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5 Epic Songs from Rock Artists Not Known for Epic Songs

Itโ€™s well-documented that our attention spans are getting shorter, and as it turns out, so are our songs. The average length of pop songs is on the wane, and thatโ€™s bad news for those of us who like our music to take its time to develop. Itโ€™s always special when we come across a song that has an epic scope, and those may become increasingly scarce.

What makes a song feel โ€œepic?” It needs to be long enough so that it has time to build up, but being longer than a typical hit song isnโ€™t enough on its own. It needs to encompass a variety of tempos and feels in the service of creating dramatic tension. This definition would exclude songs with extended jams, like Oasisโ€™ โ€œSlide Awayโ€ or Sleater-Kinneyโ€™s โ€œLetโ€™s Call It Love,โ€ as well as songs like Blondieโ€™s โ€œRaptureโ€ or Simon and Garfunkelโ€™s โ€œThe Boxer,โ€ which use their length to keep a groove going more than for heightening drama.

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On the other hand, songs like Queenโ€™s โ€œBohemian Rhapsody,โ€ Don McLeanโ€™s โ€œAmerican Pie,โ€ and Lynyrd Skynyrdโ€™s โ€œFree Bird,โ€ not to mention numerous songs by progressive rock bands like Pink Floyd, Yes, and Genesis, absolutely qualify as epic. However, these songs have become a defining part of their artistsโ€™ respective legacies. But there are plenty of songs like these made by rock artists who are much better known for straightforward compositions. Each of the five songs featured here show that being a hitmaker doesnโ€™t mean you canโ€™t create something truly epic.

1. Elton John, โ€œFuneral for a Friend / Love Lies Bleedingโ€

With songs like โ€œLevonโ€ and โ€œBurn Down the Mission,โ€ John established early in his recording career that he could write songs that felt grand and monumental. However, prior to the 1973 release of the double album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, he had yet to create anything that had the sweeping scope of โ€œFuneral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding.โ€

Just the โ€œFuneral for a Friendโ€ instrumental alone has a cinematic quality, and itโ€™s hardly surprising, given that John was writing music he would have wanted at his own funeral. To get from โ€œFuneralโ€โ€™s haunting feel to the angry guitar-led charge of โ€œLove Lies Bleeding,โ€ John takes his listeners through different tempos and styles, making this 11-minute track a true emotional journey.

2. Creedence Clearwater Revival, โ€œRamble Tambleโ€

CCR is best-known for their compact swamp-rock ditties and extended jams, like the ones on their covers of โ€œSuzie Qโ€ and โ€œHeard It Through the Grapevine.โ€ For those who are only familiar with the bandโ€™s most popular songs, hearing โ€œRamble Tambleโ€ for the first time is a revelation.

Its first minute-and-a-half holds no surprises, sounding like a typical CCR song. Then it slows down and evolves into a Cream-like jam, which eventually serves as the backdrop for a soaring, melodic John Fogerty guitar solo that slowly builds in intensity. Then for the final minute-and-a-half, the band returns to the songโ€™s original melody. โ€œRamble Tambleโ€ shows a different side to a band that we all thought we knew well. Itโ€™s such a departure that it will profoundly change the way you think about them.

3. Pearl Jam, โ€œBlackโ€

Part of what can make a song feel epic is if it can build to a dramatic climax that you never saw coming. Thatโ€™s what Pearl Jam achieves with this song from their debut album, Ten. โ€œBlackโ€ is hardly the only song on Ten that builds to an anthemic conclusion; โ€Jeremyโ€ and โ€œGardenโ€ achieve this as well.

But on โ€œBlack,โ€ Pearl Jam keeps shifting into higher gears during their final buildup, just when you think there isnโ€™t another gear left. Youโ€™d think there’s no way for the band to create more emotional tension than Eddie Vedder does when he sings, I know someday youโ€™ll have a beautiful life / I know youโ€™ll be a star in somebody elseโ€™s sky, but he and Pearl Jam are just getting started here. The 100 seconds of outro that follow just keeps building and building, creating an impact that is unlike anything found in Pearl Jamโ€™s other hits.

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4. Weezer, โ€œOnly in Dreamsโ€

The songโ€™s mellow 50-second intro provides the setup for this slow-building closer to Weezerโ€™s Blue Album. Their transitions from quiet verses to loud, crunchy choruses is hardly unique for a Weezer song, but when the song goes quiet again after it feels like itโ€™s about to end four-and-a-half minutes in, the listener is in for something different.

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โ€œOnly in Dreamsโ€ actually hits its quietest point at the beginning of this extended instrumental section, but because the song starts off slowly, this pacing doesnโ€™t feel the slightest bit awkward. Still, Weezer isnโ€™t done with the song at this point, as it heats up for one more climax before winding down for the final time. It finishes with only the bass left playing.

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5. Foo Fighters, โ€œThe Teacherโ€

The Foo Fighters have made some longer, sprawling songs, and with the title track from their 2017 album, Concrete and Gold, Dave Grohl was consciously going for a bigger-than-life sound. By and large, though, the Foosโ€™ best-known works are their four-minute radio-friendly rockers. On their 2023 album, But Here We Are, they released their most dynamic and moving song to date, the 10-minute opus โ€œThe Teacher.โ€

Dedicated to Grohlโ€™s mother, who died in 2022, the song rocks hard for most of its first five-plus minutes, which includes two false endings. Then the sound starts anew, quietly and with a more melancholy melody, before moving into its fiery finale, in which Grohlโ€™s screams of โ€œgoodbyeโ€ are eventually overtaken by guitar distortion. This raw and moving tribute is the highlight of an album that is notable for Grohlโ€™s nuanced processing of grief for both his mother and his longtime bandmate, drummer Taylor Hawkins, who also died in 2022.

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