Some songs just defy explanation. And some songs, particularly classic rock songs from the 1980s, are intentionally ambiguous in their true meanings. Letโs look at a few songs that arenโt super clear on theme or reason but are still excellent tracks worth revisiting today.
โUnder 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 itโs 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
Videos by American Songwriter
Steve Kilbey, the writer of โUnder The Milky Wayโ, said that when writing the song with Curious (Yellow) member Karin Jansson, he โsmoked 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 songโs meaning, instead opting to say he โstumbledโ upon it.
โFor some reason it has struck this wonderful sense of universality with people that most of my songs don’t,โ said Kilbey.
โDancing 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 โDancing With Myselfโ can be interpreted in one of two ways. Either itโs about m*sterbation, or itโs about social alienation in the age of club culture.
Fans still go back and forth on this Generation X songโs 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 songโs alleged dirtier meaning. Who knows?
โBring On The Dancing Horsesโ by Echo & The Bunnymen (1985)
โBring 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 havenโt been broken down by the bandโs frontman, Ian McCulloch. Rather, he said that when he writes songs, โthe 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 โBring On The Dancing Horsesโ is a โromanticโ song, โnot in a wishy-washy way, but in a big powerful way.”
That doesnโt reveal very much, though, and fans continue to pick this dreamy alt-rock song apart today.
Photo by Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images
