"
He'd Have to Get Under — Get Out and Get Under (to Fix Up His Automobile)" is one of the lengthier titles in the history of popular songs. The song was written in 1913, with music by
Maurice Abrahams and lyrics by
Grant Clarke and
Edgar Leslie.
It was a hit for recording artists such as Al Jolson in 1913, Billy Murray in 1914, Bobby North in 1920, and it was revived by Bobby Horton in the Ken Burns documentary film Horatio's Drive (2003).
The title was essentially self-defining. The song poked fun at the trials and tribulations of the average young car owner of the 1910s, especially when he wanted to get down to some serious "sparking" with his female passenger:
- He'd have to get under — get out and get under — to fix his little machine
- He was just dying to cuddle his queen
- But ev'ry minute
- When he'd begin it
- He'd have to get under — get out and get under — then he'd get back at the wheel
- Ev'ry time that he would reach for a kiss
- It seems the darned old engine, it would miss
- And then he'd have to get under — get out and get under — and fix up his automobile.
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