It's In The Book
âItâs In The Bookâ is Watersâ attempt to portray, in Watersâ words, Standleyâs âpersnickety, droll, intellectually superior comic monologue,â a part song, part exhortation on the subject of Little Bo-Peep in the manner of a revivalist preacher. The original version of âItâs In the Bookâ was a huge, surprise hit upon its release in 1952, rising to #1 on the Billboard chart and selling over 1-million copies.
Its follow-up, the nursery rhyme gone-wrong, comedy routine, âProud New Fatherâ (released the following year in 1953), would not fare as wellâ perhaps due to its gory details. Waters recounts, âIt may be the first sick joke I heard as a child.â
As in the original versions, the two Standley homages include gratuitous laugh tracks. Produced by Grammy-winner, Ian Brennan (Tinariwen, The Good Ones [Rwanda], poet Raymond Antrobus, Zomba Prison Project), Brennan states, âThat recordings of dead people prompt living people to laugh is one of the more surreal aspects of recorded medium. That often identical canned laughter tracks have been used redundantly on countless albums and sitcoms for decades is all the eerier.â
This single follows the release of Watersâ âPrayer to Pasolini,â his tribute to the legendarily controversial Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini, that was recorded by Waters and Brennan at Pasoliniâs murder site on the outskirts of Rome. That single was released as part of the Sub Pop Singles Club Vol. 6 series on Watersâ 75th birthday, April 22nd, 2021.
Waters jokes that he chose to press the new single on gold vinyl so that he can at last be able to claim, âIâve made a âGold Recordâ.â
Original: $2.00
-65%$2.00
$0.70

Description
âItâs In The Bookâ is Watersâ attempt to portray, in Watersâ words, Standleyâs âpersnickety, droll, intellectually superior comic monologue,â a part song, part exhortation on the subject of Little Bo-Peep in the manner of a revivalist preacher. The original version of âItâs In the Bookâ was a huge, surprise hit upon its release in 1952, rising to #1 on the Billboard chart and selling over 1-million copies.
Its follow-up, the nursery rhyme gone-wrong, comedy routine, âProud New Fatherâ (released the following year in 1953), would not fare as wellâ perhaps due to its gory details. Waters recounts, âIt may be the first sick joke I heard as a child.â
As in the original versions, the two Standley homages include gratuitous laugh tracks. Produced by Grammy-winner, Ian Brennan (Tinariwen, The Good Ones [Rwanda], poet Raymond Antrobus, Zomba Prison Project), Brennan states, âThat recordings of dead people prompt living people to laugh is one of the more surreal aspects of recorded medium. That often identical canned laughter tracks have been used redundantly on countless albums and sitcoms for decades is all the eerier.â
This single follows the release of Watersâ âPrayer to Pasolini,â his tribute to the legendarily controversial Italian film director Pier Paolo Pasolini, that was recorded by Waters and Brennan at Pasoliniâs murder site on the outskirts of Rome. That single was released as part of the Sub Pop Singles Club Vol. 6 series on Watersâ 75th birthday, April 22nd, 2021.
Waters jokes that he chose to press the new single on gold vinyl so that he can at last be able to claim, âIâve made a âGold Recordâ.â












