List of songs that retell a work of literature

This is a list of songs that retell, in whole or in part, a work of literature. Albums listed here consist entirely of songs retelling a work of literature.

Albums

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Album Musical artist Literary work Author Comments Citations
An Alien Heat, The Hollow Lands, and The End Of All Songs - Part 1 Spirits Burning & Michael Moorcock The Dancers at the End of Time Michael Moorcock Three albums covering the three books of the trilogy.
The Black Halo Kamelot Faust Johann Wolfgang von Goethe The Black Halo is a concept album based on Faust, Part Two. It is a follow-up to Epica, which was based on Faust, Part One. [1]
Cacophony Rudimentary Peni Various works of H. P. Lovecraft H. P. Lovecraft All 30 tracks are related to Lovecraft or his work. [2]
The Chronicle of the Black Sword Hawkwind Various works of Michael Moorcock Michael Moorcock Based on aspects of the works of Moorcock, including Elric and Jerry Cornelius. Moorcock, who has appeared with the band on numerous occasions, does the narration on Live Chronicles. [3][4][5]
Dust and Dreams Camel The Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck [6]
Epica Kamelot Faust Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Epica is a concept album based on Faust, Part One. It was followed by The Black Halo, which was based on Faust, Part Two. [1]
The House of Atreus Act I and The House of Atreus Act II Virgin Steele Oresteia Aeschylus Two-part concept album based loosely on the Oresteia of Aeschylus [7]
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds Jeff Wayne The War of the Worlds H.G. Wells [8]
I Robot The Alan Parsons Project I, Robot Isaac Asimov [9]
Journey to the Centre of the Earth Rick Wakeman Journey to the Centre of the Earth Jules Verne [10]
Leviathan Mastodon Moby-Dick Herman Melville [11][12][13][14][15]
La Leyenda de la Mancha Mägo de Oz Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes [16]
The Machine Stops Hawkwind "The Machine Stops" E. M. Forster [17][5]
Moby Dick or The Whale Caleb Hayashida Moby-Dick Herman Melville Concept album from written from the perspective of various characters in the novel [18][19]
Music Inspired by The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe The Chronicles of Narnia C. S. Lewis [20]
Seventh Son of a Seventh Son Iron Maiden Seventh Son Orson Scott Card [21]
Shakespeare's Macbeth – A Tragedy in Steel Rebellion Macbeth William Shakespeare [22]
Smallcreeps's Day Mike Rutherford Smallcreep's Day Peter Currell Brown [23]
The Snow Goose Camel The Snow Goose: A Story of Dunkirk Paul Gallico [24]
The Songs of Distant Earth Mike Oldfield The Songs of Distant Earth Arthur C. Clarke [25]
Tales of Mystery and Imagination The Alan Parsons Project Various works of Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Allan Poe [26][27]
A Tragedy in Steel Part II: Shakespeare's King Lear Rebellion King Lear William Shakespeare [28]

Songs

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Song Album Musical artist Literary work Author Comments Citations
"7th Step" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter One Deborah Pardes Angela's Ashes Frank McCourt [29]
"40" War U2 The 40th Psalm of the Book of Psalms from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament [30]
"1984" Diamond Dogs David Bowie Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell One of several songs that Bowie wrote about Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four; Bowie had also hoped to produce a televised musical based on the book. [31]
"2112" 2112 Rush Anthem Ayn Rand Song shares themes with the novel, such that Neil Peart recognized Rand in the album's liner notes. [32]
"Abigail" Creatures Motionless in White The Crucible Arthur Miller [33]
"Achilles, Agony and Ecstasy in Eight Parts" The Triumph of Steel Manowar The Iliad Homer A retelling of the fight between Hector and Achilles [34]
"Adam's Apple" Toys in the Attic Aerosmith The Book of Genesis from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament Retells the biblical story of the Fall of man through the perspective of Adam and Eve's discovery of their own sexuality. [35]
"Afternoons and Coffeespoons" God Shuffled His Feet Crash Test Dummies "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" T.S. Eliot Adapts elements of the T. S. Eliot poem. [36]
"Ahab" The Graduate MC Lars Moby-Dick Herman Melville Retells the story of Moby-Dick from the perspective of Captain Ahab. [37]
"Alice" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Go Ask Alice Beatrice Sparks [38][39]
"All I Wanna Do" Tuesday Night Music Club Sheryl Crow "Fun" Wyn Cooper [40]
"All Is Not Well" The Thing That Feels Hannah Fury Wicked Gregory Maguire [41]
"All Nightmare Long" Death Magnetic Metallica "The Hounds of Tindalos" Frank Belknap Long [42][43]
"All Quiet On The Western Front" Jump Up! Elton John All Quiet on the Western Front Erich Maria Remarque [44]
"Alone" Acoustic Verses Green Carnation Alone Edgar Allan Poe [45]
"Among the Living" Among the Living Anthrax The Stand Stephen King [46][47]
"The Ancient Ones" Blessed Are the Sick Morbid Angel The Call of Cthulhu H. P. Lovecraft Based on The Call of Cthulhu, as well as the rest of the Cthulhu Mythos. An earlier version of this song, named "Azagthoth", appeared on the band's demo album, Abominations of Desolation. [43]
"And Your Little Dog Too" The Thing That Feels Hannah Fury Wicked Gregory Maguire [41]
"Animal in Man" Let's Get Free dead prez Animal Farm George Orwell [48]
"Anthem" Fly by Night Rush Anthem Ayn Rand Loosely based on the Rand novel; The band would produce a fuller version in 2112. [32]
"The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins" Two Sides of Leonard Nimoy Leonard Nimoy The Hobbit J. R. R. Tolkien [49][50]
"The Ballad of Poker Alice" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two Larry Kenneth Potts Nothing Like It in the World Stephen Ambrose Relates the story of "Poker" Alice Ivers [51]
"The Ballad of Skip Wiley" Barometer Soup Jimmy Buffett Tourist Season Carl Hiaasen A song about the character Skip Wiley from Hiaasen's 1986 novel. [52]
"Banana Co." Radiohead One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel García Márquez [53][54]
"Las Batallas" Café Tacuba Café Tacuba Las batallas en el desierto José Emilio Pacheco [55]
"The Battle of Evermore" Led Zeppelin IV Led Zeppelin The Lord of the Rings J. R. R. Tolkien [56][50]
"Behind the Wall of Sleep" Black Sabbath Black Sabbath "Beyond the Wall of Sleep" H. P. Lovecraft [57][58][43]
"Bernice Bobs Her Hair" Liberation The Divine Comedy Bernice Bobs Her Hair F. Scott Fitzgerald [59]
"Big Brother" Diamond Dogs David Bowie Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell One of several songs that Bowie wrote about Orwell. [31]
"Billy Liar" Her Majesty the Decemberists The Decemberists Billy Liar Keith Waterhouse [60]
"Birthing Addicts" Unreleased Melanie Martinez Go Ask Alice Beatrice Sparks [61]
"Black Blade" Cultösaurus Erectus Blue Öyster Cult Elric of Melniboné Michael Moorcock [62]
"Black Corridor" Space Ritual Hawkwind The Black Corridor Michael Moorcock [63][4]
"Bloodbath & Beyond" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Dracula Bram Stoker [38][39]
"Bob's Country" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two Deborah Pardes Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight Alexandra Fuller [51]
"Brave New World" Brave New World Iron Maiden Brave New World Aldous Huxley [64]
"The Call of Ktulu" Ride the Lightning Metallica The Call of Cthulhu H. P. Lovecraft "Written from the point of view of the sea nymph who helps Odysseus after he is shipwrecked." [57][58][42]
"Calypso" Solitude Standing Suzanne Vega The Odyssey Homer [65]
"The Cask Of Amontillado" Tales of Mystery and Imagination The Alan Parsons Project "The Cask of Amontillado" Edgar Allan Poe [26][27]
"Cassandra" ABBA The Iliad Homer [66]
"Catcher in the Rye" Distortland The Dandy Warhols The Catcher in the Rye J. D. Salinger [67]
"Cent'anni di solitudine" Terra e libertà Modena City Ramblers One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel García Márquez [54]
"Chapter 24" The Piper at the Gates of Dawn Pink Floyd I Ching [68]
"Chapter Four" Waking the Fallen Avenged Sevenfold The Book of Genesis from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament The title refers to the fourth chapter of Genesis. [69]
"Charlotte Sometimes" Faith The Cure Charlotte Sometimes Penelope Farmer [70][71][72][73][74][75]
"Child of the Jago" The Future Is Medieval Kaiser Chiefs A Child of the Jago Arthur Morrison [76]
"Children of the Damned" The Number of the Beast Iron Maiden Midwich Cuckoos John Wyndham Also based on two of the film adaptations of that book: Village of the Damned and Children of the Damned [77][78]
"Christabel" No Kinda Dancer Robert Earl Keen Christabel Samuel Taylor Coleridge [79]
"Cometh Down Hessian" Blessed Black Wings High on Fire "The Hound" H. P. Lovecraft [2]
"Communion of the Cursed" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills The Exorcist William Peter Blatty [38][39]
"Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)" Fully Completely The Tragically Hip The Watch That Ends the Night Hugh MacLennan [80]
"Crown of Creation" Crown of Creation Jefferson Airplane The Chrysalids John Wyndham [81]
"Curse of Athena" Atavism The Lord Weird Slough Feg The Odyssey Homer About Odysseus's return to Ithaca. [82]
"Dalai Lama" Reise, Reise Rammstein Erlkönig Johann Wolfgang von Goethe [83]
"Damnation Alley" Quark, Strangeness and Charm Hawkwind Damnation Alley Roger Zelazny [63][5]
"Dante's Inferno" Burnt Offerings Iced Earth Inferno Dante Alighieri [84]
"The Dark Eternal Night" Systematic Chaos Dream Theater "Nyarlathotep" H. P. Lovecraft [58]
"The Dawn of a New Age" Nemesis Divina Satyricon The Book of Revelation from the Christian New Testament [85]
"Dead" Doolittle Pixies The Book of Samuel from the Hebrew Bible; II Samuel from the Christian Old Testament Refurbishes the biblical legend of David and Bathsheba. [86]
"Dixieland" The Mountain Steve Earle & The Del McCoury Band The Killer Angels Michael Shaara [51]
"Don Quixote" Don Quixote Gordon Lightfoot Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes [87]
"Doublespeak" Beggars Thrice Nineteen-Eighty-Four George Orwell [88]
"The Drowning Man" Faith The Cure Gormenghast Mervyn Peake [89]
"Dunwich" Witchcult Today Electric Wizard "The Dunwich Horror" H. P. Lovecraft [57]
"Edema Ruh" Endless Forms Most Beautiful Nightwish The Kingkiller Chronicle Patrick Rothfuss [90]
"Einstein's Brain" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter One Lynn Harrison Driving Mr. Albert Michael Paterniti [29]
"Elvenpath" Angels Fall First Nightwish The Lord of the Rings J. R. R. Tolkien [91]
"End of the Night" The Doors The Doors Journey to the End of the Night Louis-Ferdinand Céline [92]
"Envoi" Absynthe Minded Absynthe Minded "Envoi" Hugo Claus [93]
"Eumaeus the Swineherd" Atavism The Lord Weird Slough Feg The Odyssey Homer [82]
"Eveline" Why Should the Fire Die? Nickel Creek Eveline James Joyce [94]
"Exit Music (For a Film)" OK Computer Radiohead Romeo & Juliet William Shakespeare [95]
"Fable" Volcano Gatsbys American Dream Lord of the Flies William Golding [96]
"Flower of the Mountain" Director's Cut Kate Bush Ulysses James Joyce The 1989 Kate Bush song The Sensual World was based on the closing paragraphs of Ulysses. However, the Joyce estate was unwilling to allow direct use of Joyce's words at that time, so she altered the lyrics. By 2011, the Joyce estate was open to licensing his work to her, so she re-worked that song as Flower of the Mountain, using Molly Bloom's soliloquy from Ulysses. [97][98][99]
"For Whom the Bell Tolls" Ride the Lightning Metallica For Whom the Bell Tolls Ernest Hemingway [42]
"Frankenstein" Horror Show Iced Earth Frankenstein Mary Shelley [100]
"Franz Kafka" Scäb The Metamorphosis Franz Kafka A fictional rock opera by the fictional band Scäb from the cartoon series Home Movies. [101]
"From the Underworld" Paradise Lost The Herd Myth of Orpheus and Eurydice Loosely based on the Greek legend of Orpheus and Eurydice [102]
"The Future Is Now" Days Go By The Offspring Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell [103]
"The Ghost of Tom Joad" The Ghost of Tom Joad Bruce Springsteen The Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck [60][104]
"The Giant's Laughter" Vansinnesvisor Thyrfing "Jätten" Esaias Tegner [105]
"Golden Hair" The Madcap Laughs Syd Barrett "Golden Hair" James Joyce [98]
"Grandpa's Groove" Parov Stelar The Old Man and the Sea Ernest Hemingway [106][107]
"Grendel" Marillion Grendel John Gardner A retelling of John Gardner's 1971 novel Grendel, which is a retelling of Beowulf. [108]
"Hallelujah" Various Positions Leonard Cohen The Book of Samuel from the Hebrew Bible; II Samuel from the Christian Old Testament Based on the biblical story of David and Bathsheba. It also incorporates elements of the story of Samson and Delilah [86]
"Haunted" Haunted Poe House of Leaves Mark Danielewski "Haunted" by Poe and the novel House of Leaves by her brother, Mark Danielewski, both draw heavily on their difficult experiences growing up with their father, Tad Danielewski. [109][110]
"He Can't Come Today" The Golden Scarab Ray Manzarek Waiting for Godot Samuel Beckett [29][111]
"Hedda Gabler" Animal Justice John Cale Hedda Gabler Henrik Ibsen [112]
"Hell in the Hallways" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Carrie Stephen King [113][38][39]
"Hey (rise of the robots)" Black and White The Stranglers I, Robot Isaac Asimov [114]
"Hey Ahab" The Union Elton John & Leon Russell Moby-Dick Herman Melville Based on the character Captain Ahab. [115]
"Hey There Ophelia" This Gigantic Robot Kills MC Lars Hamlet William Shakespeare [116]
"High Rise" PXR5 Hawkwind High-Rise J. G. Ballard [63][5]
"Home at Last" Aja Steely Dan The Odyssey Homer Retells Ulysses' encounter with the Sirens. [117]
"Horrorshow" Scars A Clockwork Orange Anthony Burgess [118]
"House at Pooh Corner" Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy Nitty Gritty Dirt Band The House at Pooh Corner A. A. Milne This song, written by Kenny Loggins, was later performed by Loggins and Messina on their 1971 album Sittin' In. In 1994, Loggins added additional lyrics and re-recorded it with Amy Grant as Return to Pooh Corner for his album Return to Pooh Corner. [119][120]
"House of Leaves" Juturna Circa Survive House of Leaves Mark Danielewski [121]
"How Beautiful You Are" Kiss Me, Kiss Me, Kiss Me The Cure "Les Yeux des Pauvres" Charles Baudelaire [122]
"Hug Me til You Drug Me" Here, Here and Here Meg & Dia Brave New World Aldous Huxley [123]
"I Can't Let You In" The Thing That Feels Hannah Fury Wicked Gregory Maguire [41]
"I Robot" U.K. Subs I, Robot Isaac Asimov [118]
"In Every Dream Home a Heartache" For Your Pleasure Roxy Music "Dead As They Come" Ian McEwan [124]
"In Like a Lion (Always Winter)" Apathetic EP Relient K The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe C. S. Lewis [125]
"The Inner Light" The Beatles Tao Te Ching [126]
"The Insect God" The Insect God Monks of Doom The Insect God Edward Gorey [127]
"The Iron Dream" Quark, Strangeness and Charm Hawkwind The Iron Dream Norman Spinrad [63]
"It Was Her House That Killed Nessarose" The Thing That Feels Hannah Fury Wicked Gregory Maguire [41]
"Jack of Shadows" Hawkwind Jack of Shadows Roger Zelazny [63][5]
"Jamaica Inn" The Beekeeper Tori Amos Jamaica Inn Daphne du Maurier [128]
"Jean Val Jean" Edison Glass Les Misérables Victor Hugo [129]
"Killing an Arab" The Cure The Stranger Albert Camus [130][60][75]
"Land" Horses Patti Smith The Wild Boys William S. Burroughs [118][131]
"The Last Temptation of Odysseus" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter One Justin Wells The Odyssey Homer [29]
"Lay Down" Bursting at the Seams Strawbs The 23rd Psalm of the Book of Psalms from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament [132]
"The Legend of Enoch Arden" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter One Diane Zeigler "The Legend of Enoch Arden" Alfred Lord Tennyson [29]
"Let it Show" The Thing That Feels Hannah Fury Wicked Gregory Maguire [41]
"Listen (The Silences)" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two Michelle Bloom Raids on the Unspeakable Thomas Merton [51]
"Lolita" The Black Magic Show Elefant Lolita Vladimir Nabokov [133]
"The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner" Somewhere in Time Iron Maiden The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner Alan Sillitoe [134]
"The Longest Day" A Matter of Life and Death Iron Maiden The Longest Day Cornelius Ryan [135]
"Lord of Light" Doremi Fasol Latido Hawkwind Lord of Light Roger Zelazny [63][5]
"Lord of the Flies" The X Factor Iron Maiden Lord of the Flies William Golding [136]
"Lost Boy" Ruth B Peter Pan J. M. Barrie [137]
"Love and Death" Dream Harder The Waterboys Love and Death William Butler Yeats [138]
"Love and Destroy" Franz Ferdinand The Master and Margarita Mikhail Bulgakov [139]
"Lucy" Liberation The Divine Comedy The Lucy poems William Wordsworth [59][140]
"The Machine Stops" Standing in the Light Level 42 "The Machine Stops" E. M. Forster [5]
"Macondo" Óscar Chávez One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel García Márquez Based on the fictional town Macondo, used by Marquez in One Hundred Years of Solitude and other of his works. [54]
"Martin Eden" Billie Hughes Martin Eden Jack London [141]
"Magnu" Warrior on the Edge of Time Hawkwind "Hymn of Apollo" Percy Bysshe Shelley [142]
"Matilda" Harry's House Harry Styles Matilda Roald Dahl [143]
"Me, Myself & Hyde" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Robert Louis Stevenson [38][39]
"The Melting Point of Wax" The Artist in the Ambulance Thrice Myth of Icarus Retells the story of The Fall of Icarus [144]
"Misery Loves Company" State of Euphoria Anthrax Misery Stephen King [145]
"Moi... Lolita" Gourmandises Alizée Lolita Vladimir Nabokov [146]
"Moon over Bourbon Street" The Dream of the Blue Turtles Sting Interview with the Vampire Anne Rice About the character Louis de Pointe du Lac. [147]
"Mr. Raven" MC Lars "The Raven" Edgar Allan Poe [148]
"The Mule" Fireball Deep Purple Foundation series Isaac Asimov Based on the character "The Mule" from the Foundation series. [149]
"Murders in the Rue Morgue" Killers Iron Maiden "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" Edgar Allan Poe [150][78]
"My Antonia" Red Dirt Girl Emmylou Harris with Dave Matthews My Antonia Willa Cather Told from the perspective of the character Jim Burden. [104]
"Narcissist" The Libertines The Libertines The Picture of Dorian Gray Oscar Wilde Loosely based on the character of Dorian Gray. [151]
"Narnia" Please Don't Touch! Steve Hackett The Chronicles of Narnia C. S. Lewis [152]
"The Nature of the Beast" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Animal Farm George Orwell [153][38][39]
"The Necromancer" Caress of Steel Rush The Hobbit J. R. R. Tolkien [50]
"Nescio" Omsk Nits De uitvreter Nescio Song is mainly inspired by the novella's ending, when protagonist Japi jumps off the Waalbrug. In the song, however, Japi does not drown but is implied to have ended up in Italy. [154]
"Nice, Nice, Very Nice" Ambrosia Ambrosia Cat's Cradle Kurt Vonnegut Lyrics taken almost verbatim from the poem in chapter 2 (and the bridge from the one on chapter 58) [155]
"No Love Lost" An Ideal for Living Joy Division The House of Dolls Ka-tzetnik 135633 [156]
"November Rain" Use Your Illusion I Guns N' Roses "Without You" Del James The video for "November Rain" is loosely based on the short story "Without You". Axl Rose wrote the introduction to James's 1995 collection The Language of Fear, which included "Without You". [157][158]
"The Odyssey" The Odyssey Symphony X The Odyssey Homer A seven-part song based on Homer's The Odyssey [159]
"Of Unsound Mind" Blessing in Disguise Metal Church "The Tell-Tale Heart" Edgar Allan Poe [150]
"Off to the Races" Born to Die Lana Del Rey Lolita Vladimir Nabokov [160]
"Ol' Evil Eye" Riddle Box Insane Clown Posse "The Tell-Tale Heart" Edgar Allan Poe [161][48]
"One" ...And Justice for All Metallica Johnny Got His Gun Dalton Trumbo [42]
"Oor Hamlet" The Words That I Used to Know Adam McNaughtan Hamlet William Shakespeare [162]
"Orestes" Mer de Noms A Perfect Circle The Libation Bearers Aeschylus [163]
"Owen Meaney" Let's Talk About Feelings Lagwagon A Prayer For Owen Meany John Irving [164]
"Ozymandias" Jean-Jacques Burnel "Ozymandias" Percy Bysshe Shelley [118]
"Pantagruel's Nativity" Acquiring the Taste Gentle Giant Gargantua and Pantagruel François Rabelais [165]
"Patrick Bateman" Manic Street Preachers American Psycho Bret Easton Ellis [166]
"Pattern Recognition" Sonic Nurse Sonic Youth Pattern Recognition William Gibson [167]
"Paula Ausente (Absent Paula)" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two Marta Gomez Paula Isabel Allende [51]
"Pennsylvania" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two Dee Adams Songmaster Orson Scott Card [51]
"Pennywise" Pennywise Pennywise It Stephen King About the character Pennywise. [118]
"The People in the Attic" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills The Diary of a Young Girl Anne Frank [38][39]
"Pet Sematary" Brain Drain Ramones Pet Sematary Stephen King [118]
"The Phantom of the Opera" Iron Maiden Iron Maiden The Phantom of the Opera Gaston Leroux [168]
"A Pict Song" William Bloke Billy Bragg "A Pict Song" Rudyard Kipling [118]
"The Plot Sickens" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors Piers Paul Read [38][39]
"Popular" High/Low Nada Surf Penny's Guide to Teen-Age Charm and Popularity Gloria Winters [169]
"Prince Caspian" Billy Breathes Phish Prince Caspian C. S. Lewis [170]
"Quelque chose de Tennessee" Rock'n'Roll Attitude Johnny Hallyday Cat on a Hot Tin Roof Tennessee Williams [171]
"Ramble On" Led Zeppelin II Led Zeppelin The Lord of the Rings J. R. R. Tolkien Mentions characters and places from Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, including "Mordor" and "Gollum". [53][104][50]
"Rebecca" Something Real Meg & Dia Rebecca Daphne du Maurier [172]
"ReJoyce" After Bathing at Baxter's Jefferson Airplane Ulysses James Joyce [98]
"Richard Cory" Sounds of Silence Paul Simon "Richard Cory" Edwin Arlington Robinson [173]
"Rime of the Ancient Mariner" Powerslave Iron Maiden The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Samuel Taylor Coleridge [174][175]
"Rivendell" Fly by Night Rush The Lord of the Rings J. R. R. Tolkien The song is about the fictional valley Rivendell from Tolkien's works. [176]
"The River" PJ Harvey The River Flannery O'Connor [177]
"Robot" Hawkwind The Robot series Isaac Asimov Refers to the Three Laws of Robotics. [178]
"Romeo and Juliet" Making Movies Dire Straits Romeo and Juliet William Shakespeare The Dire Straits songs makes use of certain aspects of Shakespeare's play, as well as elements of some of the play's stage and screen adaptations. It also purposely diverges from the play's plot and characterizations in certain respects (such as Juliet's reaction to being approached by Romeo). [179]
"Rusty James" ¡Uno! Green Day Rumble Fish S. E. Hinton The song is named for the protagonist of the novel. [118]
"Sailing to Philadelphia" Sailing to Philadelphia Mark Knopfler Mason & Dixon Thomas Pynchon [180]
"Saint Veronika" Billy Talent III Billy Talent Veronika Decides to Die Paulo Coelho [181]
"Samson" Songs
Begin to Hope
Regina Spektor The Book of Judges from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament References the biblical story of Samson and Delilah. [182]
"Scentless Apprentice" In Utero Nirvana Perfume: The Story of a Murderer Patrick Süskind [104]
"The Sensual World" The Sensual World Kate Bush Ulysses James Joyce The 1989 Kate Bush song The Sensual World was based on the closing paragraphs of Ulysses. However, the Joyce estate was unwilling to allow direct use of Joyce's words at that time, so she altered the lyrics. By 2011, the Joyce estate was open to licensing his work to her, so she re-worked that song as Flower of the Mountain, using Molly Bloom's soliloquy from Ulysses. [97][98][99]
"Shadows and Tall Trees" Boy U2 Lord of the Flies William Golding [183]
"Sigh No More" Sigh No More Mumford and Sons Much Ado About Nothing William Shakespeare [184]
"Sirens of Titan" Modern Times Al Stewart The Sirens of Titan Kurt Vonnegut [185]
"A Skeleton in the Closet" Among the Living Anthrax Apt Pupil Stephen King [46]
"So Said Kay" Coastal The Field Mice Desert of the Heart Ann Rule The song is based on Donna Deitch's 1985 film Desert Hearts, which is an adaptation of Rule's novel. [186]
"Soma" Is This It The Strokes Brave New World Aldous Huxley Refers to the fictional drug used in Brave New World. [187]
"Song For Clay" A Weekend in the City Bloc Party Less than Zero Bret Easton Ellis [53]
"The Stand (Prophecy)" Declaration The Alarm The Stand Stephen King [188]
"Star-Crossed Enemies" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Romeo and Juliet William Shakespeare [38][39]
"Steppenwolf" Astounding Sounds, Amazing Music Hawkwind Steppenwolf Herman Hesse [63]
"Still Life" Piece of Mind Iron Maiden "The Inhabitant of the Lake" Ramsey Campbell [189]
"The Stranger" Tuxedomoon The Stranger Albert Camus [190]
"Such a Shame" It's My Life Talk Talk The Dice Man Luke Rhinehart [191]
"Sweet Thursday" Songs We Sing Matt Costa Sweet Thursday John Steinbeck [192]
"Sympathy for the Devil" Beggars Banquet The Rolling Stones The Master and Margarita Mikhail Bulgakov [53][139][104]
"The Tain" The Tain The Decemberists "Táin Bó Cúailnge" [193]
"Tales of Brave Ulysses" Disraeli Gears Cream The Odyssey Homer [104]
"Tea in the Sahara" Synchronicity The Police The Sheltering Sky Paul Bowles King Crimson also has an instrumental called "The Sheltering Sky", named for the same book.[194] [195]
"Tell Your Story Walking" A Bird Flies Out Deb Talan Motherless Brooklyn Jonathan Lethem [196][197]
"Tess-Timony" Every Trick in the Book Ice Nine Kills Tess of the d'Urbervilles Thomas Hardy [38][39]
"Thieves in the Night" Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star Black Star The Bluest Eye Toni Morrison Talib Kweli wrote in the album's liner notes that The Bluest Eye "...struck me as one of the truest critiques of our society, and I read that in high school when I was 15 years old. I think it is especially true in the world of hip-hop, because we get blinded by these illusions." [48]
"The Thing That Should Not Be" Master of Puppets Metallica The Call of Cthulhu H. P. Lovecraft [42]
"Three Sisters" Liberation The Divine Comedy Three Sisters Anton Chekhov [59]
"Time to Dance" Panic! at the Disco Invisible Monsters Chuck Palahniuk [198]
"To Tame a Land" Piece of Mind Iron Maiden Dune Frank Herbert [53]
"tolerate it" Evermore Taylor Swift Rebecca Daphne du Maurier [199]
"The Tomahawk Kid" Alex Harvey Treasure Island Robert Louis Stevenson [200]
"Tread Softly" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter Two Eileen Laverty "He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven" W. B. Yeats [51]
"The Trooper" Piece of Mind Iron Maiden "The Charge of the Light Brigade" Alfred, Lord Tennyson [201][175]
"Turn! Turn! Turn!" Pete Seeger The Book of Ecclesiastes from the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament Notably covered by The Byrds; Takes its lyrics from chapter three of the Book of Ecclesiastes [202]
"T'Was Her Hunger Brought Me Down" Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter One Anny Celsi Sister Carrie Theodore Dreiser [29]
"United States of Eurasia" The Resistance Muse Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell [203]
"The Veldt" Album Title Goes Here Deadmau5 The Veldt Ray Bradbury [204]
"Venus in Furs" The Velvet Underground & Nico The Velvet Underground Venus in Furs Leopold von Sacher-Masoch [60]
"Walking on the Chinese Wall" Chinese Wall Philip Bailey Dream of the Red Chamber Cao Xueqin [205]
"We Are the Dead" Diamond Dogs David Bowie Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell One of several songs Bowie wrote about Nineteen Eighty-Four [53][31]
"When the War Came" The Decemberists Hunger Elise Blackwell [206]
"White Rabbit" Surrealistic Pillow Jefferson Airplane Alice in Wonderland Lewis Carroll [207]
"William, It Was Really Nothing" Hatful of Hollow The Smiths Billy Liar Keith Waterhouse [208][209]
"Willie Burke Sherwood" R.A.P. Music Killer Mike Lord of the Flies William Golding [48]
"Windmills" Dulcinea Toad the Wet Sprocket Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes [210]
"Winston Smith Takes It on the Jaw" Oblivion Utopia Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell [211]
"Wuthering Heights" The Kick Inside Kate Bush Wuthering Heights Emily Brontë [53][60]
"Wonderland" 1989 Taylor Swift Alice's Adventures in Wonderland Lewis Carroll [212]
"Xanadu" A Farewell to Kings Rush "Kubla Khan" Samuel Taylor Coleridge [213]
"Yes!" Naked Amber Ulysses James Joyce Lyrics include part of Molly Bloom's soliloquy [214][97]
"Don Quixote" Face the Sun Seventeen Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Krokfjord, Torgeir P. (2005-04-21). "Interview with Kamelot (Roy Khan)". Metal Express Radio. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  2. ^ a b Welton, Benjamin (September 14, 2015). "NILE, MORBID ANGEL & 6 Other Heavy Metal Albums Inspired by H.P. Lovecraft". Metal Injection. Retrieved July 9, 2022. ..."Cometh Down Hessian" mimics the narrative plot of Lovecraft's "The Hound," which deals with the hideous consequences of grave robbing.
  3. ^ Toland, Michael (March 28, 2019). "Q&A: Michael Moorcock Plays Hawkwind". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Freeman, Phil (December 22, 2010). "Michael Moorcock, Epic Science Fiction Master and Hard Rocker". Gizmodo. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Heller, Jason (April 2016). "Silver Machine: Hawkwind's Space Rock Journey throughout Science Fiction and Fantasy". Clarkesworld. No. 115. Retrieved September 6, 2022.
  6. ^ Peacock, Tim (September 10, 2021). "'Dust And Dreams': How Camel Found The Promised Land". uDiscoverMusic. Retrieved June 26, 2022. Perhaps influenced by his new surroundings, the song cycle Latimer conceived was for a concept album evoking the spirit and themes of John Steinbeck's Pulitzer (and later Nobel) Prize-winning 1939 novel, The Grapes Of Wrath... ...Inspired by these universal themes, Latimer penned Dust And Dreams: an introspective masterpiece, which... ...was based primarily upon evocative instrumental music... ...Fans thirsting for Camel at their virtuosic best, however, were rewarded by the album's four fully-fledged songs. The stirring "Go West" reflected the Joad family's optimism as they arrived in California, but by the time Dust And Dreams hit the elegiac "Rose Of Sharon" ("What we gonna do when the baby comes?"), their hopes had fallen apart at the seams. Elsewhere, the seven-minute "End Of The Line" and the dramatic, shape-shifting "Hopeless Anger" contained flash and flair redolent of mid-70s Camel classics The Snow Goose and Moonmadness.
  7. ^ Dahlstrom, Tyrell (March 11, 2019). "Virgin Steele: A Retrospective (Part 2)". Death Metal Underground. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  8. ^ Inglis, Sam. "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version Of The War Of The Worlds". Sound on Sound. Retrieved May 3, 2020. …It turned out there was an agent who represented the estate of HG Wells, and we convinced the estate that we wanted to be true to the story in creating this musical interpretation, and we did a deal. That was 1975, and the whole writing, orchestration, scriptwriting, paintings, recording sessions, everything to do with it, took the better part of two and a half years, between early '75 and June '78. "I still have the original book with all my underlinings and scribbles about things that motivated me to compose something or to chat to the guys that were the lyricists, or our scriptwriter. The truth of it was that I somehow thought I was going to do an instrumental album, no guest artists, no roles being played, virtually all instrumental, no paintings, no script, and a budget that was in one ballpark. And it turned out to be quite the opposite."
  9. ^ Houle, Zachary (3 December 2013). "The Alan Parsons Project: I Robot (Legacy Edition)". PopMatters. Retrieved May 1, 2020. The group's 1976 debut Tales of Mystery and Imagination was focused on the writings of Edgar Allan Poe and, for a follow-up, the duo turned their attention to science-fiction author Isaac Asimov's 1950 book of short stories, I, Robot. Although Asimov was encouraging of the project, the book was already optioned to a film and television company, so Woolfson had to fudge the concept a little by making a set of songs that was more generally about the relationship between man and machine, and, though the group used the title of Asimov's book, they had to drop the comma for copyright reasons. And, thus, I Robot was born.
  10. ^ Marshall, Colin (February 27, 2018). "Hear Rick Wakeman's Musical Adaptation of Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth, "One of Prog Rock's Crowning Achievements"". Open Culture. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  11. ^ Paul, Andrew (February 23, 2016). "With Leviathan, Mastodon helped usher in a golden age of heavy metal". AV Club. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  12. ^ Chaplinsky, Joshua (May 4, 2012). "White Whale, Holy Grail: Moby Dick and Mastodon's Leviathan". LitReactor. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  13. ^ Pementel, Michael; Kaufman, Spencer (August 31, 2019). "15 Years Ago, Mastodon's Leviathan Took Fans on a High Seas Metal Adventure". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved May 5, 2020. Speaking to the Leviathan's concept, Dailor shared, "We had the big idea about the Moby Dick thing, which we all we excited about for the aesthetics, and the ability to do our own concept album that was based off this amazing piece of literature."
  14. ^ Bennett, J. (December 1, 2013). "Mastodon's 'Leviathan': The Story Behind the Cover Art". Revolver. Retrieved May 5, 2020. At one fateful point during the time when Atlanta's Mastodon were gathering ideas for what would become their 2004 breakthrough album, Leviathan, drummer Brann Dailor found himself on a hellish 30-hour plane trip with nothing to pass the time except a copy of Moby-Dick. He already had a water motif in mind for the disc—Mastodon's previous record, Remission, was fire-themed—but before he read Herman Melville's 1851 maritime classic about Captain Ahab's hunt for the "salt-sea mastodon," Dailor admits that his ideas for what eventually became Leviathan were "pretty fucking vague."
  15. ^ Mardell, Oscar (August 2019). "Sage of Discord; Or, Melville at 200: A Revenge Tragedy in 24 Sections" (PDF). 3:AM Magazine. Retrieved July 2, 2022. Perhaps my favourite attempt to make Melville "sin" again is the Moby-Dick-inspired concept album Leviathan by the American metal band Mastodon. Far more than any scholarly analysis, Leviathan is sensitive to the anger and disillusionment which permeates virtually every page of Melville's whaling epic. The album has inspired a surprising amount of critical discourse, almost all of which has focussed on its lyrics; what has not been properly acknowledged, however, is how close the album's rhythms come to the anarchic time signatures of early jazz, whose initial listeners were the first to recognise in Melville an apocalyptic vision of their own era.
  16. ^ Stavans, Ilan (July 29, 2014). Latin Music: Musicians, Genres, and Themes. ABC-CLIO. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-313-34396-4. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  17. ^ Dome, Malcolm (April 15, 2016). "Hawkwind: The Machine Stops". Retrieved September 6, 2022. It's a concept, based on the EM Forster short story The Machine Stops, which might have been written close to 90 years ago, but which has a contemporary dystopian parallel. And that mirrors the way Hawkwind sound. They offer a strong whiff of the style through which they have forged their reputation, with the odour of a modern psychedelic groove. While others might have played fast and loose with the basic story, this is not the case here.
  18. ^ Hayashida, Caleb. "Moby Dick or The Whale". Caleb Hayashida Music. Caleb Hayashida. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  19. ^ Mahani, Hazem (2 July 2022). "Album: Moby Dick or The Whale by Caleb Hayashida". Rock Era Magazine. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  20. ^ Michael, Justin (31 January 2006). "MUSIC: INSPIRED BY A WORLD OF THE IMAGINATION". Sight Magazine. Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  21. ^ Hart, Ron (April 11, 2018). "Iron Maiden's 'Seventh Son of a Seventh Son' at 30: Artists Reflect on Then-Controversial Metal Classic". Billboard. Retrieved June 30, 2020. Two years later, Maiden would ignore the jeers and double down on the digital experiments with their seventh album Seventh Son of a Seventh Son, released 30 years ago on April 11, 1988. It was the first time we heard actual keyboards on a studio recording of theirs, used to supplement the record's concept, whose roots derived from Orson Scott Card's sci-fi novel Seventh Son, which Harris had been reading at the time. And while some metal purists in the press accused the group of becoming Genesis, Seventh Son was largely celebrated as a high watermark in the Iron Maiden lexicon; its lean into progressive rock served as the basis for some of the most revered songs in the band's canon like "The Clairvoyant," "Moonchild," "Can I Play With Madness" and the album's epic title cut.
  22. ^ Rocher, David (March 7, 2002). "Rebellion - _Shakespeare's Macbeth: A Tragedy in Steel_". Chronicles of Chaos. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  23. ^ Leidolph, Christer. "Mike Rutherford - Smallcreep's Day". Genesis News. Retrieved July 4, 2020. Smallcreep's Day can actually be called a concept album. It tells the story of a factory worker who does his work every day without actually ever realizing what kind of product he helps to manufacture. He embarks on a journey of discovery into the factory and into himself, into his life, and meets lots of interesting people and new emotions. The story is inspired by Peter Currell Brown's book of the same title that came out in 1965.
  24. ^ Allardice, Lisa (19 December 2011). "Winter reads: The Snow Goose by Paul Gallico". The Guardian. Retrieved July 4, 2020.
  25. ^ "Happy Anniversary: Mike Oldfield, The Songs of Distant Earth". Rhino Entertainment. December 5, 2014. Retrieved July 14, 2020. 20 years ago today, Mike Oldfield released a concept album based on a sci-fi novel by Arthur C. Clarke, one which the author not only approved of but, indeed, enjoyed enough to compose a few words for the liner notes… …In his liner notes, Clarke – who confessed that he'd been particularly impressed with the soundtrack for The Killing Fields – wrote, "I was delighted when Mike Oldfield told me that he wished to compose a suite inspired by (The Songs of Distant Earth)…and now, having played (the album), I feel he has lived up to my expectations. Welcome back into space, Mike: there's still lots of room out here."
  26. ^ a b Marshall, Colin (April 21, 2015). "Hear Orson Welles Read Edgar Allan Poe on a Cult Classic Album by The Alan Parsons Project". Open Culture. Retrieved April 18, 2020.
  27. ^ a b Little, Michael H. (April 1, 2015). "Graded on a Curve: The Alan Parsons Project, Tales of Mystery and Imagination—Edgar Allen [sic] Poe". The Vinyl District. Retrieved April 18, 2020.
  28. ^ Clement, Keith (January 5, 2018). "Rebellion - A Tragedy in Steel Part II: Shakespeare's King Lear". Metal Heads Forever Magazine. Retrieved April 12, 2022.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Pardes, Deborah (2002). Songs Inspired by Literature, Chapter One (Media notes). San Francisco, California: The SIBL Project. MM-1005.
  30. ^ Martens, John W. (July 19, 2016). "Out of the Mire". America: The Jesuit Review. Retrieved April 15, 2020. It is a psalm that inspired Bono and the other members of U2 to write the song "40," a meditation on Psalm 40, for their 1983 album, "War."... ...Bono had said earlier in the conversation with [Eugene] Peterson: "Why do we need art? Why do we need the lyric poetry of the Psalms? Why do we need them? Because the only way we can approach God is if we're honest through metaphor, through symbol. Art becomes essential, not decorative."
  31. ^ a b c Grimm, Beca (June 23, 2017). "Flashback: David Bowie's Failed Attempt to Adapt George Orwell's '1984'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved April 15, 2020. Bowie wanted a televised musical – or so he told William S. Burroughs in a 1974 Rolling Stone interview. His album Diamond Dogs, which dropped that same year, featured the straight-forward "1984," with lines like, "They'll split your pretty cranium, fill it full of air/ And tell that you're 80, but brother, you won't care," highlighting the novel's revisionism themes and totalitarian government. Other tracks like "Big Brother" and "We Are The Dead" double down on the artist's fascination not just with Orwell's futuristic society, but Surrealism and Dada (which makes his timely interview with the post-modern author all the more fascinating).
  32. ^ a b Bulger, Adam (January 24, 2020). "Struggling With Rush's Ayn Rand Influence". BTRtoday. Retrieved April 15, 2020. The 20-minute epic "2112" relates a dystopian science fiction story so similar to Rand's novella Anthem Peart felt obligated to acknowledge the influence.
  33. ^ Daly, Joe (September 24, 2014). "Chris Motionless on writing Reincarnate". Metal Hammer. Retrieved April 15, 2020. Lyrically, Chris prefers writing songs through the eyes of characters from movies and literature, as on the song Abigail, a single from their 2010 debut, that he wrote about the Salem witch trials from the perspective of the John Proctor character in The Crucible.
  34. ^ Brouwers, Josho (1 October 2015). "Heavy metal Iliad". Ancient World Magazine. Retrieved 16 April 2020. The song, as befitting a musical rendition of Homer's epic, is nearly 29 minutes in length and, as indicated in the title, consists of eight distinct parts (though this doesn't include the prelude and part VII consists of two parts in itself, so it's actually ten parts). The song focuses on the confrontation between Achilles, the Greek champion, and Hector, the Trojan leader, and follows the story in Iliad books 12 through 22.
  35. ^ McPadden, Mike (April 7, 2015). "'Toys in the Attic' Turns 40: Ranking The Songs On Aerosmith's Classic Album". VH1. Archived from the original on June 9, 2022. Retrieved April 16, 2020. It's certainly one of the most "Aerosmith" of all Aerosmith anthems: a peacocking take on the Biblical creation myth that recreates the fall of humanity as the inevitable byproduct of just how tempting a certain "sweet and bitter fruit" is by its nature, and how just one taste ignites a particular form enlightenment to the point of madness.
  36. ^ Dolen, John (May 1, 1994). "CELEBRATING THE NEW CROP OF GREAT MUSIC-MAKERS". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved April 16, 2020. Not too many other rock bands mention Jean-Paul Sartre or go head-to-head with T.S. Eliot. (Compare Eliot's The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock and their Afternoons and Coffeespoons. Eliot: I grow old, I grow old, I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled. Dummies: Someday I'll have a disappearing hairline/Someday I'll wear 'jamas in the daytime.)
  37. ^ McCracken, Edd (March 9, 2015). "A Simple Tale About Man Who Hates An Animal: MOBY-DICK in Pop Culture". Book Riot. Retrieved April 16, 2020. MC Lars uses the power of hip-hop to pry open Ahab's inner monologue. For a man who skilfully leapt between narrative styles, if rap had been around in the 1850s, Melville would probably have used it. Choice couplets include: "Call me Ahab, what, monomaniac /Obsessed with success unlike Steve Wozniak"; and "The first one to stop him gets this gold doubloon/Now excuse me while I go be melancholy in my room!"
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The stories behind Ice Nine Kills' Every Trick In The Book album". Metal Hammer. November 4, 2016. Retrieved June 27, 2022.
  39. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Martinez, Rozanna M. (September 23, 2016). "By the book: Ice Nine Kills' songs inspired by classics". Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved June 27, 2022. Every song was based on a different novel," Ice Nine Kills frontman Spencer Charnas said. "It was a different creative process because the material, the basic outline of everything, was already there and it was our job to step in and give our own spin on those classic stories. I think the most difficult element of that was making sure to respect the source material, and we had to keep reminding ourselves that these were classic stories for a reason so we better do them justice.
  40. ^ Sagal, Ajay (December 4, 1994). "The Poet and the Rock Star: All He Wants to Do Is Write Some Poems ... And Now, Thanks to Sheryl Crowe, Many of Us Can Recite at Least One ... Until the Sun Comes Up Over Santa Monica Boulevard". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 8, 2022. ...Bill Bottrell, a record producer, had stopped by Cliff's, a used-book shop in Pasadena, and picked up a bunch of poetry books, including one of the 500 copies of "The Country of Here Below." He brought it to a sort of informal weekly meeting he attended, called the Tuesday Night Music Club. One of the members, a singer/songwriter named Sheryl Crow, had written a song titled "I Still Love You." She liked the music but was unhappy with the lyrics. Bottrell showed her Wyn's poem, and bam--like that--American poetry took one giant step into the mainstream. Crow changed some of the words in "Fun," added a refrain and came up with "All I Wanna Do," which sailed to the top of the Billboard charts, where it remained in the No. 1 position for weeks.
  41. ^ a b c d e "Hannah Fury: The Thing That Feels". Muruch. November 8, 2006. Retrieved September 9, 2022. "Let It Show", "I Can't Let You In", "And Your Little Dog Too", "All Is Not Well", and "It Was Her House That Killed Nessarose" are the songs based on Gregory Maguire's novel about Elphaba, the so-called Wicked Witch... ...The lyrics are heavy with references to the novel, so I'm not sure how they translate to those who haven't read it. I suspect that the otherworldly vocals and harmonic music are enough to carry the songs even if you are unfamiliar with the strange characters Hannah sings about.
  42. ^ a b c d e Harlitz-Kern, Erika (April 3, 2016). "Songs by Metallica Inspired by Literature". Book Riot. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
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  44. ^ Rosenthal, Elizabeth J. (2001). His Song: The Musical Journey of Elton John. Billboard Books. p. 217. ISBN 978-0-8230-8893-5. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  45. ^ "Green Carnation: The Acoustic Verses". Sputnik Music. March 15, 2010. Retrieved April 16, 2020.
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  49. ^ Matthews, Dylan (February 27, 2015). "Remember Leonard Nimoy with "The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins," his greatest musical moment". Vox. Retrieved April 18, 2020. The song — essentially a musical recapitulation of the plot of The Hobbit, but with much better choreography — was originally released as a single in 1967, and it grew into an internet phenomenon long before streaming video became ubiquitous.
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  64. ^ "Brave New World". The Iron Maiden Commentary. 30 May 2000. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
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  66. ^ Vedantam, Shankar (September 17, 2018). "The Cassandra Curse: Why We Heed Some Warnings, And Ignore Others". Hidden Brain. National Public Radio. Retrieved April 18, 2020.
  67. ^ Hilton, Robin (October 4, 2016). "Watch The Dandy Warhols' Take On 'Catcher In The Rye'". All Songs TV. National Public Radio. Retrieved April 18, 2020.
  68. ^ Dadamo, Giovanni (10 July 1974). "The Madcap Speaks". The Syd Barrett Archives. Terrapin. Retrieved 19 April 2020. Q: Some of your songs seem rather obscure, like Chapter 24 on Piper. Syd: 'Chapter 24'... that was from the 'I Ching', there was someone around who was very into that, most of the words came straight off that.
  69. ^ Long, Siobhán Dowling; Sawyer, John F. A. (2015). The Bible in Music: A Dictionary of Songs, Works, and More. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 44. ISBN 978-0-8108-8452-6. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  70. ^ Spooner, Catherine (2004). Fashioning Gothic Bodies. Manchester University Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-7190-6401-2. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
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  73. ^ Farmer, Penelope (June 9, 2007). "The Cure(d)". rockpool in the kitchen. Retrieved April 19, 2020. The lyric to the song was on the record sleeve. Not only was it about confused identity, much of it consisted of quotes from the book. The title of the instrumental track on the B side, what's more, was another quote from the book.
  74. ^ Farmer, Penelope (June 12, 2007). "The Cure(d): Robert Smith for ever..." rockpool in the kitchen. Retrieved April 19, 2020. Then he told me the story of how he'd come across the book in the first place. 'My elder brother used to read to us at bedtime,' he said, 'I was about twelve or so and he was still reading books to us. Your book was one of them, it never got out of my head. Once I got into music I wanted to make a song about it. That's how it happened.'
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  76. ^ "Kaiser Chiefs on "Child of the Jago"". YouTube. 8 July 2011. Archived from the original on 2021-12-11.
  77. ^ Daniels, Neil (2014). Killers: The Origins Of Iron Maiden 1975-1983. Soundcheck Books. pp. 106–107. ISBN 978-0-9575700-2-3. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
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  79. ^ Prince, Jeff (May 19, 2015). "Robert Earl Keen Ponders Your Questions, Prepares For Billy Bob's". Fort Worth Weekly. Retrieved April 20, 2020. Keen has read many of the English romantic poets such as Shelley, Keats, and Byron. "I wrote this song sort of based on the Samuel Taylor Coleridge poem," he said. "He was one of the more fantastic rock stars. You have to think of those poets as rock stars, and they did rock star stuff back then. Coleridge was like the Jim Morrison of the bunch. You could not contain the guy."
  80. ^ McGinnis, Ray (April 27, 2019). "#906: Courage by The Tragically Hip". Vancouver Pop Music Signature Sounds. Retrieved April 20, 2020. It was MacLennan's final award winning novel that earned his place in the song title "Courage (for Hugh MacLennan)". The song included lines from The Watch That Ends The Night, where MacLennan states "There is no simple explanation for anything important any of us do, and the human tragedy, or the human irony, consists in the necessity of living with the consequences of actions performed under the pressure of compulsions so obscure we do not and cannot understand them." The Tragically Hip stated MacLennan's thought this way: "There's no simple explanation for anything important any of us do. And, yeah, the human tragedy consists in the necessity of living with the consequences under pressure."
  81. ^ Sutherland, Steve (March 5, 2019). "Jefferson Airplane: Crown Of Creation". Hi-Fi News & Record Review. Retrieved April 20, 2020. The album's title is taken directly from The Chrysalids. 'Your work is to survive. Neither his kind, nor his kind of thinking will survive long. They are the crown of creation, they are ambition fulfilled – they have nowhere more to go. But life is change, that is how it differs from rocks. Change is its very nature.' And the title track quotes liberally from its text. The book has 'In loyalty to their kind they cannot tolerate our rise – in loyalty to our kind, we cannot tolerate their obstruction'. The song goes: 'In loyalty to their kind, they cannot tolerate our minds...'. It's strident, punchy, fist-in-the-air Airplane in all their righteous indignant fury and sets the tone for the rest of the album.
  82. ^ a b Korn, Mike. "Interview with Mike Scalzi of Slough Feg From 2005". Music Street Journal. Retrieved April 20, 2020. [Scalzi:] I'd rather talk about real history and mythology. MSJ: That segues pretty neatly into two more songs I had questions about. "Eumaeus the Swineherd" and "Curse of Athena". Are those songs strictly about Homer's Odyssey? [Scalzi:] Absolutely, yeah. One of the newest infatuations I have is The Odyssey. Anybody who wants to read where the songs come from, open up the Odyssey and turn to the chapter about Eumaeus the Swineherd. Odysseus returns to Ithaca after being gone for 20 years and he returns disguised as a slave. Athena puts a curse on him because the suitors are trying to marry his wife Penelope and he has to win her back. Odysseus is welcomed into the humble home of Eumaeus the Swineherd who has no idea who he really is.
  83. ^ Döing, Laura (16 August 2019). "Rammstein: Just what's in those lyrics?". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 22 April 2020. Not all of the horror comes from Lindemann's pen. Some of the frontman's lyrics are inspired by classical German literature, exemplified by the most prominent poet in the language, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Goethe's famous ballad Erlkönig, for example, translated: Who rides so late through the night and the wind? It is the father with his child. He holds the boy safely in his arms; he holds him tight, he keeps him warm. The mood, rhythm and content of Goethe's poem are echoed in Rammstein's "Dalai Lama": An airplane lies in the evening wind / On board is a man with a child / They sit safely, sit warm / And are lulled into falling asleep. In Goethe's poem, a ghostly apparition, the King of the Elves, whispers seductively to the child and seeks to abduct him into his realm. At the end of the ballad, the son dies in the arms of his father on horseback. In the Rammstein song, the "King of the Winds" endeavors to claim the boy, who finally dies in his father's arms, held too tightly in anticipation of an airplane crash.
  84. ^ Irizarry, Katy (August 15, 2018). "11 Metal Songs Inspired by Dante's 'Inferno'". Loudwire. Retrieved April 23, 2020. There is perhaps no song that portrays such a detailed and comprehensive retelling of Dante's 'Inferno' as this one. Not only does it follow the epic format with 16-and-a-half minutes of music, but it takes the listener on a musical journey to each layer of hell, just as Dante did for his readers.
  85. ^ Cotterell, Joel (April 9, 2013). "This Is Armageddon: The Dawn Motif and Black Metal's Anti-Christian Project". Helvete: A Journal of Black Metal Theory (1). punctum books: 98. ISBN 978-0-615-75828-2. Retrieved April 23, 2020.
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  88. ^ Johnson, Dan (13 September 2009). "Thrice: Beggars". PopMatters. Retrieved 24 April 2020. From humble musings on human nature, Thrice licks into the next track "Doublespeak", an obvious homage to Orwellian realities where insidious totalitarian hegemony controls consciousness.
  89. ^ "The Cure: Beyond The Hits". The Quietus. June 12, 2019. Retrieved April 24, 2020. 'The Drowning Man' is a perfect example. Drawing lyrically from Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast books, specifically the fraught mental state and accidental death of the character Fuschia and the reaction of her devastated brother Titus, Robert Smith's anguished vocal rises and fades into distances like air bubbles in murky water, his skittering guitar and the spare rhythm section work of Simon Gallup and Lol Tolhurst an audio portrait of utter desolation.
  90. ^ Åkerlund, Pauliina (March 30, 2015). "Nightwish – Endless Forms Most Beautiful (Album Review)". Cryptic Rock: Your Entertainment Odyssey. Retrieved April 24, 2020. The beautiful and melancholic "Edema Ruh" was inspired by fantasy author Patrick Rothfuss' group of strolling musicians and actors from his books Kingkiller Chronicle, called the Edema Ruh.
  91. ^ Encabo, Enrique (January 29, 2019). Sound in Motion: Cinema, Videogames, Technology and Audiences. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-5275-2729-4. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
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  94. ^ House, Silas (September 1, 2005). "Nickel Creek – It's about the music". No Depression: The Journal of Roots Music. Retrieved April 25, 2020. ...And they're performing songs that sound more like poetry than money, especially the one about Joyce's heartrending character. "Eveline" is one of fourteen tracks on their new album, Why Should The Fire Die?
  95. ^ Flory, Tyler (April 23, 2013). "Radiohead's "Exit Music (For a Film)" as a Romeo and Juliet teaching tool". City Pages. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
  96. ^ Smith, Eric (March 18, 2013). "Gatsby's American Dream: The Most Literary Band You've Never Heard Of". Book Riot. Retrieved April 25, 2020. The song fifth song on Volcano, Fable, is one of the catchiest on the record, and retells the story of Lord of the Flies. "We came here on a plane, Just a bunch of little boys. Dance around the fire, then we strike him down. We'll burn the island down. Kill the pig pig, kill the pig pig…"
  97. ^ a b c Max, D.T. (April 10, 2011). "Kate Bush's Rewrite: Reason to ReJoyce?". The New Yorker. Retrieved April 15, 2020. Kate Bush... ...has gotten permission to quote some part of Molly's famous soliloquy in the reissue of a song first released in 1989 as "The Sensual World" and now appropriately renamed "Flower of the Mountain." "Flower of the Mountain" is a phrase in the soliloquy, the most famous part of which goes: "And first I put my arms around him yes and drew him down to me so he could feel my breasts all perfume yes and his heart was going like mad and yes I said yes I will Yes."
  98. ^ a b c d ""A Man of Genius Makes No Mistakes": A Joycean Playlist Just in Time for Bloomsday 2015". Flood Magazine. June 16, 2015. Retrieved June 23, 2020. Kate Bush's musical homage to James Joyce and Ulysses's Molly Bloom was a twenty-two-year journey in the making. Originally planned as a musical interpretation of Bloom's last speech in the novel, Bush had to alter the lyrics after Joyce's estate wouldn't allow her to use his words. That track became 1989's "The Sensual World," but in 2011 (after the Joyce estate finally realized how amazing the singer-songwriter is) she was granted a license and rereleased the track in its true form as "Flower of the Mountain." It is more than worth the wait... ...True to its name, the entirety of "Rejoyce" is Jefferson Airplane's psychedelic four-minute retelling of the story of Ulysses. Grace Slick sets scenes from the novel against one of the world's grooviest bass lines.
  99. ^ a b Dunston, Tyler (November 16, 2019). "Kate Bush Steps Out of the Pages of James Joyce and into The Sensual World". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved June 28, 2020. For the opening, title track of The Sensual World, Bush had originally planned to take an excerpt of Molly Bloom's final soliloquy from James Joyce's Ulysses — a continuous, un-punctuated mass of text — and put it to music. However, unable to get the rights from the Joyce estate, she wrote her own version of Molly Bloom's speech, incorporating elements of the original text while making something that was her own. (In 2011, the Joyce estate actually did grant Bush's request, and you can hear another version of the song, which quotes Ulysses verbatim, on the 2011 record Director's Cut.) The song unfolds from Bush's words. It is rhythmically punctuated by Bush singing, "Mmm, yes," evoking Molly Bloom's repetition of yes near the end of the book. Adorning these words, Davy Spillane plays the uilleann pipes, a traditional Irish instrument, the melody adapted from a Macedonian dance. By recontextualizing language in song, Bush gives form to a piece of text by Joyce that is, by its nature, formless (insofar as it lacks punctuation). Bush characterizes this form in terms of moving from text to the real world: "Stepping out of the page into the sensual world."
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  105. ^ "Thyfring". Voices from the Darkside. Retrieved April 25, 2020. 'The Giant's Laughter' is pretty much Patrik's English interpretation of Swedish Poet Esaias Tegner's brilliant poem "Jätten" (the giant). The words paint a fairly depressive view of nationalism and a "lost struggle"… ah, read it damn it
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  109. ^ Simpson, Dave (17 August 2001). "Haunted house music". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 April 2020. And now comes Haunted, a rock album from Mark's sister, Poe (real name Annie), started long before the book was published. Just as disturbing as House of Leaves, Haunted uses tape recordings of her father's voice, discovered after his death in 1993, to exorcise memories of their difficult relationship.
  110. ^ Biancotti, Deborah (April 2, 2012). "The Weirdness in House of Leaves". Weird Fiction Review. Retrieved April 27, 2020. House of Leaves (Pantheon Books, 2000) is a cluster of stories told more in their metatext than text, a book that took ten years to write and has given rise to another book (The Whalestoe Letters), an album (Haunted, by Danielewski's sister, Anne – known as Poe), and an author with a reputation for being so 'experimental' his next book, Only Revolutions, was shortlisted for the US National Book Prize despite being practically incomprehensible to any but the most dedicated reader. House of Leaves is a cult classic, reviled by some and adored – fiercely – by others.
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  112. ^ Bierman, Bryan. "Hidden Gems: John Cale's "Animal Justice" And "Sabotage/Live"". MAGNET. Retrieved April 27, 2020. ...the EP closes with strikingly beautiful ballad "Hedda Gabler." Loosely based on the Henrik Ibsen play of the same name, the song features Cale's voice in fine form, and the slow meditation is a welcome resolution to the previous madness...
  113. ^ Barkan, Jonathan (June 10, 2016). "Go Behind-the-Scenes in Ice Nine Kill's 'Carrie'-Inspired "Hell in the Hallways" Music Video (Exclusive)". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved April 28, 2020. The video is a reimagined version of Carrie, the now infamous story from author Stephen King.
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  121. ^ "Lenny Sasso Goes Rogue for Circa Survive on Rockstar Disrupt Festival Tour". Chauvet Professional. August 14, 2019. Retrieved May 1, 2020. It's altogether fitting that Circa Survive drew inspiration for their breakthrough debut album "Juturna" from the novel House of Leaves. Like the powerful Mark Z. Danielewski story, which breaks down literary barriers with its wildly unusual layout (some pages have only one or two words) and multiple storylines, the progressive five-piece band from the Philadelphia area has set its own course weaving in and out of musical lanes to create a unique sound.
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  127. ^ "MONKS OF DOOM". Trouser Press. Retrieved May 2, 2020. Seattle's C/Z Records got the consolation prize in the Monks' post-Rough Trade sweepstakes, a five-song EP entitled The Insect God. Although it draws direct inspiration from Edward Gorey's book of the same title ("an admonitory tale of temptation, hapless greed, abduction and unspeakable ritualistic practices"), The Insect God is in many ways a lighter, not to mention more concise, outing.
  128. ^ Caffery, Adrian (11 May 2014). "Tori Amos to play Birmingham's Symphony Hall". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  129. ^ Cummings, Tony (30 March 2008). "Edison Glass: Long Island music graduates become thinking man's rockers". Cross Rhythms. Retrieved May 3, 2020. On 'Time Is Fiction' the band display their characteristically poetic lyrics by making use of Victor Hugo's triumphant fictional character Jean Valjean from the Les Miserables classic to ask "Will good overcome religion? It's a battle between grace and pride. . . Will grace overcome what was done."
  130. ^ Bradshaw, Calum (20 July 2018). "Killing an Arab: The Cure try to reclaim their most controversial single". New Statesman. Retrieved April 15, 2020. The song draws its inspiration from the central action of Albert Camus's novel L'Étranger (The Stranger), which follows a protagonist who murders an Algerian man on a beach after a love dispute involving the victim's sister.
  131. ^ Young, Alex (November 29, 2008). "Rock History 101: Patti Smith's "Land"". Consequence. Retrieved June 29, 2022. In this album without a home, "Land", a nine-minute epic with three distinct movements, somehow sticks out as just plain odd. It tells the story of Johnny, a boy who is physically attacked and possibly raped, and the subsequent Surrealist journey he experiences. Smith based Johnny on the character Johnny in William Burroughs' The Wild Boys.
  132. ^ Silverman, Ed (April 11, 2019). "The Strawbs will celebrate 50-year history in New Jersey". NJArts.net. Retrieved May 3, 2020. And the band's biggest hit — the infectious and ultra-radio-friendly "Lay Down" — has a clear spiritual vibe derived from the 23rd Psalm.
  133. ^ Ollison, Rashod D. (May 11, 2006). "The Elefant evolution". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved May 5, 2020. The danceable lead single, "Lolita," is part homage to Vladimir Nabokov's infamous character and part autobiographical.
  134. ^ Wagner, Jeff (2010). Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal. Bazillion Points Books. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-0-9796163-3-4. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  135. ^ "The Top Iron Maiden Songs With A Military Theme". www.forces.net. British Forces Broadcasting Service. 8 January 2020. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  136. ^ Presley, Nicola (30 June 2013). "William Golding's legacy: His enduring influence on popular culture". www.william-golding.co.uk. Retrieved May 6, 2020. Lord of the Flies has provided inspiration for music by a wide range of artists. Most notable, perhaps, is Iron Maiden's song, 'Lord of the Flies', released in 1996 on their album 'The X Factor'... ...The 'I' of the song is most likely to be Jack with lines such as 'Who cares what's right or wrong/it's reality/killing so we survive'. The chorus alludes to the division between the boys: 'Saints and sinners/ Something within us/ To be lord of the flies'. Here, the dichotomy of good against evil in the novel is divided as 'saints and sinners', although just like the book, the writer acknowledges that there is the potential for evil within all of us: 'we don't need a code of morality'.
  137. ^ Ceron, Ella (May 9, 2016). "Watch the Dreamy New Music Video For Ruth B's "Lost Boy"". Teen Vogue. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  138. ^ Catlin, Roger (August 4, 1993). "HE THAT SINGS A LASTING SONG ... MAY HAVE YEATS TO THANK". Hartford Courant. Retrieved May 10, 2020. Yeats is the hottest new name among pop music publishers, yet precious little is known in those circles about him. Still, there is some indication his work has been surfacing in rock albums during the past few years. "I've put Yeats to music before," Mike Scott says in press materials accompanying the Waterboys' new album, "Dream Harder," which includes a Yeats lyric called "Love and Death." "Van Morrison and Bono have done it, too, among others. Wouldn't it be great to do an album of different artists interpreting Yeats?" Scott enthuses. "I love his poetry, and if a poem jumps up at me and I feel the music, I just do it; I don't argue. I grew up in a home full of books and poetry, and it doesn't seem strange to me."
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  146. ^ Slethaug, Gordon (2014). Adaptation Theory and Criticism: Postmodern Literature and Cinema in the USA. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 202. ISBN 9781623560287. Retrieved October 24, 2023. ...in 2000, the French singer Alizée came out with her much celebrated video "Moi Lolita" that has a basis in Nabokov's novel in the depiction of an underage Lolita, her encounter with a slightly older man who gives her money, and the pink dress she wears, which is exactly as Humbert describes it in his first important encounter with Lolita.
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  152. ^ Hackett, Steve. "The world behind the wardrobe". www.hackettsongs.com. Retrieved May 23, 2020. I've read many books by CS Lewis... and I've often wondered about the man behind the work and the world around the man. I wrote my song Narnia because of the impact he had on me...
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  156. ^ Fox-Bevilacqua, Marisa (January 14, 2015). "An Unlikely Tribute: How Cult U.K. Band Joy Division Found Inspiration in Auschwitz". Haaretz. Retrieved May 24, 2020. ...Joy Division's greatest enigma may have been its name — a reference to the brothel at Auschwitz as depicted in the book "House of Dolls" by Ka-Tzetnik 135633 (Yehiel De-Nur)... ...it was Curtis' sense of compassion that enabled him to come up with the relentless lyrics of "No Love Lost," about a sex slave's forced sterilization or abortion: "In the hand of one of the assistants, she saw the same instrument which they had that morning inserted deep into her body, She shuddered instinctively. No life at all in the house of dolls. No love lost. No love lost." The song also contains a spoken-word part entirely lifted from "House of Dolls." In "So This Is Permanence," Curtis' handwritten notes for the song begin with the heading "House of Dolls."
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  160. ^ Hogan, Marc (December 20, 2011). "Lana Del Rey Plays a 'Hood Lolita in 'Off to the Races'". Spin. Retrieved May 26, 2020. "Lolita gets lost in the 'hood."... ...this self-description she gave to a Guardian reporter remains a pretty good way of approaching her music as Lana Del Rey. Especially if you keep in mind that, as critic Nitsuh Abebe pointed out in a Pitchfork column, Del Rey appears to be talking about the actual literary Lolita, from Vladimir Nabokov's classic novel, rather than the term's much broader common usage. "Off to the Races," the latest track to emerge from Del Rey's upcoming full-length debut, interprets the 'hood-Lolita angle fairly literally, with results that are intriguing if unlikely to end many arguments... ...the studio version of a song Del Rey has been performing live cleverly combines tropes straight out of Nabokov with those straight outta gangsta rap, though its reach may outstretch its grasp. "Light of your life, fire of your loins," Del Rey purrs, just like Lolita's Humbert Humbert, mixing the old-school Hollywood glamor of her vocal with mixtape-ready nods to cocaine and Riker's Island…
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  163. ^ Crain, Caemeron. "Thanks for All the Fish: A Perfect Ten from A Perfect Circle". Retrieved August 27, 2022. The lead singer, Keenan, talks about, in his song, that, like in the play, he feels he must separate himself from his mother to 'keep me from killing you', similar to the plotline of the play.
  164. ^ Caffrey, Dan (November 21, 2008). "Instant Indie Classic: Lagwagon – Let's Talk About Feelings". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved May 26, 2020. The album's standout track is "Owen Meaney", the closer that describes the fall of John Irving's title character from A Prayer For Owen Meaney... ...Like the novel, the song is told from the viewpoint of protagonist John Wheelwright as the death of his pint-sized friend causes him to question his faith.
  165. ^ Armstrong, Sam (November 23, 2015). "Acquiring The Taste Of Prog Icons Gentle Giant". udiscovermusic. Retrieved May 27, 2020. Indeed, the only thing blatant about Acquiring The Taste was the group's refusal to compromise... ...choosing to open the record with 'Pantagruel's Nativity', a seven-minute excursion built around primitive Moog and Gregorian chants, and taking for its inspiration series of 16th-century French novels written by François Rabelais, was hardly a moderate start. (In fact, the song seems to have been so perplexing to some that it's mis-spelt as 'Pentagruel's Nativity' on the original A-aide label.)
  166. ^ Power, Martin (April 5, 2018). Nailed to History: The Story of Manic Street Preachers. Omnibus Press. p. 149. ISBN 978-0-85712-776-1. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
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