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No Matter How Many Times We Listen, We Cannot Make Out the Meanings of These 3 Classic Rock Songs From the 1980s

Some songs just defy explanation. And some songs, particularly classic rock songs from the 1980s, are intentionally ambiguous in their true meanings. Letโ€™s look at a few songs that arenโ€™t super clear on theme or reason but are still excellent tracks worth revisiting today.

โ€œUnder The Milky Wayโ€ by The Church (1988)

This dreamy neo-psychedelia track from 1988 is a favorite among fans of the genre. And it has been the subject of quite a bit of interpretation. Some think itโ€™s about drugs (what a shocker). Others believe it might be a love song about the one who got away, or even a spiritual experience.ย 

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Steve Kilbey, the writer of โ€œUnder The Milky Wayโ€, said that when writing the song with Curious (Yellow) member Karin Jansson, he โ€œsmoked a j*int and started playing the piano and she came in the room and we just made it up.โ€ A press release from the time stated that the song was named after a Dutch music venue that Kilbey spent time at. In more recent years, Kilbey has not elaborated on the songโ€™s meaning, instead opting to say he โ€œstumbledโ€ upon it.

โ€œFor some reason it has struck this wonderful sense of universality with people that most of my songs don’t,โ€ said Kilbey.

โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ by Generation X (1980)

This jam from Billy Idol has always had a little bit of controversy around it. The dance-rock punk song โ€œDancing With Myselfโ€ can be interpreted in one of two ways. Either itโ€™s about m*sterbation, or itโ€™s about social alienation in the age of club culture. 

Fans still go back and forth on this Generation X songโ€™s true meaning. However, Idol and co-writer Tony James have said that they were inspired to write the song after witnessing several Tokyo club attendees dancing with their own reflections on the mirrored walls of a Japanese club. Though, that could be a cover for the songโ€™s alleged dirtier meaning. Who knows?

โ€œBring On The Dancing Horsesโ€ by Echo & The Bunnymen (1985)

โ€œBring On The Dancing Horsesโ€ by Echo & The Bunnymen remains one of the most ambiguous rock songs of the 1980s, and the more in-depth meanings behind the song havenโ€™t been broken down by the bandโ€™s frontman, Ian McCulloch. Rather, he said that when he writes songs, โ€œthe words tend to come first and the meaning later.โ€ Though, he did admit in a print interview with Number One Magazine in 1985 that โ€œBring On The Dancing Horsesโ€ is a โ€œromanticโ€ song, โ€œnot in a wishy-washy way, but in a big powerful way.” 

That doesnโ€™t reveal very much, though, and fans continue to pick this dreamy alt-rock song apart today.

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