"Yankee Rose" is a song by American rock singer David Lee Roth, featuring the prominent electric guitar of its co-writer, virtuoso Steve Vai.
Roth's first single on his debut solo studio album Eat 'Em and Smile (1986), with lyrical allusions to the American national anthem and Irving Berlin's "God Bless America", as well as July 4, independence, flag unfurling, rocket flare, fire crackers, apple pie, and her torch light, was recorded as a tribute to the Statue of Liberty,[2] as the statue was completing a major renovation for the 100th anniversary of its dedication in 1886: "coast to coast, sea to shining sea, hey sister, you're the perfect host" "...nothing like her in the whole world" The song was Roth's third Top 20 hit, the first two being covers of "California Girls" (peak #3) and "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody" (peak #12).
Despite the song's topic, there were no visual references to the Statue of Liberty; rather it was a band performance with much sexual innuendo, bumping and grinding, as well as Roth rump shaking and even simulating coital insertion and thrusting with his microphone.
It featured a comical prolog of a gold medallion-wearing Indian convenience store clerk and various eccentric customers and their ensuing melodrama, as Bollywood-type music plays in the background from his radio.
"; a sleazy playboy in a suit (flanked by blondes in bikinis), played by Roth's co-creator Pete Angelus; and finally, David Lee Roth himself, shirtless, in the same blue and red tribal face paint seen on his album cover, head feathers and a loin cloth holding a spear, demanding "Give me a bottle of anything...and a glazed doughnut...to go," and cuts to the start of the song.