17 Comments
User's avatar
Jorge Otero - Stormy Mondays's avatar

The first version of Dylan's "Tangled Up In Blue" has an amazing twist on perspective if you're familiar with the released version. The first few verses are written in the third person and then there's a switch to the first person. However, there are now three characters and not two! Check it out here (scroll down): https://glyphobet.net/strthrwr/bob/18-01.html

Expand full comment
Chris Dalla Riva's avatar

Oh wow, that's fascinating. Completely changes the song

Expand full comment
L. Sojini's avatar

This is an interesting piece. Have you ever thought of metafiction?

Expand full comment
Chris Dalla Riva's avatar

Not particularly. Though I’ve read Pale Fire by Nabakov and some Vonnegut which always feels meta-y

Expand full comment
Thea Wood's avatar

Telling a story without the use of personal pronouns is my favorite form of lyricism. It requires more observation and empathy, less introspection / ego. Switching between first and third person plays on that real-world interaction between the self and other. That’s what makes it powerful for me.

Thank you for the insightful essay!

Expand full comment
Chris Dalla Riva's avatar

thanks! this comment is just as insightful.

Expand full comment
Rick Massimo's avatar

Speaking of perspective, I’ve always been completely blown away by the bridge of Tom Petty’s Even The Losers:

Two cars parked on the overpass

Rocks hit the water like broken glass

I should’ve known right then it was too good to last

God it’s such a drag when you’re living in the past

It’s all first person, but lines 1-2 are in the moment; line 3 is looking back on the moment and line 4 is looking at himself looking back on the moment. Just genius.

Expand full comment
Chris Dalla Riva's avatar

Underrated lyricist

Expand full comment
Ian Paul Sharp's avatar

Mott the Hoople’s ‘Ballad of Mott’ is a lovely, reflective song about the band’s history. It’s on the album called (inevitably) ‘Mott’.

Expand full comment
MoonMamaWarrior's avatar

THANK YOU! I've always loved "Stan", just brilliant writing, and now people who have NO IDEA of its origin throw this "word" around adds to my delight (a decade ago I would have been SO PISSED about this, age has given me wisdom HA).

Expand full comment
Bern's avatar

Intro to Gershwin's "They Can't Take That Away From Me"

'Our romance won't end on a sorrowful note. Though by tomorrow you're gone. The song is ended, but as the songwriter wrote: "The melody lingers on." ' Which is Gershwin's nod to Irving Berlin...

Expand full comment
Matt Thompson's avatar

"Black Blade" by Blue Öyster Cult has a cool change in perspective. The lyrics are by Sci-Fi/Fantasy author Michael Moorcock. Most of the songs are in the first person from the perspective of Moorcock's character Elric. He expresses concern that he losing control to his sword Stormbringer, forcing him to kill even those he loves. It includes lyrics like "It keeps calling me its master, but I feel like its slave." The last part of the song is from the point of view of the sword, who confirms that it is in control of Elric: "My master is my slave."

Expand full comment
Dimitriy's avatar

If you want a more recent example, Money Game, Part 2 by Ren recycles the she sells sea shells nursery rhyme as a model for capitalism: https://youtu.be/0ivQwwgW4OY?si=74XfAPP_359qWHUB. In a kind of duet between two of his personalities, Ren’s alter ego mocks Earnest Ren’s MG song by quoting it back to him: https://youtu.be/s_nc1IVoMxc?si=td72jSx4m_CDmK2Z. I tend to like music where there is more talent or creativity than taste, so consider yourself warned.

Expand full comment
Dimitriy's avatar

It also references Eminem’s Stan in a bout of anxiety of influence.

Expand full comment
Dimitriy's avatar

Also a whole slew of Major Tom songs (Bowie, M.I.A., Shilling, etc): https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_Tom. I am partial to the Space Lady version: https://youtu.be/pHsXETlnA80?si=eY2FgRM1mI7agCcj

Expand full comment
Frank Dent's avatar

Dylan’s “Hard Rain” appears to have at least two voices: the opening refrain question that begins each verse addressed to “you” and then the question’s first-person answers. And the refrain lines that end each verse (“And it’s a hard,” etc.) could be thought of as being in third person.

In English, “you” can be pretty ambiguous: it can refer to the reader/listener, or to someone the speaker/singer is talking to in the poem/song, or the speaker/singer themself, or even as a less-affected substitute for “one.”

So in this song the “you” could be Dylan addressing himself (he has blue eyes, a detail he added to the “Lord Randall” questions used in the song) and then answering himself. Usually context makes it clear what “you” means, but maybe not in this case.

https://www.bobdylan.com/songs/hard-rains-gonna-fall/

Expand full comment
A2D's avatar

This article sound in my ears, original subject 🎶

Expand full comment