s music to a generation who have probably never heard of the man.

Paul Weller is a simply brilliant musician who does not get the recognition he deserves, and to see this song on RP reinforces my opinion that RP is the best. Thank you for adding this tune! You made my day!

Now this is a cool RP addition. {#Cool}
I always liked the Humble Pie version.
 Bleyfusz wrote:
is this the one from the Doc.....? yes it is!
 
I certainly appreciate Weller's work, but give me the Doc for this one.
but its not the Doc is it?  {#Ask}  I think i prefer  Dr. Johns version myself

is this the one from the Doc.....? yes it is!