Take for example, the Michael Martin Murphey song Wildfire...
This song came out in 1975, and it was one of those Folk songs that skirted the edge of the Country/Western genres and Folk Rock genres. I'd heard it on the radio in the 70s, but outside of the refrain it never resonated with me very much. Until I stumbled on it a few months ago, I probably hadn't heard it at all since the early-mid 80s, because the only person I knew who listened to Country on the radio was my dad's mom, and I tried my damnedest to avoid listening to it whenever I visited.*
It had popped up on my YouTube feed, and I stared at it for a good 5-10 minutes, trying to remember the song, but I finally gave in and clicked it.
The song sounded familiar, but the lyrics certainly weren't. It was only when the refrain came on that I realized I did remember the song after all.
Even more than that, after a few critical listens, I realized it wasn't a love song at all, but a ghost story. The first verse doesn't give anything away, but that the lyrics are in present tense imply something current. It's when the second verse kicks in and switches to past tense that you realize that the girl and horse mentioned in the first verse are actually ghosts. The third verse provides the grounding of a failed crop, and as the cold (and presumably hunger) has crept in, the owl heralds the ghost horse and rider coming for the singer as essentially a harbinger of death.
Pretty grim stuff wrapped up in a mellow sounding song.
***
Sometimes I'll hear a voice or an instrument in a song, and I'll say "I know I've heard that before, but I don't know where."
Again, I'm going to pull the 80s out of a hat and mention late Genesis guitarist Mike Rutherford's band, Mike + The Mechanics.
Paul had a nice solo career, and I had recognized his voice from the song "Don't Shed a Tear" that was released a year earlier in 1987...
...and he's also known for his time in the band Squeeze, but I was completely unprepared for something over three decades later.
For some strange reason I'd fallen down the rabbit hole of listening to what was then called Soft Rock and is now called Yacht Rock when I stumbled across this song...
Funny how that works.
*Because I was into all sorts of Rock, Heavy Metal, and New Wave at the time.
**Yes, it was Cincinnati's WARM 98, WRRM-FM 98.5.
EtA: Mike Rutherford is actually still alive. It was the manager for Genesis, Richard Macphail, who'd passed away in 2024. Whoops. I have since corrected the post.
Hadn't heard that Michael Murphy song before, although apparently it's his best-known. I vaguely know his name but from where, I have no idea. It's a very nice little number until that weird piano-noodle at the end, which kind of wrecks the mood. Always up for a song about a ghost-pony, though!
ReplyDeleteI think he put in that piano outro to mimic the intro. Apparently the radio edit removed the piano in both parts of the song, which of course tightens it up considerably. Having heard both, I can see where people who only heard the radio edit thought it was a love song of sorts if they weren't listening closely, but the piano lends a bit of melancholy to the song.
DeleteFor me, each version works as a stand-alone, but if I'm in more of a melancholy mood the album version (which is what I linked to above) works better.