Goodbye Google Eye
"Oh goodbye google eye...
Goodbye goodbye goodbye google eye"

No, not a reaction the news that Google's Street View Spycams have been banished from Britian, but a chunk of lyrics from a 1960s hit called "Google Eye" that I stumbled upon the other day. Written by John D. Loudermilk it was recorded in the UK by The Nashville Teens, and came out in 1964 on the Decca label, catalogue number F12000.

The song is about search in a roundabout way - the search for some fish to eat for dinner.

"Jump in me old jeep wagon bump it to the banks of the river
Dig me a worm and a cricket squirm and a wade out into the water
Oh goodbye google eye eat him up a google eye
Eat him up a google eye google google eye goodbye google eye"
The Nashville Teens

The Nashville Teens are one of those bands who don't ever seem to have got the credit due to them, or to have their proper place in the history of 60s rock'n'roll. They backed Jerry Lee Lewis on a critically acclaimed live album recorded in Hamburg. At various times they were produced by names like Andrew Loog Oldham and Shel Talmy, but hits seemed to elude them.

"Tobacco Road", which featured Jimmy Page on guitar, was their only big hit on both sides of the Atlantic. "Google Eye" reached number 10 in the UK though, and was their second-biggest hit here, but to be honest until I came across it the other day on a Nashville Teens compilation, I can't say that I'd ever heard it.

Nashville Teens album sleeve

I had always thought that they were one hit wonders. Which, is, I guess a slight improvement on when I was a kid. Because they appeared on the same blue Decca label, I used to believe that they were some sort of off-shoot from The Rolling Stones.

Rolling Stones and Nashville Teens

Of course, these days, you can watch a clip of "Google Eye" on Google-owned You Tube: