Cooper has said
he was inspired to write the song when answering the question, "What's the
greatest three minutes of your life?". Cooper said: "There's two
times during the year. One is Christmas morning, when you're just getting ready
to open the presents. The greed factor is right there. The next one is the last
three minutes of the last day of school when you're sitting there and it's like
a slow fuse burning. I said, 'If we can catch that three minutes in a song,
it's going to be so big.'"
Alice Cooper
(born Vincent Damon Furnier; February 4, 1948) is an American rock singer,
songwriter, and musician whose career spans more than four decades. With a
stage show that features guillotines, electric chairs, fake blood, boa
constrictors, and baby dolls, Cooper has drawn equally from horror movies,
vaudeville, and garage rock to pioneer a grandly theatrical and violent brand
of heavy metal designed to shock.
Originating in
Detroit in the late 1960s, Alice Cooper was originally a band consisting of
Furnier on vocals and harmonica, lead guitarist Glen Buxton, Michael Bruce on
rhythm guitar, Dennis Dunaway on bass guitar, and drummer Neal Smith. The original
Alice Cooper band broke into the international music mainstream with the 1971
hit "I'm Eighteen" from the album Love It to Death, which was
followed by the even bigger single "School's Out" in 1972. The band
reached their commercial peak with the 1973 album Billion Dollar Babies.
Furnier's solo
career as Alice Cooper, adopting the band's name as his own name, began with
the 1975 concept album Welcome to My Nightmare; in 2011 he released Welcome 2
My Nightmare, his 19th album as a solo artist, and his 26th album in total.
Expanding from his Detroit rock roots, in his career Cooper has experimented
with a number of musical styles, including conceptual rock, art rock, hard
rock, New Wave, pop rock, experimental rock and industrial rock.
Alice Cooper is
known for his social and witty persona offstage; The Rolling Stone Album Guide
has called him the world's most "beloved heavy metal entertainer".
Cooper is credited with helping to shape the sound and look of heavy metal, and
he is regarded as being the artist who "first introduced horror imagery to
rock'n'roll, and whose stagecraft and showmanship have permanently transformed
the genre". Away from music, Cooper is a film actor, a golfing celebrity,
a restaurateur and, since 2004, a popular radio DJ with his classic rock show
Nights with Alice Cooper.
Cooper has also
said the song "School's Out" was inspired by a line from a Bowery
Boys movie. On his radio show, "Nights with Alice Cooper," he joked
that the main riff of the song was inspired by a song by Miles Davis.
The lyrics of
"School's Out" indicate that not only is the school year ended for
summer vacation, but ended forever, and that the school itself has been blown
up. It incorporates the childhood rhyme, "No more pencils, no more books,
no more teachers' dirty looks" into its lyrics. It also featured children
contributing some of the vocals. "Innocence" in the lyric "...and
we got no innocence" is frequently changed in concert to
"intelligence" and sometimes replaced with "etiquette."
School's Out lyrics
Well we got no
choice
All the girls and
boys
Makin' all that noise
Cause they found
new toys
Well we can't salute ya can't find a flag
If that don't
suit ya that's a drag
School's out for summer
School's out
forever
School's been
blown to pieces
No more pencils
no more books
No more teacher's
dirty looks yeah
Well we got no class
And we got no
principals
And we got no
innocence
We can't even think of a word that rhymes
School's out for summer
School's out
forever
My school's been
blown to pieces
No more pencils
no more books
No more teacher's
dirty looks
Out for summer
Out till fall
We might not come
back at all
School's out forever
School's out for
summer
School's out with fever
School's out
completely
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