![]() ![]() Dusty Springfield, being gay, would probably have preferred to record the original lyrics. ![]() There's one final wrinkle to this story that makes it even better. Just like a ghost, you've been a-hauntin' my dreams Also they have a verse that was omitted from Dusty's version, clearly because it couldn't be gender-flipped convincingly at the time: The original lyrics are about a spooky little girl behaving exactly like she might be expected to in mid-60s pop lyrics. In January 1968 Dusty Springfield recorded her version. Later that year it received lyrics by James Cobb and Buddy Buie and was put out by the Floridian rock quartet the Classics IV. The tune to “Spooky” was written by Mike Sharpe and Harry Middlebrooks Jr. This is because what Dusty recorded was a gender-flipped version of the original lyrics. For the time definitely, and largely to a 2014 audience as well I believe, the gender roles in the lyrics are confusing. “I get confused and I don't know where I stand / But then you smile and hold my hand.” On the other hand, she won't give him a straight answer when he tries to ask her out. She constantly finds him winking with his “little eye” at other women. ”Love's kind of crazy with a spooky little boy like you”. They have a woman describing her relationship with a fickle, unreliable, flirtatious man. The lyrics to Dusty Springfield's 1970 song ”Spooky” are slightly odd.
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