Pete the Cat's blue shoes (see "Fools and wise men on hills, planetary shoon, and a literal Blueberry Hill") made me think of the song "Blue Suede Shoes," most famously sung by Elvis Presley, which begins thus:
Well, it's one for the money two for the show
Three to get ready now go, cat, go
But don't you step on my blue suede shoes
Besides the cat and the blue shoes, the emphasis on "stepping" also syncs with Pete the Cat, where we read four times (the number corresponding to "go, cat,go"), "Oh no! Pete stepped in . . ." to explain why his shoes have changed color.
I had been primed to think of "Blue Suede Shoes" by a book I recently read, Tuned In by Grant Cameron, which relates this anecdote about what inspired the lyrics:
The song came to [Carl] Perkins in a dream. In an interview with Gadfly Online, Perkins stated, "I was playing at a place called the Roadside Inn. I heard this boy tell the girl he was dancing with 'Watch out, don't step on mah suedes' and I looked down at his feet, and he had on this pair of blue suede shoes. It kinda stuck to me." The incident stayed on his mind all night and when he woke up in the morning he immediately began writing down the lyrics on an old brown paper potato sack, the only piece of paper he had around the house.
Suede is a homophone of suade, an archaic synonym of persuade, so that got me thinking of another song: "Crystal Blue Persuasion" by Tommy James and the Shondells. I had been primed to think of that band in an advance, too, by a comment in which Debbie copied and pasted this from Wikipedia:
The Ides of March is an American jazz rock band that had a major North American and minor UK hit with the song "Vehicle" in 1970. The Ides of March began in Berwyn, Illinois (a near western suburb of Chicago), on October 16, 1964, as a four-piece band called "The Shon-Dels".
That's right, the Ides of March -- whose guitarist's footwear was what brought blue shoes into the sync stream in the first place -- were originally called the Shon-Dels. It was in the summer of 1964, just months earlier, that Tommy James renamed his own band to the Shondells.
Back in early 2023, probably February or March, I had a dream of my own about blue shoes. I dreamt that I had bought a pair of blue leather wingtips and was very pleased with them. The dream left me with a desire to buy such a pair of shoes in real life, but they unsurprisingly proved impossible to find. I ended up buying a pair of brown wingtips instead. Up until then, I had never worn wingtips in my life -- had actively disliked the style, in fact -- and had a very strong preference for black shoes. This "brand new pair of brogues" inspired the post "Are the Irish better at math?", which is what my approximate dating of the dream is based on.
Note added: When I went to YouTube to get the link for "Crystal Blue Persuasion," it recommended an unfamiliar song, "Substitution" by Silversun Pickups, and I clicked out of curiosity. Almost the first thing we see in the video is this:

1 comment:
William,
Don't forget to wear your Blue Suede Shoes
while watching the Blue Moon.
Not sure you are familiar with a Do-Wop group in the
late 1950's early '60's called The Marcels and
their hit song : Blue Moon .
( see link )
I recall Blue Moon playing on radio and record players
in the Black community. Especially in the summer
when people had their doors and windows open
and my sister and I would be playing outdoors.
I haven't heard Blue Moon in many many years. Decided
to google it and lo and behold the cover of their album
is a photo of the Marcels and a blue, black and purple
moon. ( see link )
Check out the 2nd stanza:
"And then there suddenly appeared before me
The only one my arms will hold
I heard somebody whisper, "Please adore me."
And when I looked, the moon had turned to gold"
~~~~~~~~
I did a bit more investigating and saw
on wiki that the Marcels' Blue Moon was a
part of the soundtrack in the 1982 movie American
Werewolf in London.
I have never seen that movie before.
The plot according to wiki:
copy and paste:
"Two American graduate students from New York City,
David Kessler and Jack Goodman, are trekking across
the North York Moors.
As night falls, they stop at the Slaughtered Lamb,
a local pub. Jack notices a five-pointed star on the pub's wall.
When he asks about it, the pub-goers grow hostile,
prompting him and David to leave.
The pub-goers warn the pair to keep to the road,
stay clear of the moors, and beware of the full moon."
~~~~~~~
I did find a clip of the movie, but I'm not sure if it
is an original clip with the Blue Moon soundtrack
or someone's compilation of different scenes from
the movie and used the Blue Moon song.
What caught my eye was the protagonist David
wearing a bright red jacket and carrying
a blue backpack. He is also running
through the woods barefoot.
And lo and behold a clip of a scene
(at the very end of the video) a line up
of people standing in a line, the camera
angle from the people's lower legs
and shoes. In that line someone is wearing
bright red shoes and the last person
is barefoot.
See my recent comment about Barefootin
on your Fools and wise men on Hills, post.
Also in the clip (starting abt marker/frame 1:15--1:16)
is a dark green door with the number
4 in gold. ( there appears to be a 6 in front of the number 4,
but the 6 is very faint. ). Also in that scene the protagonist
David is once again barefoot.
I think there were green door syncs
in a previous stream on your blog , many months ago.
Recall I shared that I believe
my frequency numbers are 4 ( meaning Dalet
and door in Hebrew), 5, 10 (1) and 11.
Also in the clip is a pentagram ( a 5 point star ).
THE MARCELS - "BLUE MOON" (1961)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qoi3TH59ZEs
The Marcels - Blue Moon - An American Werewolf in London
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3w_jUJUUdJc
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Moon_%28The_Marcels_album%29
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