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More music madness: Teen death songs will never die

Posted: Friday, September 14, 2007 5:00 AM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
Filed Under:

While we're on the topic of wacky lyrics, let's talk about death. Specifically, the spate of teen death songs that had a real heyday in the 1950s. I wasn't around then, but I remember in the 1980s I bought a great Rhino Records compilation of them -- yes, on vinyl. It was called "Teen Tragedy" and the best part about it was that it had a built-in Kleenex box right in the record jacket, so if "Patches" or "Tell Laura I Love Her" made you start bawling on the spot, hey, at least facial tissue was easily at hand.

The standard teen tragedy song detailed how half of a love match met his or her end. Railroad tracks were often involved. Speeding cars and motorcycles were big elements. "Tell Laura I Love Her" is a classic example. (Best line: "No one knows what happened that day / Or how his car overturned in flames..." Well, does it really matter HOW?) "Teen Angel" wins for the stupidest and most avoidable death -- if your car stalls on a railroad track, and you get out safe but run back for your boyfriend's class ring, well, any sympathy you're going to get is limited.

Sometimes the song had a supernatural element. Dickey Lee's "Laurie" tells of meeting a girl at a dance and later finding out she was dead the whole time -- the sweater he loaned her turns up neatly folded on her grave. (Very similar to the Vanishing Hitchhiker urban legend.)

Not all creepy death songs involved teens. One song that was frequently mentioned in your comments was Bobby Goldsboro's "Honey," where a man reminisces about his dead wife. Not really a teen death song, but a death song nonetheless. The song has been named to numerous "worst song" lists, and once you look at the lyrics, you can see why. In an earlier post, Deb E. says "My vote for worst lyric ever goes to this "gem" from the sappiest song ever written: 'She wrecked the car and she was sad / So afraid that I'd be mad /  But what the heck.' " Others cite the opening lines, "See the tree, how big it's grown, but friend, it hasn't been too long it wasn't big." We get what you're going for, there, but there's no way to say that in a more elegant way?

Maybe the most famous death song of all time is Terry Jacks' "Seasons in the Sun."  (Best/worst line: "But the stars we could reach, were just starfish on the beach.") According to the song's Wikipedia entry, the song was done numerous times by other artists, including the Kingston Trio and the Beach Boys. Apparently Jacks' version meant to leave the cause of death -- be it suicide or natural causes -- vague. In the original version, by Jacque Brel, the singer is not only dying, his wife cheated on him. What a bummer.

Here's a great site about Teen Tragedy songs. Check out their lengthy list! Who knew there were this many? My Rhino compilation only had about eight or 10. Some of these are parodies ("All I Have Left is My Johnny's Hubcap") and some should be ("The Water is Red," about a shark attack).

This site sorts them by theme ("motorcycles," "trains," "flying things") and has a great sense of humor about it. It also goes beyond the old days and pulls in songs from more recent eras, including songs from Nirvana (does "All Apologies" really qualify?) and The Replacements. Seems that teenagers dying is a topic that never grows old.

And this site doesn't have the quantity of songs listed as the others, but it makes up for it by offering links that go into detail about the songs that are listed.

It's easy to make fun of these songs, but I have to say, some really hit bone. The hairs on the back of my neck always stand up when I hear Jan & Dean's chilling "Dead Man's Curve." According to urban-legend site Snopes.com, while that song did turn out to be pretty prophetic, Jan's near-fatal car accident was NOT on the very same corner the song was written about, but it wasn't really that far away. Won't come back from Dead Man's Curve...

And don't forget perhaps the looniest of the death songs...and what has to be one of the only songs out there about cannibalism. You know it: "Timothy." about three guys trapped in a mine who end up munching down on poor Tim. It was written by Rupert Holmes of "Pina Colada Song" fame.  Songfacts has a funny bit where he details how his record label became upset when they realized the content, and tried to spread a rumor that Timothy was a mule. The site quotes Holmes as saying "Someone called me and said, 'Was Timothy a mule? You wrote it.' And I said 'No, what can I tell you, they ATE him.' "

Share your favorite (and least favorite) teen tragedy and other death songs in the comments. Have joy, have fun, have seasons in the sun.

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"A Lifetime" by Better Than Ezra

Allie woke up 8AM
Graduation day.
Got into a car,
And crashed along the way.

When we arrived late to the wake,
Stole the urn while they
Looked away,
And drove to the beach
'Cause I knew you'd want it
That way.

And you were standing
On the hood of the car
Singing out loud
When the sun came up.

And I know I wasn't right,
But it felt so good.
And your mother didn't mind,
Like I thought she would.
And that REM song was playing
In my mind.
And three and a half minutes
Felt like a lifetime
Well I read all the folks posts and have to say that I grew up when these songs came out. I still love to listen to them and some still give me shivers up and down my spine. One, of many, songs that wasn't brought up was "American Pie". It was about the crash of Buddy Hollys plane.
My favorite death song is "Helena" by My Chemical Romance. The video is very well done as well.

Long ago
Just like the hearse you die to get in again
We are so far from you

Also, Nirvana covered Seasons in the Sun as well. Check it out on You Tube. Kurt is playing the drums and Dave Grohl is playing the guitar.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kO4BF67pvsc

I bartended my way thru college and I had to listen to my fair share of Ode to Billy Joe on Karoake night which was usually sang very badly. I can't stand that song.

The Oak Ridge Boys' "I'll Be True to You"

They met up on the blue moon
and they parted on a cloudy day
They were so in love
and out of school, but he was going so
far, far away

Chorus:
She said, "I'll be true to you, even though you don't want me to...
I'll be blue for you, even though you've asked me not to..."

Well the years drifted by them as we all know they can
He found other women but she refused other men,
But as fate would have it, they met again
She was on a down hill slide, he was just slidin' in....

As he looked into her eyes that night he never realized
the only real love in his life was passin' by
When he turned and left her there, his words, "good bye"
he heard her calling out to him and as he walked
she cried,

Chorus:
" I've been true to you,
seems like speakin' to me is the least that you could do...
and I've been blue for you...
even though you've asked me not to"

She'd been drinking way too hard one night,
She'd been drinking way too long,
Alone and pale in a cheap hotel
She died there in the dawn

Kneeling by her grave
Oh so late and oh so wrong
He longed to hold her close again
crying on and on

Chorus:
He cried, "I'll be true to you...
after all that I have put you through
and I'll be blue for you....
Though you never even asked me to..."



There is a version of a song by Bobby Darin called "Artificial Flowers."  It is sung with such flair and pizzazz by Darin, you forget its about a little girl forced into child labor after her parents died.  How sad is that?
There are quite a few more modern tracks.  Simple Plan's "Untitled" off their Still Not Getting Any CD.  It's a serious song about drunk driving and how pervasive the damage one causes from such an event.  The video is even more powerful with a climactic scene at the end of the song.

You're right:  Songs like this won't die.

Pun intentional.
This is a great article, it reminds me of a Dave Barry book called "Dave Barry's Book of Bad Songs." There is a whole chapter dedicated to Teen Death Songs. I'd like to add one more to this list: "Running Bear" - the song about the two little Native American teenagers who were in love, but couldn't be together because they were from different tribes. They then drowned together in a river so they could be together. Sick!
I don't know if this counts as a "teen" death song, but Jumper by Third Eye Blind always struck a chord with me. "Wish you would step off from that ledge my friend...." (trying to stop a suicide attempt)
Sinead O'Conner "Stretched on Your Grave"

"I am stretched on your grave / and will lie here forever/ if your hands were in mine / I'd be sure we'd not sever / My apple tree, my brightness / It's time we were together / For I smell of the earth and am worn by the weather....The priests and the friars / approach me in dread/ because I still love you / my love, and you're dead."

Great beat. Creepy as hell. Especially the part about her "maidenhead".
From the 90's--how about "The Freshman" by the Verve Pipe?

When I was young I knew everything
She a punk who rarely ever took advice
Now I'm guilt stricken, sobbing with my head on the floor
Stop a baby's breath and a shoe full of rice

I can't be held responsible
'Cause she was touching her face
I won't be held responsible
She fell in love in the first place

For the life of me I cannot remember
What made us think that we were wise and we'd never compromise
For the life of me I cannot believe we'd ever die for these sins
We were merely freshmen

My best friend took a week's vacation to forget her
His girl took a week's worth of valium and slept
Now he's guilt stricken sobbing with his head on the floor
Thinks about her now and how he never really wept he says

I can't be held responsible
'Cause she was touching her face
I won't be held responsible
She fell in love in the first place

For the life of me I cannot remember
What made us think that we were wise and we'd never compromise
For the life of me I cannot believe we'd ever die for these sins
We were merely freshmen

We've tried to wash our hands of all of this
We never talk of our lacking relationships
And how we're guilt stricken sobbing with our heads on the floor
We fell through the ice when we tried not to slip, we'd say

I can't be held responsible
'Cause she was touching her face
I won't be held responsible
She fell in love in the first place

For the life of me I cannot remember
What made us think that we were wise and we'd never compromise
For the life of me I cannot believe we'd ever die for these sins
We were merely freshmen

For the life of me I cannot remember
What made us think that we were wise and we'd never compromise
For the life of me I cannot believe we'd ever die for these sins
We were merely freshmen
We were merely freshmen
We were only freshmen

From the same era: "Magic" by Ben Folds Five and (slightly older) "Far Behind" by Candlebox
I'm rather fond of Tom Lehrer's "I Hold Your Hand In Mine":

I hold your hand in mine, dear,
I press it to my lips.
I take a healthy bite from
Your dainty fingertips.
My joy would be complete, dear,
If you were only here,
But still I keep your hand
As a precious souvenier.

The night you died, I cut it off,
I really don't know why;
For now each time I kiss it,
I get bloodstains on my tie.

I'm sorry now I killed you,
For our love was something fine.
Until they come to take me,
I shall hold your hand in mine.
Hey man, what about "Detroit Rock city" by Kiss ? What a great song !

"Excitable Boy" is great, but not really teen........
"Honey" was a great record, and Goldsboro did an incredible job with performing it.  I always thought the lyrics (by Bobby Russell) were not intended to be "elegant."  The song describes everyday events in a simple style, making the listener able to relate to the love and eventual grief conveyed.  "Honey" was an enormous #1 record (I read that it was the biggest seller in the world during its year of release) that has somehow now become underappreciated.
How about "Moon River" by Pat Boone? That's a pretty depressing one. Green Day's got a slew of them. Faster Pussycat has one called "Please, Dear."

Please, Dear
Won't you save a seat in nirvana for me

The rest of the words aren't coming to me. It was allegedly written after the singer's girlfriend was killed in a car crash.

And yes, Pearl Jam covered "Last Kiss."
What about the song El Paso.  Its the ultimate love triangle. He kills the young  cowboy who flirts with her, and then he gets killed when he rides back into town cause he cant live life without her. Depressing
One song that always makes me cry is Bobby Goldsboro's song "Honey". I still listen to the lyrics and well up with tears. Even my boyfriend is amazed at how sensitive I get when the song comes on.
I will always remember Condition Red...especially the sirens playing...I was glad to see that on the list I have been looking for it online for a while and haven't found it..I was starting to think that it was a song I made up from my childhood! LOL...
I thought THE WATER WAS RED was a cool song. I still listen to it today. First time I heard it I was in Florida on vacation back in the early 1960's
I loved "Timothy!"  It was by The Buoys who were from my hometown.  Most people have never heard it and think I'm making it up when I mention it.
I grew up with these songs and would rather hear them, then some song about how to kill a police officer, degrade a woman and the profanity that is in so many of todays songs. Call me old fashion but it was better back then with the music than now.
 You probably have never heard this one on the radio, but it would rank up there as one of the best EVER if you had. It is " Terminus El Dorado" by Ted Nugent.It is about a young girl that takes Daddy's Cadillac out for a spin. Here is a sample of the lyrics: "She did not see the tandem gravel truck coming around the curve-too much fun, too little luck, she didn't have time to swerve". That is followed up by this line " and the crows will be pickin' at your flesh as you've got no control of the situation", followed by a hair-raising laugh. God Bless Uncle Ted !!
THANK YOU, I have been trying to think of that song, D.O.A. for a year, wanted to download it and add to my "oldies" selections.  Only thing, I just checked Napster and iTunes and sadly no listing for Bloodrock.  Anyone know where on the net I might find the song?  I love these old teen tragedy songs!  thanks for all the memories.
Teenage suicides are on the rise.  Are "death songs" influencing their decisions?  I betcha most fans will say no, whether they do or not.
Well, teen death songs seem to have started around the '50s -- around the 1650s that is -- with "Barbara Allen".
No one thought of the hair band Sebastion Bach fronted, when they sang "18 And Life", about a guy who is messing around with his gun, kills his best friend, and spends life in jail thinking about it?
Gotta love the Jim Carroll Band and "People Who Died!"

It starts out "Teddy sniffing glue, he was 12 years old
Fell from the roof on East Two-nine
Cathy was 11 when she pulled the plug
On 26 reds and a bottle of wine
Bobby got leukemia, 14 years old
He looked like 65 when he died
He was a friend of mine..."

What a great tune!
How about the song People Who Died by Jim Carroll?  I heard this song as a kid - I'm now 40 and I still can't get it out of my head.  

Teddy sniffing glue he was 12 years old
Fell from the roof on East Two-nine
Cathy was 11 when she pulled the plug
On 26 reds and a bottle of wine
Bobby got leukemia, 14 years old
He looked like 65 when he died
He was a friend of mine
(Chorus)Those are people who died, died...

I was shocked to realize that a couple of the songs were about suicide-one in 1959 & the other @ 1965 & both were banned-one in England!
Wow, I listened to D.O.A. and other Bloodrock a lot in high school. Can't believe so many people remember it. Haven't thought of it in years.

No one has mentioned the truly awful "Gotta Get a Message to You" by the BeeGees, which my friends and I sobbed to at slumber parties in 6th grade.
Oh, BTW, what about the song, "Timothy?"  Now THAT was a weird song esp. hinting at cannibalism
How about Judas Priest's song "Beyond the Realms of Death". They were unfairly taken to court because two kids killed themselves listening to it. Now that's a powerful song.

He'd had enough,
he couldn't take anymore!
He found a place in his mind,
and he slammed the door.

With dread he'd sit there,
stare into space.
No sign of life would flicker on his face.
Until one day it seemed as though with pride,
the wind kissed him and then he died!



Here's a recent one from The Decemberists.  Not as cheesy as some of the others already discussed, but still pretty awful.  I think the Romeo and Juliet vibe it has going just increases the awfulness.

Valencia
"You belong to the gang
and you say you can't break away
but I'm here with my hands on my heart

And our families can't agree
I'm your brothers sworn enemy
but I'll shout out my love to the stars

So wait for the stone on your window, your window
Wait by the car and we'll go, we'll go

When first we laid eyes I swore to no compromise
Until I felt my caress on your skin
Well how soon we were betrayed,
your sister gave us away
and your father came all unhinged

So wait for the stone on your window, your window
Wait by the car and we'll go, we'll go

Oh Valencia, with your blood still warm on the ground
Valencia, and I swear to the the stars
I'll burn this whole city down

All I heard was a shout
of your brother calling me out
and you ran like a fool to my side

and the shot it hit hard
and your frame went limp in my arms
and AN OATH of love was your dying cry

So wait for the stone on your window, your window
Wait by the car and we'll go, we'll go

Oh Valencia, with your blood still warm on the ground
Valencia, I'll burn this whole city down
Valencia, with your blood gettin' cold on the ground
Valencia and I swear to the stars
I'll burn this whole city down"

http://www.sing365.com/music/lyric.nsf/Valencia-lyrics-The-Decemberists/AAF87BDA856B1D63482570BB0029A581
Does no one remember "Leader of the Pack?" This good/bad boy was cast out by parents of a girl too good for her. It was raining. No mention of motorcycle helment. All she has left are her memories of leader of the pack. I, personally, think she married  a small-town banker and is still looking for her G spot.One down for "bad boys" one up for "over-protective parents."
The best one EVER is Judas Priest's "Beyond the Realms of Death"  ... and then he died!

Probably one of the most hyped, yet misunderstood was Ozzy Osbourne's "Suicide Solution"- not about teens at all, but the adults at the time (1982?) were SOOOOO nieve!
What about "Leader of The Laundromat" by The Detergents. The poor girlfriend in the song gets hit by a garbage truck.
It's not a teen song (it's Johnny Cash), but I was a teen-ager when I first heard it, and the awful thing still sticks in my head:

And the song she was singing would make a man's blood run cold/When it's springtime in Alaska, it's forty below...(and then her boyfriend kills the narrator.  The last words he hears as he dies;) When it's springtime in Alaska, you'll be six feet below."
Last Kiss; I can still sing this song 45 years later. Fact is, it has one of the best melodies  in rock and roll. And possibly the worst lyrics.
"I was out on a date in my daddy's car,
we hadn't driven very far.
Up in the road, straight ahead, a car was stalled, the engine was dead. I couln't stop so I swerved to the right. I'll never forget the sound that night. The squealing tires, the busting glass, the painful scream that I heard last. (Cool thumping bass line.)
Where or where can my Baby be? The Lord took her away from me. She's gone to Heaven so I got to be good, so I can see my Baby when I leave-a this world. OOhh, oooh, ooooh..."
The Water Was Red - Johnny Cymbal (1961)
MGM 12978 45rpm - Bubbled Under 3/27/61 #108 3wk

A boy met a girl on a lonely beach
and soon they were holding hands
they fell in love on that lonely beach
and kissed on the silver sand

Until the water was red and the day was done
until the water was red from the setting sun

They returned to the beach whenever they could
and stay until the moon was bright
and once they were swimming where the water was deep
and the white fin came into sight

The shark had struck and disappeared
and left his sweetheart dead
and as he pulled her to the shore
the mooring waves were red

Oh the water was red with what the shark done
Yes the water was red and his love was gone

He looked towards the water and he saw the fin
so he gently put her on the sand
he walked to the water with a tear in his eye
and a gleaming knife in his hand

And the water was red once again
Yes the water was red as he walked toward his sweetheart
with the fin in his hand

And the water was red once again
Yes the water was red

Found all the words I love this song. Even though it may be cheesey. It still has a warm spot in my memories
I cant believe that no one mentioned "Fade to Black" by Metallica! I saw that "One" was on here, but that song is not about teen death. Though, there were alot of other great songs listed.
DOA came out two weeks after one of my best friends in high school had died of a car crash. We rode around in another friend's VW Beetle and listened to it, or turned it off the minute it came on, depending on the mood. About the same time another song came out, and I don't remember the name, but it was about a guy killing himself over some girl, and some of the lines were, "The morning paper won't carry my name, And the evening sun will still set the same. Could have done more had the time alive, But I didn't know then what I do know now. And it was bound to happen anyway, just like the cold November snow, So what difference does it make, now that I know." Does anyone remember the name or the group who sang it?
KISS - Detroit Rock City
When I was young, the Bloodrock song D.O.A. used to scare the shit outta me too!!
Some of the following songs required some investigation or reading into to find out what the artist was really talking about, and of course, intruth a song can mean pretty much whatever the person listening to it wants to mean. But here are a few I've found that have been made in just the last few years.
            All I see By: Teddy Thompson
- This song is just gut wrenching to listen to and the Chris Issak style of guitar playing almost brings tears to your eyes the first time you listen to this song.
            We Die Young By: Alice In Chains
-It's AIC of course, during their time and with the grunge era in full swing, this group were the masters of pain and tragedy.
    I live with it every day By: Barenaked Ladies
- This song struck me as odd the first time I heard as this group has been known for their original style and sense of humor  sing they broke out in the us back in the late nineties. This gem was taken from the Born on a Pirate Ship album.
      She Took him to the Lake By: Alkaline Trio
- This group is notorious for their writing material centering around death. This song stands out as targeting the teen years for the topic. This song is also from when they were more of a speed punk band
      Blood Red Summer By: Coheed and Cambria
Though they don't come out and bluntly say in the lyrics, this song has a double meaning as targeting the innocense of youth. Of course, for anyone familiar with these guys, they rarely say ANYTHING in their lyrics without masking their true intent. By the way, this group's entirealbum releases to date hgave been one ongoing story with each album being released as a chapter. Strange, but interesting to listen to
             Hide and Seek By:  Imogen Heap
Always a pleasure to listen to her music and this one is done entirely accapella which actually increases the angst in my mind. Very worth listening to.
            And finally this gem from their sophmore album:
                Helena By: My Chemical Romance
This song is done from the perspective of a male teenage lover speaking at the girl's funeral in the wake of a fatal car crash. Though i don't particularly like everything this quintet have done, this song came off beautifully.
           
 
Saddest song I have ever heard is "Traveling Soldier" by the Dixie Chicks. It is a remake because  he guy died in Viet Nam.  I STILL can't get through it without crying my eyes out.  

 "Two days past eighteen
  He was waiting for the bus in his army green
  Sat down in a booth in a cafe there
  Gave his order to a girl with a bow in her hair
  He's a little shy so she gives him a smile
  And he said would you mind sittin' down for a while
  And talking to me,
  I'm feeling a little low
  She said I'm off in an hour and I know where      
  we can go. . . .

  I cried
  Never gonna hold the hand of another guy
  Too young for him they told her
  Waitin' for the love of a travelin' soldier
  Our love will never end
  Waitin' for the soldier to come back again
  Never more to be alone when the letter said
  A soldier's coming home"
 
While I don't agree with her politics, tha girl can sing-
"How about Blue Oyster Cult's "Don't Fear the Reaper?  That's my favorite."

Whenever anyone mentions this song, all I can think about is the SNL skit... "I gotta have more cowbell!"
How does 'people who died' by Jim Carrol not get any mentions?
Eric Clapton, Tears In Heaven.
Did everyone forget Alone Again, Naturally!
Thank GOD I'm not the only one who's heard D.O.A.!

My Mom has that on vinyl and played it for me and a friend of mine when we were teens.  Freaked our butts OUT!!!
I had forgotten all about "DOA."  Once my memory was jogged, I remember playing it as a DJ at a radio station in Portsmouth, Ohio.  We got phone calls out the wazoo bitching about the song and demanding we stop playing it.  Naturally, we kept playing the hell out of it.  And I also remember playing "Timothy," but for the life of me I can't remember what it was about.  Cannibalism?  Well, I don't remember anyone complaining about that one.  My favorite version of the piece-of-crap tearjerker "Honey" was the Smothers Brothers TV parody sketch of it.  Really funny, and it put the song in its place.  With "Ode to Billy Joe," if they were drowning their baby, how come her parents and family never noticed she had been pregnant?  Don't know what they were throwing off the Tallahatchee Bridge, but it wasn't some newborn.  Maybe they were just throwing caution to the winds.  Ha-ha!


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