I've got several thousand songs in iTunes, which enables you to rate songs on a scale of 1-5. In the spirit of Darwin, natural selection takes over to give the lesser songs the John 15 treatment (lopping them off), leaving me with only the better songs (and more disk space--that's the real issue).
This unnatural selection leaves me with quite a few songs sporting a "5" rating, the highest. But among them are a handful of songs which, if I could, would get a "6." These are songs which I never, ever get tired of hearing. When I hear the song, I stop and pay attention. They aren't necessarily by my favorite artists. In some cases, I don't care for anything else by these artists. No, there's just something about these particular songs. They resonate with something in me.
For example, I've given a "5" rating to a number of Bruce Springsteen songs, like "Glory Days," "Darlington County," "The Rising," and "Into the Fire." I love those songs. But there's something about "Born in the USA" which is on another Cosmic Level of Existence. It's the only Springsteen song which makes me pay attention every time I hear it.
Here are the other songs I would put in this transcendent category.
- "The Rose," by Bette Midler (1979). Might be my favorite of all.
- "It's Only Rock'n'Roll," by the Rolling Stones (1974). There's something restrained (for the Stones) about this song, like a thoroughbred with a restrictor plate (to mix racing metaphors). Do you remember the TV awards show where they performed this wearing white sailors' outfits in a plastic bubble which filled with bubbles as they performed?
Career-wise, I've been hanging around and writing about and cheering on churches and pastors for the past 25 years as my denomination's Communications Director.
Leave a comment