Inspiration for song lyrics can come from an infinite number of places, but sometimes the ambiguity of their meaning is the best part. Here are 10 well known songs that fans have misinterpreted over the years. Of course there are many more (and perhaps some with better stories), but these songs were chosen simply because of their widespread popularity.
Misconception: A song about drugs
As evidenced in the movie Dangerous Minds, this song has widely been speculated to be an ode to mind-altering drugs, with Mr. Tambourine Man supposedly representing Dylan’s drug dealer. The song’s abstract, surrealistic imagery has fueled the idea that LSD was responsible for some of the lyrics, although Dylan claims to have been introduced to the drug after the song had been written. Dylan insists the song was never about drugs, but rather the search for inspiration. He claims the title character of Mr. Tambourine Man was actually inspired by musician Bruce Langhorne, who played a large Turkish tambourine during many of Dylan’s previous recording sessions.
Misconception: Autobiographical band story
In the summer of 1969, Bryan Adams was 10 years old. That should be enough to quell the idea that this song had anything to do with 1969 being the year he learned guitar, played in a band, and fell in love, yet the rumors persist. The upbeat nostalgia of this song wasn’t inspired by an actual year, but rather Mr. Adams’ fondness for a certain sexual position. According to Adams, the lyrics detailing a fondly remembered musical summer were mostly filler, because the song was actually about “making love in the summertime.”
Misconception: Describes singer’s struggle with AIDS
Queen’s classic was once rumored to reference Freddie Mercury’s battle with AIDS. The fatalistic lyrics about a man who has killed someone and his subsequent judgment supposedly chronicle Mercury’s feelings about his illness and impending death. The members of Queen have been intentionally vague over the years about the true meaning of the lyrics, but Mercury had been quoted as saying the words were simply “random rhyming nonsense” that were just written to fit the music. Furthermore, the AIDS epidemics of the early 80s took place years after this song had been completed.
Misconception: Sweet love song
Arguably the Police’s most popular song, Every Breath You Take has been played during countless weddings and on request lines due to the widely held belief that it is a gentle love song. According to Sting, the song is about love, but it’s quite a bit more “sinister and ugly” than people think. Sting wrote the song during the collapse of his marriage, amidst feelings of jealousy and obsession over his lost lover. He claims the stalker-like vibe of the lyrics were inspired by the desire for surveillance and control he was feeling during his divorce.
Misconception: Sexy love song
This lighthearted tune has solidified itself as a classic love song about longing for that special someone. Matthews’ soft and sincere delivery seem to distract some listeners from the lyrics that are actually kind of creepy. Matthews has admitted it is, indeed, a love song, but one that has been written from the perspective of a peeping tom. On close inspection, the song is definitely a celebration of women, albeit from a voyeuristic point of view, with the narrator at one point literally standing outside of a woman’s window watching her. Matthews has jokingly stated this song was written as an alternative to getting arrested.
Misconception: Song about devil worship
The ominous and abstract nature of Hotel California’s lyrics have led to numerous interpretations through the years. One view that was widely held during the 80s was that the song referred to a hotel purchased by Anton LaVey, the founder of the Church of Satan. The spooky imagery in the album cover art along with lyrics like, “they just can’t kill the beast” contributed to this myth. Don Henley and Glenn Frey have stated the song is really metaphorically describing excess in America and the Los Angeles high life that the band experienced.
Misconception: Patriotic song
Most people won’t be surprised to hear that despite many people (including politicians) having used the song for patriotic uses, the lyrics are actually extremely critical of the US. Many fist-pumping beer-drinking Americans, myself included, would proudly sing the chorus at ball games without giving a second thought to the lyrics contained in the verses. The song was written in response to the negative impact the Vietnam war had on Americans, but the catchy patriotic refrain is apparently just too… well, catchy. Similarly, the Australian band Men at Work’s song Down Under has been widely considered a patriotic song, while the authors maintain it was meant to be critical of their country.
Misconception: Song is about a suicide
Legend has it that Tom Petty wrote this song about a University of Florida student that commited suicide by jumping from her dorm room balcony. Petty is from Gainesville where UF is located, and Highway 441 (mentioned in the lyrics) does pass by the school, lending credibility to the story. However, Petty himself has insisted that this story is an urban legend, and the lyrics were actually inspired by the sounds of the freeway near his apartment in Encino, California, several years after he’d moved away from Florida.
Misconception: Witnessed a preventable death
The dark, accusatory lyrics of this song lent themselves to one of the most well known incorrect meanings. The story says that Phil Collins saw someone drowning once from far away, and that a third person, who was close enough to help, either ignored or refused to help the drowning person. Appalled by this, Collins penned this tune as an anonymous condemnation of the person’s cowardice and/or apathy. Some versions of the story have Collins finding this person at one of his shows and even singing it directly to them. Of course Collins says that story is incorrect, and the lyrics actually arose from the bitterness and anger he felt while going through his divorce.
Misconception: Girlfriend died in plane crash
The sad refrain and apocalyptic lyrics of one of James Taylor’s most famous songs gave rise to a belief that the song dealt with him losing his girlfriend, “Suzanne”, in a plane crash after friends bought her a ticket, trying to surprise Taylor with a visit while he was out of town. If interpreted in this manner, the line “sweet dreams and flying machines in pieces on the ground” supposedly references the crash. According to Taylor, however, the song was written over time, with each of the three verses dealing with a different aspect of his life: from the death of a friend, to his frustration in music, to his brief time spent in an institution. The lyric mentioned above actually referred to a band of Taylor’s that had failed, which left him deeply depressed. The name of that band was The Flying Machine.
Misconception: song is about LSD
John Lennon claimed this song was inspired by a drawing made by his son, and that he had no idea that the first letters of the words “Lucy,” “Sky,” and “Diamonds” were a reference to LSD. The lyrics certainly sound like some sort of drug-induced hallucination, but Lennon insisted that was never his intention.




















How is there no Stairway to Heaven?
What would the mis-interpretation be? Come to think of it, what the heck is the interpretation?
I am surprised not to see John Lennon's Imagine at n°1. It is the most misinterpreted song ever. It is about anarchy and atheism (both wished by Lennon) and it doesn't take a degree to understand it: you just have to listen to its lyrics. Nevertheless, this song is so catchy that you can hear religious people playing and singing together acappella this song (how smart!). I recall, on tv, during the terrible days of 9/11, Imagine was played over and over on the images of Twin Tower's smoking ruins, while stupid religious people kept sending silly sms that invoked revenge against the unfaithful to god…
My favorites are songs that really seem to have no meaning at all.
Look up the lyrics to these songs and try to find out what they are about:
"Sacred Serenity"
"Bleak"
"Zero Tolerance"
"Crystal Mountain"
If you can figure out exactly the point of these songs, you are a genius. But, to be fair, Crystal Mountain isn't that hard to understand (but it's a commonly misconceived idea. It seems to suggest anti-religious themes, but it's somewhat different)
Sorry to add another comment, but I also would like to say that "Under the Blade" by Twisted Sister deserves a mention. Not because people always misinterpret it, but because the misinterpretation was a major source of controversy (you may have heard of it, it's called the PMRC), and helped cause the parental guidance sticker.
They thought it was about S&M, but it's about a throat operation.
Anyone else hear anything about the Buzzcock's, 'Ever Fallen in Love'? I always heard it was about homo*****uality, and loving someone who was hetero.
Also, I don't know how widely it's known, but 'Diane' by Therapy? Anybody any thoughts?
I still don't understand a word Fall Out Boy says…
theyre saying *words*?
his accent and diction is atrocious lol
Where's The Byrds "Eight Miles High" ?
Very interesting list today! I must admit that some of these songs I believed, as many others obviously, that the misconception meaning was the meaning of the songs. Can't wait to see what else will come of this list
One that I thought had a different meaning, but I guess falls within the range they meant the song to be, was Hotel California. Honestly, I guess (taking a wild guess that I may be one of the youngest here) because I grew up listening to this music and later "really listening" to the lyrics, I never "saw" the image of the devil in this song. I saw more of of the drug and for some reason "ladies of the night" images in this song. Maybe because of the lady standing at the door with the bell??
Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds…how could they NOT see LSD in that??? I mean I know that they were "experimenting" during that time, but damn!!! I heard that that was the original name and that somewhere down the line (during the recording I believe) that they could not say "LSD" so they had to come up with some kind of acronym.
@mrssmith080604 — "(taking a wild guess that I may be one of the youngest here)"
—–if you grew up listening to this music on the radio (not classic rock station) — then youre probably more in the middle — as we have lots of people under 25 — a handful of regulars in high school, etc
—–from the "about" tab:
62% under 20 years old
34% 20 – 39 year old
those are like — year old numbers, but the demographics probably havnt radically shifted.
as for the comment about the list — when i first saw it, the title looked like gobbledegook nonsense to me, but the way the list was written (along with most of the comments) give the topic some validity.
this subject could have been an interpretaive nightmare, but it was a refreshing take.
""Can't wait to see what else will come of this list
""
—–hopefully a followup list, and another list based in the fashion of this topic, but with different factors. but thats just me — i love the music lists
many many more interpretations at: http://www.songfacts.com
Thanks for the web site
I always thought "Turning Japanese" by the Vapors was about jerking off and the same with "She Bop" by Cyndi Lauper
Thanks too the site I now know that "Turning Japanese" was not about choking the chicken but "She Bop" is
Bonus, was the best song on the list.
In the words of Syd Barrett:
Honey love you, honey little,
Honey funny sunny morning
Love you more funny love in the skyline baby
Ice-cream 'scuse me,
I've seen you looking good the other evening
In Barrett's defense, he was nuts.
speaking of number 4, i think men at work were recently done for plagiarising the flute section of down under from a song used by girl guides in Australia.
It always baffles me when people are surprised that "Every Breath You Take" is a stalker song. I mean…it's so obvious.
i'm not signed in to the new system, so i can't edit. maybe this makes more sense:
i kinda think that some "pro-johnson" scholars have reached for the "port chicago" idea in an effort to dispel a racist "johnson was such a dumb [black] dude that he didn't know IL from CA…" but if you look at it as a mention of an unrelated "other place better than here" (that just fit into the existing lyrical beats of the older indiana lyrics) that people had emotional dreams about reaching too, none of the whole "we must justify that he wasn't so geographically ignorant" stuff is even needed!
ok, i finally logged in, does that make tracking replies easier?
i kinda hate the new indented and NON-numbered comments….. if something has hundreds of comments how do you know where to look for the discussions you are in in the thread?
Whoa , nice answers guys – i guess the legend of robert johnson can never be fully explained . Also looking at the explanations above id rather reserve my judgement on what really went on , im glad we dont know everthing about him , he is so much more enigmatic than most other cultural icons . I wish i could contribute to the lengthy explanations above so i tried doing my own research . So far all that i have concluded is that he kicked ass…… I do beleive he was a genius.
Thanks agin for the explanations !
well, rock on bluesman is all i can say!
this kind of spirited intellectual discussion reminds me of the LV comments of a few years back! i'm happy your question brought it on
i was starting to really lose faith in the site comments being interesting ever again…..
yeah never hear of that RJ movie , so i know what im doing tonight!
Interesting read… like your lists!
It doesn't help if you mishear the lyrics as well.
My friends always thought George Michael was singing about "Careless Wilbur". http://www.blackwatertown.wordpress.com
Most of these are so obvious if you just pay attention to the lyrics.
Lucy in the sky with diamonds may not be about LSD, but the video is pretty similar to the sorts of things I saw when I used to get high (not on LSD)
Bryan Adam's *****ual reference in "Summer of 69" was totally after the song was written. Even his co-writing partner, Jim Valance, states that the song is about reminiscing about past summers and Bryan made a "69" joke and they kept it in. So the song itself is not about a *****ual position but rather it's a song with an inside joke built in.
It's all about the divorce, folks!
Song Number is the best ever. Everlasting song ever.
A list of classic songs and you stick Dave Matthews right it the middle of it?
We will add you to the Top 10 list of “Dumbasses Who Misinterpret List Titles”.
And I will add you to the *****heads who missed the point of a post list.
No, you’ve cornered the market on that list as well. Whether a given song is a “classic” or not was nowhere stated to be criteria for inclusion on this list. So why did you base your alleged “point” on that? In short, your so-called point was pointless…
(sub-point – btw, I do agree with you that Dave Matthews, though wildly popular for some reason, is utter *****, so if THAT was your only point, ok then, but you didn't have to take such a dumbass route to get there)
I reckon the point was that it is an obscure song in a list of songs that almost everyone knows.
My brother thought The Eagles were saying, “pump in the vaseline, surely make you lose your mind”, instead of “life in the fast lane, surely make you lose your mind”.
When you listen to it, I couldn’t blame him given the context of the other lyrics.
I recall going to my first Bryan Adams and right before he sang this iconic song he said, "The title has nothing to do with the year 1969. It's all about the 69." Now I finally know what he meant!
I've always thought that "Every Breath You Take" sounded too much like a stalker song, but I am surprised that I was right.
"American Pie" by Don McClean?
I'd like to include "How Long? (Has This Been Going On)" by Ace. I always thought the song was about a woman cheating on Paul Carrack (lead singer). Then, I was told recently, it's actually about one of the members of the band, leaving for another group. That's just as rotten! If you'd like, here's that song for your listening pleasure: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGHiGLqhFfY&fe…
Hot damn I love that song!!
I’d like to know what the Beatles’ “I Am The Walrus” is about. That song is open to so many interpretations from being utter nonsense to hidden meanings mentioning Paul McCartney’s “death” in Nov 1966, Norman Pilcher’s squad (Mr City Policeman Sitting Pretty Little Policemen in a Row; Semolina Pilchards climbing up the Eiffel Tower) to the very nature of death. The walrus is considered a symbol of such, and the walrus was Paul. Or was he? Was Eric Burdon the eggman? How does one get a tan from standing in the English rain?
Also of question is whether The Turtles’ “Happy Together” is really a love song or just a wistful dream that doesn’t actually come to fruition. Why else would one discuss the weather in a song about love?
“American Pie” was about the day the music died..February 3, 1959 when Buddy Holly, Richie Valens and the Big Bopper passed on, although there are lyrical references to the Byrds, the Beatles and Mick Jagger as well.
Lennon was vaguely inspired by "The Walrus and the Carpenter" in Alice in Wonderland", but otherwise was just having fun with words. (the LSD probably helped!) Read Lennon's books sometime…("Spaniard in the Works" and "In His Own Write") "Walrus" would fit right in with the wordplay…
I also saw on VH1 that English teachers had been giving students Beatles lyrics for class interpretations and Lennon was amused by this and this song was sort of a response with non sense lyrics to confuse people who try to interpret his lyrics.
One of my sister's favorite songs was Sarah McLachlan's "Angel," until I told her it was about one of the guys from Smashing Pumpkins and his death from a heroin overdose and not angels. Her song "Possession" is about a stalker she had, and lots of the lyrics are taken from his letters to her.
I'm surprised there's no Phil Collins – Air of the Night and that Hotel California. They've been misinterpreted and many people thought they were about other things. E.g divorce and cults
John Lennon admitted Lucy was about LSD.
wrong. Julian Lennon drew a picture of his classmate Lucy =)
gee, i didn't know that to do an article here all you needed was knowledge of what to copy and paste from another site (snopes)
I'd have to disagree with your interpretation of "Born in the USA". It's definitely an anti-war song, and it's definitely not jingoistic, but that doesn't mean it can't be patriotic too. If you listen to the energy that Springsteen puts into that chorus, or listen to his other political songs (see "Long Walk Home" from "Magic"), you can hear his fundamental optimism about the US: we've betrayed our values, made terrible mistakes, but we can rise from the ashes of our self-destruction. That's where his music comes from–it's part of the US's long tradition of left-wing patriotism (which many conservatives can't tell apart from anti-americanism).
Great list, lots of stuff i was unaware of. Would i be able to reference some of these for my website? http://www.music-explained.com/
Paul McCartney acknowledged a few years ago that Lucy in the Sky with Daimonds really was about acid, but they didn't want to admit it for a long time. It was pretty widely covered in the UK press. I don't know how anyone believed John Lennon's claim to the contrary – "plasticine porters with looking glass ties"? "Kaleidoscope eyes"? "Rocking horse people"? If it were just the song's title, I could buy the coincidence, but really…
too much music in this list.
how could Bohemian Rhapsody be about AIDS? Did he even have it yet? Isn't The Show Must Go On the one about AIDS? I'm confused…
I can't believe Extreme's more than words wasn't on this list. It's another hilarious one to hear at weddings, misconceived as a love song when it's about pressuring a girl into having *****, maybe when she isn't ready just yet.
Extreme – 'More Than Words'
(To make my previous post more clear).
'Hotel California' is about Mental Institution ..listen closely to the lyrics ,you will understand…
You seem to have missed the MOST misinterpreted song. "House of the Rising Sun" is about an opium den, not a *****house.
I've seen a number of comments about misheard song lyrics (sometimes called mondegreens). If you haven't done a list on that, you should. But leave out "Gladly, the Cross-Eyed Bear." You may, however, include "Bringing in the Sheeps…"
And what's with these church people singing "On the arms of a snow white dove…" It's WINGS of a dove. 'Cause doves don't have arms.
I thought it was bringing in the sheets!!! LOL You know, like from a clothes line.
Has no one mentioned I Used To Love Her by G N R? The first time it was performed live,
Axl said it was writter abt. his ex gf. Later, in a television interview, the band debunked his obvious ploy for attention stating that it was about a well loved family bet (dog). Ahhh, but it's a great anger song, if I've ever heard one, when you don't know the real meaning….. Once I learned the meaning, I understood the anger to really be remorse.
Another good one is Neil Young’s song “Union Man”, which militant British trades union members used as an anthem but which was actually intended to lampoon them.
How can “you’re so vain” Carly Simon not be in here, even without an answer — just adds to the mistique
These are all sounding like great songs, but dang… all these interpretations are dark. Interpreters must've been depressed or something… It's not really important, but Alien Ant Farm's song "Movies" is also interpreted as suicide after breaking up. It's a very cheerful song for goodness's sake!
You need a another list. I can think of 3 you forgot:
Dire straights…."Money for Nothing" This song sounds like it's making fun of MTV but it's actually making fun of people who make fun of same
Randy Newman…"Short People". Sounds like a song making fun of dwarves but it's actually criticizing the bigotry that those people face
Def Leppard "Gods of War" sounds like a Pro- Reagan, Pro-Thatcher song, but it actually is protesting their hawkish foreign policies
2pac – "Me and my girlfriend" – It's actually about his gun
Paul McCartney claimed that Lucy in the Sky w/ Diamonds really was a reference to LSD sometime during early 2000's :-/
Summer of '69 is actually about the year. Jim Vallance who Adams co-wrote the song with was about 17 when they wrote it. Adams got his first guitar around the time he was ten. Originally the line "summer of `69" was only supposed to be sung once: right after "played it 'til my fingers beld" but they liked the line, and after a while decided to repeat it more times, and changed the original title, which was "best days of my life". While recording the demo Adams threw in "me and my baby in a '69" as a joke, and he kept it for the real recording as well. Who knows why he says it's about the *****ual position in concerts? Probably for fun. The song really is inspired by a lot of things. Some of the lines are inspired by other songs, and some form the writers experiences both at the present and the past. Adams' sound man, Jody, actually got married around the time the song was written, and he and his wife are in the music video in the car with a "Just Married" sign.
I love John Lennon and all, but Lucy in the Sky with Diamons is about LCD. I don't care what he or anybody else says.
"Pink Houses" by John Mellencamp
"This Land is Your Land" by Woodie Guthrie
These are two that immediately came to my mind. Both used a lot by politicians and in schools and are misrepresented.
It's common knowledge that Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds is about LSD.
If that song isn’t about Acid his son must of been on it when he drew that picture haha!!
um what about The Number Of The Beast by Iron Maiden?
Theres a song which should be on 1, its helter skelter by the beatles…
Google Charles Manson and Helter Skelter ;D
My english is not that good, because of that I cant explain it good.
AND WHAT ABOUT THE SONG ”YOUR DADDY AIN’T YOUR DADDY !! BUT YOUR DADDY NEVER KNOWS…….
”YOUR SISTER AIN’T YOUR SISTER !! BUT YOUR SISTER NEVER KNOWS….
i remember my granny never let this song played in the house whenever my dad will pay it !!! He insted played it when she was not in the house or was out … Ha Ha …& i don’t even remember d lyrics correctly as for the tape which VANISHED from our house…Ha Ha
During the nineteen seventies, there were the electric guitar repair shop in southern california that will altered metal record. It turned out where all the youthful electric guitar as well as largemouth bass avid gamers …vintage bass
I really enjoyed the movie, and I believe it could be used as a positive way as showing how drugs can ruin lives. I have seen the “E True Hollywood Story” and I could not believe how much John changed from the time he married Sharon til he died. I am so glad that you got away from him and that you are a happy wife and mother. I believe you are a great inspiration, and I know that you will reach those who are in trouble or in bad situations just by your book and website. I am a middle school teacher, and I would love for someone like you to talk to students because they have so many influences in their lives today such as drugs and also hanging out with the wrong people.
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