Skip to content
Click on cover to enlarge

The Saddest Music, Part 3

The Boss, Bob Dylan, Dolly Parton, Sinead O’Connor, Buffalo Tom

by The Walrus

Published in the May 2008 issue.  » BUY ISSUE     

Bookmark and Share             Facebook         Stumble      Get The Walrus on your Blackberry or Windows Mobile        RSS


11. Dolly Parton, “Down From Dover” (1970)



You pretty much don’t know sad until you’ve heard this Dolly Parton song about a pregnant young girl, abandoned by her family and baby daddy. The lyrics kill and Dolly’s mournful twang could melt even the coldest of hearts. The protagonist holds on hope that her only love will return, but he never ever does. As if that weren’t sad enough, what happens next? Her baby up and dies! At the end of the ballad, the poor thing has no one left to love at all. Penned by Miss Parton at the tender age of eighteen and banned from radio due to its controversial nature, “Down From Dover” is unfairly emotionally manipulative, yet undeniably brilliant. It’s the anti-Juno. Sofi Papamarko




12. Bob Dylan, “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” (1963)



The real sadness of Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” comes not from the fact this guy and girl are totally done, but that this guy is so sure they’re done that he’s decided to phrase everything in negative constructions: “It ain’t no use,” indeed. But beneath the bravado, there’s hurt in him, too. The line that’s always haunted me is “You could have done better, but I don’t mind,” which sounds like precisely the sort of self-preserving rhetoric one expects from a ten-year-old who is trying to dismiss the fact that you just stole his toy. Or, you know, a twenty-two-year-old kid who’s had his heart broken. JB




13. Bruce Springsteen, “The River” (1980)



“Then I got Mary pregnant, and man that was all she wrote
And for my 19th birthday, I got a union card and a wedding coat”


While Ronald Reagan campaigned on a promise of Morning in America, 1980 saw Bruce Springsteen drawing his characters from ever deeper within the country’s gloom. The Magic Rats and Puerto Rican Janes that featured in his early successes were gone, replaced by factory workers and women with wrinkles around their eyes, as Springsteen’s interest shifted from romantic street fantasies to the lives of the blue collar people he’d grown up around. The title track of his double album, “The River” tells the story—based on the experiences of Springsteen’s sister—of a couple who find themselves too old too soon, dead-ended by a shotgun wedding and a recession, turning in on themselves and away from each other. The song’s haunting harmonica part and wordless coda are among the most powerful moments in Springsteen’s catalogue. JT




14. Sinead O’Connor, “Streets of London” (orig. 1969)



Sinead’s version of Ralph McTell’s widely covered 1969 track is an ethereal, reverb-heavy recording fit for plugged-in subway rides, studying strange faces. Each verse is a somber, lilting meditation on the city’s forgotten characters. “Have you seen the old man/ In the closed down market / In his eyes you see no pride / Hands held loosely by his side / Yesterday’s paper, telling yesterday’s news.” Sinead whisper-sings through each melancholy portrait, uttering each word slowly and plainly. Her mildly-intoned rebuke in the chorus (“So how can you tell me you’re lonely?”) packs the hardest punch. The bottom line: Life sucks worse for other people. Quit feeling sorry for yourself. Claire Ward




15/16. Buffalo Tom, “Taillights Fade” (1992) / Red House Painters “Katy Song” (1993)





One of the most important reasons sad songs exist—obviously—is to help you get laid by looking sensitive. And back in the heart-on-your-frayed lumberjack shirt-sleeves Grunge era of the early 90s, nobody embodied the “horniness disguised as empathy” ethic better than Buffalo Tom and the Red House Painters. It doesn’t hurt, of course, that both of these songs are absolute killers. PI

Next: Mahalia Jackson, Swamp Dogg, Gram Parsons, Neil Young

Comments (4 comments)

Joel McConvey: While I can't argue with "The River," I think, when discussing Springsteen, it's worth noting that Nebraska is probably the saddest album ever made. Two contenders from that record:

- "Atlantic City," featuring the line, "Well our luck may have died and our love may be cold, but with you forever I will stay," which has long been my default answer when asked about the saddest line in music.

- "Reason to Believe," which wants us to believe it's uplifting, but is really just the Boss commenting on how "funny" it is that people don't give in to despair and throw themselves in front of a truck.

"Will You Love Me Tomorrow?" by Gerry Goffin and Carole King also deserves a mention. However, given recent developments, I posit that "Lucky" by Britney Spears is in fact the saddest song of all time. It's a masterpiece of subconscious, sublimated anticipatory desperation at an inevitable loss of dignity, hope and meaning, and also a brilliantly crass exploitation of that by the people who were making it all happen. You probably think I'm joking, but go YouTube that shit, then try telling me that the moment when fresh-faced young Britney reaches out to take the hand mirror from dolled-up "Lucky" Britney in the makeup chair doesn't break your heart. April 17, 2008 18:42 EST

Mike: Dolly Parton is truly the queen of sad songs. "Down From Dover" is certainly one of her most mournful. But also take a listen to "Me & Little Andy", "Mountain Angel" and of course the greatest of all "I Will Always Love You". Dolly you are the greatest!!! April 22, 2008 15:09 EST

WalkmasterFlex: Co-sign on "Atlantic City" on Bruce Springsteen. The way he sings that line still gives me goosebumps, and also that whole last stanza is just a killer: "Out here there's just winners and losers and don't get caught on the wrong side of that line/Well I'm tired of comin out on the losing end, so honey last night I met this guy and I'm gonna do a little favor for him..."

"State Trooper" is also pretty sad, as is most of "Nebraska" April 22, 2008 21:23 EST

Jesse: I agree with the others mentioning "Atlantic City" and other Springsteen tracks, but don't forget about "Downbound Train" off Born in the USA, the line "Now I work at the car wash, where all it ever does is rain..." just gets me every time like a sucker punch to the gut. July 11, 2008 01:44 EST

Comment on this article


Will not be displayed on the site

Submit a comment online

Submit a letter to the Editor


    Cancel

The Walrus E-Newsletter

Online exclusives, events, offers:
get news of everything Walrus.


Article Tools

»    RSS Feed      Bookmark and Share

»  Printer-friendly page

»  Email this article

»  Comment on this article

»  More in this issue

»  More in Music

»  More from The Walrus

»  BUY THIS ISSUE

ADVERTISE WITH US