I Started A Joke

Album: Idea (1968)
Charted: 6
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  • I started a joke which started the whole world crying
    But I didn't see that the joke was on me oh no
    I started to cry which started the whole world laughing
    Oh If I'd only seen that the joke was on me

    I looked at the skies running my hands over my eyes
    And I fell out of bed hurting my head from things that I said
    'Till I finally died which started the whole world living
    Oh if I'd only seen that the joke was on me

    I looked at the skies running my hands over my eyes
    And I fell out of bed hurting my head from things that I said
    'Till I finally died which started the whole world living
    Oh if I'd only seen that the joke was on me
    Oh no that the joke was on me Writer/s: Barry Gibb, Maurice Ernest Gibb, Robin Hugh Gibb
    Publisher: Universal Music Publishing Group
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 67

  • Angie from Tyne And Wearmy husband had an affair and when it finished i noticed in his history he googled the meaning of this song
  • Southernhemi from Sydney, AustraliaThe Bee Gees said in an interview that the lyrics were psychedelic, like some songs written in the same era by groups such as the Beatles, and didn’t have any real meaning, but they also said that people can take their own meaning from a song9 and that was fine.

    The lyrics are intriguing because of the unexpected reactions to the singers actions: a joke results in crying, crying results in laughter and finally dying leads to living.

    It’s a great and classic pop song.
  • Andy from UkOnly Robin could sing this song, there's just something about it beautiful and haunting.
  • Grace Elizabeth Lynn from UkMy husband choose this song for his funeral never heard it before but he said this is me that was about Jan this year he was OK he planning retirement what we were going to but sadly he died May the 8th this year heart problems he found the song on u tube played it alot I have never heard on radio but this is his song I did play at his funeral as he said I listen to it most days it our song forever now
  • Raydar from IndianaThis is about a boy who thought everything he said or how he looked would be ridiculed and he was afraid, embarrassed and shy to enteract with the general public
  • Doll from CaliforniaThis song if we put into individuals life means that sometimes when we want to be happy and want to pursue it many will cry or get hurt bec it is not what they expected/wanted from you, so when you started to laugh everyone cries, and when you started to forget about yourself and do what THEY wanted or expected from you even though its not what makes you happy BUT WILL make them happy so you started to cry and the whole world is laughing.. (world can mean "your world" family, friends etc.

    This one is a very sad one... sacrificing yourself and your own happiness for your love ones happiness and contentment.
  • Jamie from CaA very complex song. My best HS friend thought it might be about the thoughts of the person who created the atom bomb.
  • Ritchie Rhoads from Mannheim / GermanyI remember well: when this song came out, I was 18. On the radio we were hoping for Hendrix, for Cream, for Small Faces, and if it had to be The Bee Gees, some Barry-Song. And then came "I started a joke"...

    And of course, there will be comments stating, that the song is about god, about Jesus, or Adolf Hitler.
  • Mark B from OntarioIt's not complicated. Life life to the fullest. After that, it's too late.
  • Matt from UkWhile I'm sure this wasn't the intended meaning, I think it fits the Joker quite well, particularly the Joaquin Phoenix version and the Killing Joke, which partially inspired that film. He tried being a comedian, but he failed miserably (I started a joke/the whole world crying). Then he is put through one bad day (I started to cry) and becomes the Joker, who wants to prove the cruel absurdity of the world and how it can drive anyone as crazy as him. But Batman and by extension, the people of Gotham disprove or "laugh" at this idea. The joke is on him in the end. Then the "I started to die, which started the whole world living" bit reminds me of Batman Arkham Knight, where we see that the Joker's greatest fear is being forgotten. He sees a vision of the world after his death, where everyone has forgotten who he was and goes on happily with their lives. Joker tried to project his misery and insanity onto the world and blame the way he reacted to his hardships on it, but ultimately he was alone. This fits so well with the message of the song.
  • Pichinga2 from New JerseyThis song is about God, and how he created a joke: Humans. When he created us, humans sinned and cried. He cried in despair, then we started laughing. Then when he falls from the bed (Jesus came to earth) and spoke words, he wished he never said. The he died and we became alive again, he rescued us but the joke was on him, people didnt get it. Humans are the creation, and for some very pessimists, we are a joke. It's are, and music. Dont take it personally.
  • Sixties Guy from Australiai was born on the autism spectrum.
    this song is a sad but perfect description of my life.
  • Alan P from UkWas listening to my album “Ultimate Bee Gees” in the car on a long journey. I had always skipped this one but decided to give it ago. From the first line I was hooked .. even shed a tear , don’t know why ??
    The lyrics are so poignant and of course beautifully sung.. will now play it as much as possible.. Bee Gees genius yet again.
  • Adam Silver from CaliforniaThe meaning of the song is pretty simple. People overcomplicate it. It is about someone that said something stupid and humiliated himself. He feels that everyone is laughing at him while he is crying. I'm sure everyone can relate to this. You just want to die (which is why he says "when I finally died..") and you feel that your death will make everything return to normal. The Talmud in fact says that embarassing someone is like murdering them. That is what this song expresses very simply.
  • David Craine from Chicago, IlI think this song works so well because on first glance, it's incredibly over the top, overly emotional and just exploding with self-pity; it seems silly and childish to use such polar-opposite and absolute expressions, and I wonder if Robin Gibb was aware of just how sappy the lyrics were as he was writing them. Add the melodrama of the music, with the classic sadness of the G to Bm chord change (also used in "Reflections of My Life") and the overall effect is the classic feel-sorry-for-yourself song. But ultimately, this melodrama is universal--who hasn't felt this sorry for themselves at some point in their life? Feeling sorry for yourself IS over the top, and sappy, and overly-dramatic. But it is real, and in so many ways this haunting song captures the pain, the embarrassment, the exposure of self-pity. We all carry the fears and insecurities of our child-selves our entire lives. I'm 65 years old, and at times I still feel the childish self-pity expressed in this song. Whether Robin Gibb intended it or not, his song perfectly captures the melodrama of self-pity. And the Faith No More video of this song, with performance artist David Hoyle portraying the karaoke singer, expresses my feelings about it about as well as I could imagine.
  • Dave Wyers from Niles, Oh.I've always loved this beautiful, haunting, & powerful song! Robin sings it with amazing depth & emotion! I recommend everyone should check out the incredible cover done by Puddles Pity Party!
  • Kathy from Potosi Missouri Most beautiful song I've ever heard! The depth of passion in his voice amazes me yet today..
    I feel like it symbolizes someone thinking everyone is in the same mindset as he is, but, realizes it's the total opposite, and of how cruel he must have been before this realization.. LOVE IT
  • C Pronounced (see) from MontanaGrateful for these guys sharing their gifts, this song interpits for me the recovering from an addiction, the core of addiction for me is spiritual apathy and dieing represents no longer about self- messed and the positive effects this has on others.
  • Vietnam Era Vet from MichiganI always thought it was about LBJ and the Vietnam War. The joke was the war and his decision not to run for re-election was when the world started to live.
  • Arhicks00I always thought of the song for as ode to a person who thought they were a winner, but in actuality are a loser. Basically, "They aren't laugh with you, but at you." These people thought everyone love them and that their fans were following their every word when in reality their suppose fans are laughing at them. When he says, "Till I finally died, the whole world started living" I took that as the targeted person fading from obscurity, which is when the people resume their lives until the next "joke." Perfect example is former famed celebrity Kevin Sorbo who has become a joke since Hollywood stopped calling him for more roles. He has since become a joke and has somewhat faded into obscurity.
  • Anonymous from Rivia I think it means that somebody died laughing and everyone cried. Idk that’s what I think.
  • Marilyn L Wolf from Coos Bay Oregon 97420I love the Bee Gees. I am watching them now!! They give me such joy!! True professional musicians!! Thank you!!
  • Ellenrenee from MontanaI came here to possibly find the meaning to this song. My mother passed away this past July. When planning her funeral my aunt (my mom's sister) said Mom wanted I Started a Joke played. I never remember her talking about this song, about liking it, about liking the Bee Gees.. So I'm struggling to figure out what it would have meant to her.
  • Favi from TexasTo me this song speaks of someone fully misunderstood by a bunch of narcissists. Someone who meant well, who perhaps didnt have the best of personalities, but always had the best of intentions. Someone who was very judged. Its genious how Robin wrote it. I always think of my late Father when i hear it, and how misunderstood he was by so many.
  • Honeyb from Muami, FlThere will always be something special about Robin Gibbs. It's wonderful "Started a joke..." was played at his moment of passing away, & I believe him when he says this is a spiritual song. It makes me think we take ourselves too seriously ... " the joke's on me."

    It could be from Joyce ... like here it was all the time, or it could be about a higher being.
  • Michellehrvth from Bennington My interpretation is that a song Jesus may have sung....
  • John From Baldwin from Baldwin, New YorkI find some of the comments amusing. Writing songs in the 20th century did not start in the 1960's, believe it or not. In fact, there have been some very capable writing teams and individuals prior to Lennon/McCartney and the Gibb brothers. Let me suggest the Gershwin brothers, Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, Richard Rodgers and either Lorenz hart or Oscar Hammerstein II. From the 50's I offer Boudleaux and Felice Bryant, Lieber/Stoller, Carol King and Gerry Goffin. In the country vein, Hank Williams. There are many others.
  • Curtis from Bay City, Michigan Robin Gibbs, I started a joke displays his near genius talent along with unique voice that very few people could ever sing. It’s a powerful song that touches my soul like no other. Thank you Robin Gibb you are a special human being
  • Joe Remus from Los AngelesIt's about creation: 1) A fundamental symmetry broke which released the energy that powered the big bang and created all the matter in the universe, 2) "Jesus" died which allowed "God" to forgive man for eating from the tree of knowledge" and let human kind live without fundamental sin, shame and guilt, 3) our mortality in which our parents age and pass away, but the their union created their children. (Man, this pandemic isolation is too much!).
  • Iza from Califas U are all correct on the meaning of this song , it meaning will be different to everybody . Whatever u're feeling when u hear, will determine u're interpretation of the song .
  • Doug from Waco, TexasThought it was about Adolf Hitler.
  • AnonymousI I always thought the song was about Jesus.
  • Angeline from SingaporeEgg from Australia, thank you; this bit from Robin Gibb says it all:

    "To me, that was a very spiritual song, about faith and survival in life. It wasn't a love song, it was one of the first songs we wrote about struggling to survive emotionally alone in the world."

    Gibb's explanation/song mirrors the biblical verse 1 Corinthians 1:18: "the message of the cross is foolishness to them that are perishing; but for those who are being saved, it is the power of God."

    The lyrics:"I looked at the skies running my hands over my eyes; And I fell out of bed hurting my head from the things that I said" is a reference to the folly of trusting human reason, thoughts and words.

    Looking up at the skies, we SEE but don't really SEE (the visible is but a shadow of the invisible: Plato); human reason and vision is always incomplete in time and space. If we only we could see what God can see in time and space, we might be laughing at ourselves for the things we say in jest or with such conviction that we are right.

    So for those struggling emotionally alone out there in the world, the lyrics are a spiritual encouragement to keep Faith, and not give up.

    How perfect that Gibb's son played the song on his father's chest upon leaving this world. Thank you for this beautiful song that reminds us always to be humble in the things we say and do...
  • Karen from Bay Area, CaliforniaFor me, this song is about the anguish of a person who is at odds with the rest of humanity. One's actions create the opposite of the intended effect. One's emotional experience lands opposite to others, producing unfathomable misunderstanding and isolation. Eventually one looks skyward (to the elemental and spiritual world) for visionary perspective. Finally, the misaligned aspects of the ego die, and in this ego death, the whole world comes alive.
  • Sol from BrasilHumanity started and supported all the Jokes and now the jokes materialized in the Men in power. Donald Trump is the epitome of the Jokers. This song debuted at (#66) in the United States in the week of 14 December 1968 which was 50 years ago. I guess that only misses one more six. We are all seeing who the Joke really is. Let's not forget that it was humanity who deserved this Joker. The Joker only now started to play his jokes. More jokes are coming and we won't like it.
  • Rachel from UsaI think the song means be nice with people, you don't know what others are suffering. Human beings are pretty lousy at communication, what is funny for one person is not always funny for everyone. This song was used (very effectively) at the end of the film Sympathy for Delicious. The film was about a young man in a wheelchair who suddenly discovers he is able to heal others but not himself.
  • Carey from BerlinGuys guys guys (and gals), come ON. It means nothing when a writer says he or she doesn't know what their work 'means' or was meant to mean. I'm a much-published novelist and I never claim to know what my work 'means.' This disclaimer says nothing about the work's value. And PLEASE everyone note (because many people seem to think this is a gloomy or depressed song - perhaps because of the mention of death - oo-er! Eeek! - or Robin's soulful way (always!) of singing it, but you're not paying attention: if the world starts to live when you die, this is not BAD NEWS. It's a beautiful prospect. You've got to die, but the world doesn't have to start to live... yet it will (in the song)! This is not 'about religion.' It's a beautiful spiritual statement about man's eternal resurrection; about eternity
  • Dylan from NswThis song is covered and used in the trailer for Suicide Squad.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn December 15th 1968 "I Started A Joke" by the Bee Gees entered Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart; and on February 2nd it peaked at #6 (for 1 week) and spent 11 weeks on the Top 100...
    On January 20th, 1969 it reached #1 (for 2 weeks) on the Canadian RPM Singles chart, then one month later on February 22nd it peaked at #1 (again for 2 weeks) on the Australian Kent Music Report chart...
    R.I.P. Maurice (1949 - 2003) and Robin (1949 - 2012).
  • Jinny from Brighton , United KingdomRobin didn't like to explain his lyrics as he felt it took away from what people 'got' from the songs.
  • Victor from Cádiz, SpainThis song is one of those living things whose meaning vary according to its listeners. It heavily depends on the listener's life experiences, which is great for the emotional value a song, for it's something anyone can relate to, one way or another. For me, it's about unrequited love. The joke the narrator speaks of, it's the naive illusions from the start, which grow into something sad and unwanted. After the rejection, the loved one and everybody else goes on with their lives without giving the matter any more attention, while the narrator remains heartbroken. BTW, great melody. It's a nice, nice song.
  • George from Glen Burnie, MdThis song is about a doomed relationship.
  • Bill from Drexel Hill, PaI believe the song "I Started a Joke" is about Adolph Hitler, or anyone else who has similar designs on a large scale to control and manipulate free human beings by attempting to destroy their inherent human liberty and dignity and reduce them to slaves of the state while equating them to ordinary pack animals. I guess to Adolph, it seemed like a pretty good idea at the time.
  • Jun Misugi from Bandung, IndonesiaI always hear this song when I childhood..and I want to hear this song again and again...until I will die sometimes and I was memories to my family..
  • Alika from Houston, TxI dunno perhaps songs like poems are the guides in our soul, marking a specific imaginary region where one's thoughts and heart clicked at the same time. I missed my girlfriend terribly when barely 19 I was headed to Vietnam, didn't know if I'd make it. And she wrote to me about this song. Still remember it playing in the NCO club (bar) at base after a few beers. It seemed that she was right next to me whispering the words in my ear. I Started a Joke is pretty heavy, I know it. Thanks, BeeGees, it kept the unrealness of the times be a bit more good and true.
  • Leo from Aberystwyth, United KingdomAny art has to elicit some feeling or emotion. An atmospheric song such as this will do just that, especially if it is being played in an atmospheric situation, perhaps driving home late at night, or in a quiet street overheard on somebody's tranny. In these situations the meaning of the lyrics is in the head of the listener, I think as a piece of art it is doing its job. It is a beautiful song and I hope Robin and Barry continue to sing it.
  • Brad from Gold Coast, AustraliaHi all. Denise from lakeland, FL thanks for telling me about the song 'Holiday' it is really awesome and I think under rated. I love the song 'Words' it hard to beat. Also my all time favourite by Aussie band 'Hunters & Collectors' 'Throw your arms around me' you need to source the original song from their original album as it has been re-released and re-re-released and the newer versions whilst still great lack it's soul and haunting appeal.
  • Vince from Despatch, South AfricaThis is what I make of the song...over analyzing as usual, but I live for this moments.
    ABOUT SONG:
    Said something he heard to someone about someone, but only to find out the something was about him (the someone)
    Realizing that the gossip/joke was actually about him...
    Looking up at the heavens for help and asking, "Why?" while wiping the tears from his eyes (frustration) Knocked from his pedestal, beating himself up (remorse )for spreading the rumor/joke about himself
    He accepted the fact that he was the joke & so went on living, but is constantly reminding himself ' think before you talk about others"

    -Vince, South Africa
  • Peerless from Portland, OrHey guys/girls (us). This song answers the age old question of why we are here and how did it happen? Scientists tell us the "Big Bang" created us. This song tells us why. God wanted to know himself. So he exploded himself and started this huge joke that we know as life. There is nothing to be done, it has already been done and here we are! Enjoy it. P.
  • Five from Sai Gon, Viet NamWhen I was young this song made me had felling deeply in my heart....
    Five Saigon
  • Gary from Watford, United Kingdomregarding the bee gees they are probably joint 2nd in line with jagger/richards as the most accomplished singer/songwriters of 20th century- lennon/mcCartney being no.1
  • Denise from Lakeland, Fli also really liked the bee gees song entitled holiday. i too agree with the person who wrote that this was a very haunting song that reminded us of when we were kids. he could not of put it any better. denise esposito
  • Denise from Lakeland, Fli really like this song, and i totally agree with the person who commented that it reminded her of the trials and tribulations of jesus christ. i feel the same way. denise esposito.
  • I from Florida(not A City), FlOk, so maybe I live in a different more spiritual world, but I alway thought this song as about Jesus. It makes sense to me and that's all that matters, very profound
  • Kevin from Reading , PaI think the comment by Kirsten of N.Y. is a key to liking this song -- it's so grandoise and over the top, in a kind of adolescent way, that you can't help but get swept up in it. I love that's vague and doesn't tell you what the "joke" was that wreaked such havoc on the narrarator's life. This is great songwriting, because it allows a listener to use their imagination. Robin Gibb was the great singer in the Bee Gees early years, not Barry. His quivering vocal style is perfect for this song and their other early "over-the-top" hits like "I've Gotta Get a Message," "I Can't See Nobody," etc etc. At the end of this song, when you hits the high notes on "oh oh oh oh oh oh . . . " it really is quite stunning. It's like the ending to a Roy Orbison song. Very dramatic.
  • Judy from Evarts, KyThis song is what you make of it. It's whatever you feel while you're listening to it. There is no right or wrong. -Judy C. Kentucky
  • Kirsten from New York, NyI always thought it was perfectly geared to appeal to a highly emotional adolescent who thinks in very melodramatic terms, that everything s/he does has great meaning and impact. "I start a joke that made the *whole world* cry! I am so powerful and evil I'll never forgive myself!" The line "I finally died, which started the whole world living" actually makes me laugh out loud.

    OTOH, Robin's voice is stunning and full of emotion. It's a beautiful sounding song.
  • Marty from San Francisco, CaWhen this song was first released, many people rumored that it was about "Hitler". Made sense!
  • Joe from Pittsburgh, PaThe song was supposed to have been about an incident in which a Pennsylvania official claimed that several college students, high on LSD, were blinded after lying in a meadow and staring at the sun. After the story gained notoriety around the world, and reporters were unsuccessful in tracking down the source, the hospital, or the students involved, the official admitted to concocting the entire story and was forced to resign.
  • Farrah from Elon, NcI really like this song. I know some people think this is dumb. But believe you me, there are songs out there that are far more stupid than this one could ever be.
  • Egg from -, Australia ***QUOTE***
    ROBIN GIBB: The idea for the song came when I was sitting on a plane over Germany, and I heard a melody in the droning of the engine. As soon as I got on the ground that night I completed the song with Barry and Maurice. To me, that was a very spiritual song, about faith and survival in life. It wasn't a love song, it was one of the first songs we wrote about struggling to survive emotionally alone in the world.
    *************************************************
  • Mike from Jersey City, Nj"I started a joke," and "Holiday" are two very haunting songs despite lyrics that are somewhat vague. The mood of sadness comes across in both songs and the mournful singing suggests fleeting
    remembrances of things that delighted us as kids and maybe embarrassed us as adults. Mike S. Chicago
  • Glen from Kent, NeLee's right - to an extent. Robin said he was inspired by the sound of the jet engines on the plane. The melody is actually based around the sound of the plane taking off.
  • Christopher from Tucson, Azits funny to watch people post comments on peoples music tell what the song is about. Being a songwriter its all subjective and relative to the artist. its more fun to hear people say what the song is about even though they didnt write it. music is art. its all relative
  • Luke from Manchester, EnglandCovered to a great degree by Faith No More and the video is very strange
  • Fyodor from Denver, CoI always thought it was about being misunderstood by and out of step with others. The pathetic side of alienation.
  • Lee from BournemouthI once saw an interview with Robin, (who wrote this song), and he said that it doesn't really have a meaning. People speculate it's about religion etc, but he said it came into his head whilst on a plane. So while what the above facts say are true in that they explain the lyrics, the scenario quoted is not what Robin necessarily had in mind.
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