Sunday, June 8, 2025

Easy Sunday: The music of lost love

"I told myself he isn't really leaving but he left me 
He doesn't love me anymore
Now he's really gone there's nothing left to cling to
I'm all alone with no one to talk to
He left me 
He doesn't love me anymore."
    Skeeter Davis, "He Doesn't love me Anymore," 1967


My guess on Friday was that Elon Musk would cave first, and that turned out to be right. 

Musk deleted the tweets that said that the Epstein tapes would be a bombshell and he is getting word to President Trump that he wants to talk. Trump won't take the call. This is Trump sending a powerful message with action, not words. Republicans see that if you cross him, Trump will make you suffer, no matter how close you were before. 

Remember, Michael Corleone had his brother Fredo shot and killed. 

There were no shortage of song lyrics that I could have selected  to express Elon Musk's feelings. After all, breaking up is hard to do, whichever side of the breakup one is on. The songs in my mind are from that Golden Age of music -- that era of the 1960s and 1970s when I imprinted on popular music. 
"You never call. . . I'll be beside the phone,"

Build me up, Buttercup is too upbeat to use, but I was tempted by the lift-me-up then let-me-down subject matter. Still, I love the melody. So happy and fun.

Critics praise the studio albums, A Tramp Shining, with Jimmy Webb songs and Richard Harris (of all people) singing -- that album with the song MacArthur Park, the one with the sweet green icing dripping off the cake left out in the rain. Critics wrote:
MacArthur Park is about a relationship that was doomed from the start, but that the singer still cannot believe is over. 

That sounds right.

Harris, a great actor but mediocre singer, sounds just the right kind of desperate for Elon Musk, but no one song had the right few lines to use here. So I kept looking.

There were other great potential songs: 

I considered Elvis Presley's "Return to Sender" from 1962, back when people ghosted an ex by returning postal mail. His former sweetheart writes "return to sender, address unknown, no such number, no such zone" on the letters he sends.

The Jackson Five's I Want You Back was a strong candidate, and written in 1969 it was in the sweet spot for me personally. The lyrics also served my purpose:

Oh, baby, give me one more chance (to show you that I love you)
Won't you please let me back in your heart
Oh, darlin', I was blind to let you go (let you go, baby) . . .
Yes, I do now (I want you back)
Ooh, ooh, baby (I want you back)

But, like Buttercup, it is so uptempo that it seemed almost happy. The wrong mood. 

I had always thought that Joni Mitchell's Both Sides Now, was a contemplation of life's complexities and nuances, but in reviewing the lyrics for this post I am reminded that the thing that sets off her revery about life's illusions was lost love, not something more existential. Lost love. Perhaps Musk has come off the ketamine enough to become contemplative and wonder what went wrong.That would have worked to lead off this post, but Mitchell seems moody here, not miserable, so I went with the Skeeter Davis song. Davis sounds as desperate as I suspect Musk feels. 

Readers may have better suggestions, which I might work into a future post, in case the firehose of Trump news ever lets up.



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20 comments:

  1. For Jon Gell, M.D.

    Smokey Robinson and the Miracles
    Ooh Baby Baby 1965

    Ooh, la-la-la-la
    I did you wrong
    My heart went out to play
    But in the game I lost you
    What a price to pay
    I'm cryin'
    Ooh, baby, baby
    Ooh, baby, baby
    Mistakes, I know I've made a few
    But I'm only human
    You've made mistakes too
    I'm cryin'
    Ooh, baby, baby
    Ooh, baby, baby
    I'm just about at the end of my rope
    But I can't stop tryin', I can't give up hope
    'Cause I feel that one day I'll hold you near
    Whisper, "I still love you"
    Until that day is here
    I'm cryin'
    Ooh, baby, baby
    Ooh, baby, baby
    Ooh-ooh, baby, baby
    Oo-hoo-ooh, baby, baby
    Ooh-ooh

    ReplyDelete
  2. I picture a plaintive, regret-filled Musk crooning the Chicago classic:

    “If you leave me now, you’ll take away the biggest part of me
    Ooh ooh ooh no Donald please don’t go
    And if you leave me now, you’ll take away the very heart of me
    Ooh ooh ooh no Donald please don’t go

    A love like ours is love that’s hard to find
    How could we let it slip away?
    We’ve come too far to leave it all behind
    How could we end it all this way?
    When tomorrow comes and we both regret
    The things we said today…..

    ReplyDelete
  3. Another one from Jon Gell, M.D.

    Bread Everything I Own 1972

    You sheltered me from harm
    Kept me warm, kept me warm
    You gave my life to me
    Set me free, set me free
    The finest years I ever knew
    Were all the years I had with you
    And I would give anything I own
    I'd give up my life, my heart, my home
    I would give everything I own
    Just to have you back again
    You taught me how to love
    What it's of, what it's of
    You never said too much
    But still you showed the way
    And I knew from watching you
    Nobody else could ever know
    The part of me that can't let go
    And I would give anything I own
    I'd give up my life, my heart, my home
    I would give everything I own
    Just to have you back again
    Is there someone you know
    Your loving them so
    But taking them all for granted?
    You may lose them one day
    Someone takes them away
    And they don't hear the words you long to say
    I would give anything I own
    I'd give up my life, my heart, my home
    I would give everything I own
    Just to have you back again
    Just to touch you once again

    ReplyDelete
  4. "You had your way, now you must pay. I'm glad that you're sorry now."

    Connie Francis: "Who's Sorry Now?" 1958. To a dwindling few of us, the '50's were the golden age of music. :)

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  5. "Sideshow" by Blue Magic, released in 1974

    ReplyDelete
  6. "The End of the World" sung by Sketter Davis, released in 1962.

    "It ended when I lost your love"

    ReplyDelete
  7. Yeah, End of the world. Even sadder, even more desperate. Better choice, in hindsight. Yeah.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Tyrone Davis, "Can I Change My Mind?"
    Harry Truman said, "If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog."

    ReplyDelete
  9. Musk still has a bruised ego that Trump should be wary of hurting too much. America’s party is his latest salvo and is the equivalent of going to a new better girl.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Add to playlist:
    The Tears of a Clown, Smokey Robinson & The Miracles in 1970

    ReplyDelete
  11. "The Way We Were" sung by Barbra Streisand, 1973

    ReplyDelete
  12. Or my favorite country lyric: "If the phone don't ring, baby, you'll know it's me."

    ReplyDelete
  13. Or another country lyric: "I gave her a ring; she gave me the finger."

    ReplyDelete
  14. I’m partial to ELO’s Telephone Line

    Hello, how are you?
    Have you been alright through all those lonely, lonely, lonely, lonely
    Lonely nights? That's what I'd say
    I'd tell you everything if you'd pick up that telephone
    Yeah, yeah, yeah
    Hey, how ya feelin'?
    Are you still the same? Don't you realise the things we did, we did
    Were all for real? Not a dream
    I just can't believe they've all faded out of view
    Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
    Ooh-woo-ooh-ooh-ooh-ooh
    Doo-wop, doo-be-doo-doo-wop, doo-wah, doo-lang
    Blue days, black nights, doo-wah, doo-lang
    I look into the sky (the love you need ain't gonna see you through)
    And I wonder why (the little things you planned ain't coming true)
    Oh, oh, telephone line, give me some time
    I'm living in twilight
    Oh, oh, telephone line, give me some time
    I'm living in twilight
    Okay, so no one's answering
    Well, can't you just let it ring a little longer, longer, longer? Oh
    I'll just sit tight, in shadows of the night
    Let it ring forevermore, oh-whoa

    ReplyDelete


  15. Songs about lost love are cute, but this was never about anything remotely resembling love. Neither of these guys have the capacity for love beyond themselves. The more appropriate songs for these guys are more like gangsta rap about betrayal and retribution, with lyrics that would make Curt blush.

    Musk is brilliant in so many ways but he completely miscalculated the brief and fragile shelf life of Trump’s conditional “love” for him.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This is "Easy Sunday." Take a short break from the nightmare.

      Delete
    2. Facts are facts whether you like them or not. John C is right on.

      Delete

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