Splicetoday

Music
May 16, 2008, 10:52AM

Five Songs For Springtime Loneliness

Spings means love and allergens are in the air. While we can't do anything about the allergy tears, this piece might help all the pitiful crying you're doing from being so very alone. Nevermind all those happy couples: you've got music to make you feel better.

" Bob Dylan - "Girl from the North Country"

Bob Dylan has written hundreds of sad songs that could satisfy this hastily compiled list - he's a master at evoking any emotion but he's especially ingenious at tugging at sorrowful heartstrings - still, "North Country" remains at the top of my list of Dylan songs to soundtrack my crying into pillows at night. It finds him seeing to the well-being of his once true love as he hopes that she will simply remember his name. I can relate, as none of my ex-girlfriends have ever referred to me by name - but simply as, "Hey asshole."

See Also: "Boots of Spanish Leather" - They're pretty much the same song.

Otis Redding - "Tennessee Waltz"

Originally written as a country song by Pee Wee King and made popular by Roy Acuff in 1950, Otis Redding claimed it as his own on his 1996 album "Dictionary of Soul" as he belted out its verses in that anguished, beautifully flawed deep soul voice that soared out of Memphis and to the top of the charts before it came crashing back down in a passenger plane over Wisconsin. The song recalls a night of dancing to the Tennessee Waltz before an old acquaintance came along to steal his baby away. "I introduced him to my baby, while, while they kept on playing. That friend stole my sweetheart away from me." Otis bleeds the verses as if on the verge of tears, proving that cockblockers have been a thorn in the side of good-intentioned gentlemen for generations.

Radiohead - "Creep"

You remember just as well as I do when you were in the eighth grade you would sing this song into your bathroom mirror and cry and cry. As hilariously pathetic as it is to look back on this humiliating time in your life, when you saw your best friend walk hand-in-hand to the bus with the girl you thought was the love of your life, it was like the holocaust thrown into the great plague. Well, if you're reading this, congratulations; you got through it, and I believe you owe thanks to Thom Yorke, his lazy eye and the girls (just about all of them) who turned him down and inspired this masterpiece of gloom and rejection.

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Discussion
  • The writer (by typo, one assumes) performs the impossible by resurrecting Otis Redding, who was killed in '67, saying "Dictionary of Soul" came out in '96. Off by 30 years, but a great song. I'd nominate the Smiths' "I Want the One I Can't Have" for this list.

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