Damn that Tori Amos! Can she produce anything happy? Loosing my religion was sad enough before I just downloaded her version!
I’m kidding, shes brilliant
I think lyrics are my favourite type of writing, theres something about them, even when they are just written down and not in a song, good lyrics are still so compelling and moving. Its crazy that you can conjure up that much emotion in 3-6 minutes!
Anybody ever heard of a band out of Chicago called Pinetop Seven ? Their music has been described as ‘americana’ and it sounds like a soundtrack to a western movie sometimes. Anyway, a lot of it is achingly beautiful - “Drying Out”, “Mission District”, and “Heavens” are exceptionally moving.
Thank you, RawkStah for mentioning I Don’t Like Mondays. Partly because of when I first discovered it, and partly because it’s such an amazingly beautiful song, it just really gets to me.
Definitely Pearl Jam’s Black, but Yellow Ledbetter gets to me even more. Particularly toward the end. God. Actually, lots of Pearl Jam songs have that effect on me.
How about “I Am a Rock” - Simon & Garfunkel? This part always got to me:
Don’t talk of love…
Well, I’ve heard the word before.
It’s sleeping in my memory.
I won’t disturb the slumber
Of feelings that have died.
If I’d never loved,
I never would have cried.
(Hope I’m not repeating a post; this thread is getting really long.)
Good observation on The Cure, Tanaqui, but you neglected to mention Pictures of You.
Also, I would like to comment that the song Don’t Take the Girl is was one of the first country songs I had ever heard, and it broke me up! Cried for almost a half an hour…
A couple more by Simon and Garfunkel, that are actually on the same album and right next to each other: “Richard Cory” and “A Most Peculiar Man.” Both are suicide songs. The first one is about a rich man who seems to have it all, but goes home one night and shoots himself. The second one is about an anonymous “everyman” who gasses himself to death.
The album as a whole (Sounds of Silence) is pretty much a downer. There is the title track with its theme of urban isolation. There are two fairly sad “lost love” type songs (“Leaves That Are Green” and “April, Come She Will”).
And then there are two suicide songs.
Oh, I am pretty sure that the aforementioned “I Am A Rock” is on there as well…
Mainly because it was popular and on the radio when I was driving back from the hospital one evening trying to pretend to myself that my mum wasn’t goign to die in the next few days.
These lyrics got to me:
Lightning crashes, an old mother dies
Her intentions fall to the floor
The angel closes her eyes
The confusion that was hers
Belongs now, to the baby down the hall
Omygod! I cant believe you mentioned that Richard Cory song. I just wrote an essay on the poem “richard Cory” by Edwin Arlington Robinson. I didn’t even realise there was a song about it. It bursting with curiosity now! I think ill go download it! Thats so exciting!
Great choices (especially the Tori Amos and S&G recommendations, plus Gollum). Let me htrow in my favourite song of this century: Cup of coffee by Garbage.
You left behind some clothes
My belly summersaults when I pick them off the floor
My friends all say they’re worried
I’m looking far too skinny
I’ve stopped returning all their calls
And no of course we can’t be friends
Not while I’m still so obsessed
I want to ask where I went wrong
But don’t say anything at all…
I have to second I’ll Stand By You (but it didn’t really get to me until I watched the fanmade Xena music video of it, with all the footage from the last episode) and Seasons In The Sun (which didn’t get to me at all until I finally sat down and listened to the lyrics) and make a few contributions of my own:
Don’t Cry Daddy, Elvis Presley. I realised only a few months ago that Elvis isn’t the son in the song, he’s the father, which makes it somewhat less sad, but it’s still a tearjerker.
Most Of The Time, Bob Dylan. The number one saddest breakup song ever. I watched High Fidelity while recovering from a broken-up longterm relationship, and this song just slew me outright.
That song from Moulin Rouge, Come What May, doesn’t really qualify as a sad song until you’ve seen the movie, but I have, so I’ll call it sad, and if you’ve got trouble with that, see my lawyer.
The lyrics to the song are different from the poem, but the story is basically the same. The moral of the story being that money does not necessarily bring happiness.
I was a major Simon and Garfunkel fan in junior high/the first year or so of high school. I was a socially awkward, sensitive kid, and somehow their music really seemed to express much of what I was going through.