A Vietnam War-inspired ballad, “Goodnight Saigon” was first released on the 1982 album The Nylon Curtain.
The song follows a group of United States Marines beginning their military training on Parris Island and then into various situations of warfare.
Arguably the most impactful rendition of the s...
[Verse 1]
We met as soul mates on Parris Island
We left as inmates from an asylum
And we were sharp, as sharp as knives
And we were so gung ho to lay down our lives
[Verse 2]
We came in spastic like tameless horses
We left in plastic as numbered corpses
And we learned fast to travel light
Our arms were heavy but our bellies were tight
[Verse 3]
We had no home front, we had no soft soap
They sent us Playboy, they gave us Bob Hope
We dug in deep and shot on sight
And prayed to Jesus Christ with all of our might
[Verse 4]
We had no cameras to shoot the landscape
We passed the hash pipe and played our Doors tapes
And it was dark, so dark at night
And we held on to each other like brother to brother
We promised our mothers we'd write
[Chorus]
And we would all go down together
We said we'd all go down together
Yes, we would all go down together
[Verse 5]
Remember Charlie, remember Baker
They left their childhood on every acre
And who was wrong? And who was right?
It didn't matter in the thick of the fight
[Bridge]
We held the day in the palm of our hands
They ruled the night, and the night
Seemed to last as long as six weeks
On Parris Island
We held the coastline, they held the highlands
And they were sharp, as sharp as knives
They heard the hum of our motors, they counted the rotors
And waited for us to arrive
[Chorus]
And we would all go down together
We said we'd all go down together
Yes, we would all go down together
Goodnight Saigon was written by Billy Joel.
Goodnight Saigon was produced by Phil Ramone.
Billy Joel released Goodnight Saigon on Thu Sep 23 1982.
Billy Joel told Howard Stern in an interview:
I wanted to do that for my friends who did go to ‘Nam. A lot of them came back from being in country and really had a hard time getting over it, and still to this day I think a lot them are having a hard time. They were never really welcomed back, and w...