by Gary Fearon, Creative Director, Southern Writers Magazine
A couple of years ago on the blog, in a post called Songs
in the Key of Life, I chronicled some famous songs whose inspiration came
from real-life situations in the writers' lives. In this post, let's look at a few hits that
were inspired by real people, some as well-known as the songs themselves. I suspect you'll know several of these origins
already, but some may surprise you.
This one goes back a ways, but 60s songster Jimmy Dean's
claim to fame (long before he became a sausage king) was story songs about
people, some imaginary, some drawn from life. While "Big Bad John"
was fictional folklore, "P.T. 109" celebrated the heroic Navy background
of President John F. Kennedy a year after he took office.
Speaking of JFK, his young daughter Caroline would not only
make the cover of Life Magazine at four years old, but Neil Diamond
would be so taken with the photo of her riding her pony that he'd write "Sweet
Caroline" in her honor.
Don McLean was just a paperboy "the day the music died". He was deeply affected when he saw the
headline announcing the deaths of Buddy Holly, The Big Bopper and Richie
Valens. But he kept the music going
after all with one of his biggest hits, "American Pie".
While the lyrics sing of "Daniel, my brother", Elton
John's "Daniel" was inspired by the story of a wounded Vietnam War
veteran who came home to a hero's welcome but wanted only to go back to his normal
life. Meanwhile, his "Candle in the
Wind", written in memorial to Marilyn Monroe in 1973, served double duty
when he rededicated it in 1997 to Princess Diana, changing the opening line
from "Goodbye, Norma Jean" to "Goodbye, England's Rose".
Some songs have more ambiguous origins, as in the case of
"Dude Looks Like a Lady" by Aerosmith. One story goes that Steven Tyler, spotting Mötley
Crue's Vince Neil from behind, mistook him for a chick. Vince himself contends that the song title
came when he and Tyler visited a bar where the waiters wore women's clothes.
Other rumors abound, but they all seem to have something to do with Vince Neil.
The list goes on, and I invite you to check out my latest
video to see and hear a few more famous connections from the Top 40, below or at https://youtu.be/V278ljKTE3g
Inspiration for a song, a poem or a novel can be found
everywhere you look. It could even be
the next person you meet.
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