Top 10 Breakup Songs

Posted by Brian Fairbanks

 

We gave you a partial day off yesterday to help you (us) recover from Valentine's Day. Were there any casualties on the field?

If so, then it's true... breakup season has begun... and with it comes a playlist to help you make it through the night...

10. Bob Marley & The Wailers - No Woman, No Cry. Bob Marley's anthemic reggae single from 1974 was actually (allegedly) written by a guy who worked at a local soup kitchen. Either that or Marley wanted to ensure the guy received enough in royalties to keep his charitable organization alive. In any case, it's impossible to not be uplifted by this chorus-- although many have often tried to interpret it. "Does it mean because he has a woman, he isn't crying or what?" Choice lyrics: "My feet is my only carriage/So I've got to push on through/But while I'm gone, I mean: Everything's gonna be all right!" Mood: Ready to embrace life again.

9. Fleetwood Mac - Go Your Own Way. From 1977's smash Rumours album, this is the only song on our list written as a breakup song from one band member to another-- in this case, from Buckingham to Nicks. Strangely enough, Nicks knew the song was about her and agreed to sing it... although she asked Lindsay to remove the choice line "Packing up, shacking up is all you want to do" because she never cheated on him. He disagreed or at least didn't want to remove it and the song stands as is. Mood: Venting, prone to leaving epic voice mails.

8. Elvis Presley - Heartbreak Hotel. The biggest song of 1956 is still a great breakup song more than four decades later. It's combo of somber lyrics and an infectuous melody is the perfect combination when you're in the mood for a sympathetic soul and inspiration to go forward. And, of course, it's always worth a listen in any situation. Choice lyrics: All of them, but particularly the opening: "Well, since my baby left me, I found a new place to dwell/Its down at the end of lonely street/At heartbreak hotel." Mood: Lonely, in need of a lift.

7. Alanis Morrisette - You Ought Know. We never liked this or any of her songs, especially after we learned "You Oughta Know" is about that douche from that awful Full House show, but you can't argue with the anger here. Or those choice lyrics: "Would she go down on you in a theater?" Sadly, she will not. Mood: If you're the breaker-upper and you're not sure the switch was the best move.

6. Ani DiFranco - Untouchable Face. Maybe it's because of who we hung out with and where we grew up, but it seemed like every girl we went to high school with popped this in their CD player and hit repeat when they got dumped. Those choice lyrics "fuck you in your untouchable face/fuck you for existing in the first place" may have had something to do with it. Mood: Angry, wishing you weren't still in love.

5. Joni Mitchell - Both Sides Now. Mitchell's classic folk tune from the late sixties is often interpreted as reflections by a narrator who has seen the two viewpoints of everything in life, but particularly love. At first, she sees love as a fairytale and isn't prepared for the reality, that not everything will be perfect. Once she's reconciled to this, the narrator is finally able to take on a relationship full prepared. Choice lyrics: "I've looked at love from both sides now/From give and take, and still somehow/It's loves illusions I recall/I really don't know love at all." Also: "Tears and fears and feeling proud/To say I love you right out loud." Mood: Reflective and ready.

4. Paul Simon - 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover. Not all breakup songs have to be from the point-of-view of a lover. Remember, your friends can hate your ex's, too. Choice lyrics: "Just slip out the back, Jack/Make a new plan, Stan/Don't need to be coy, Roy/Just get yourself free." Mood: Glad you listened to your friends in getting out of that one by the skin of your teeth

3. Bob Dylan - Tangled Up in Blue. During the mid-seventies, while undergoing a rough period in the relationship with his wife, Dylan lived in New York City and began studying painting. His new-found love of art and his relationship weigh in equally on his 1974 album Blood on the Tracks, which depicts a series of breakups in its songs, all with nonlinear narratives and unfinished portraits of the characters. The obvious example is, of course, Tangled Up In Blue, which shifts back and forth through time, ending with the immortal final stanza and its memorable lyric "Now I'm going back to her again/I got to get to her somehow" and the last lines "We always did feel the same/We just saw it from a different point of view/Tangled up in blue." Thanks to these pleas, he was able to get his relationship going for three more years until he blew it for the last time. Choice lyrics: "And when finally the bottom fell out/I became withdrawn/The only thing I knew how to do/Was to keep on keepin' on like a bird that flew/Tangled up in blue." Mood: Devastated.

2. Smokey Robinson & the Miracles - The Tracks of My Tears. This is the "I don't care about you" song that lets them know that, deep down, you really do care. If you see him with another girl, just remember that she's just his rebound babe and that the one he really wants is you... whenever you're ready to come back around. As Oliver Stone says over a scene featuring this tune on the Platoon DVD commentary: "Humanity is engraved in this music." Choice lyrics: "So take a good look at my face/You'll see my smile looks out of place/If you look closer it's easy to trace/The tracks of my tears." Mood: Not over you, leaving that door open, but on the rebound.  

1. Gloria Gaynor - I Will Survive. It's hard to imagine that people have made breakup song lists that not only haven't placed this at #1, but have left them off entirely. At least they could've included that funkified Cake cover. Anyway, what can we say about this song that isn't obvious: it's a disco classic, it's a breakup song, and it's sappy and motivational. Choice lyrics: "Oh, as long as I know how to love I know I'll stay alive/I've got all my life to live/I've got all my love to give and I'll survive/I will survive." Mood: Tony Cliftonesque.

Honorable Mention: Hurt - Johnny Cash; The One I Love - r.e.m.; Hit the Road Jack - Ray Charles; Always on My Mind - Elvis Presley / Willie Nelson. What songs have gotten you through a bad breakup?

Playlist:

The Tracks Of My Tears [Single Version (Mono)]

Link to mp3 of Both Sides Now

Tangled Up In Blue

Go Your Own Way [LP Version]

50 Ways To Leave Your Lover [Album Version]

 

Related:

Top 10 Cover Songs of All-Time

Top 10 Sexiest Album Covers of All Time

Amazon Giving Away Lots of Great mp3's


Comments

Emily Farris said:

No "Radio Cure" by Wilco? Really? Really, BF?

February 17, 2009 2:43 PM

Brian Fairbanks said:

I think it's more of a love song than a breakup song, no? Well, maybe I'm just trying to see the positive side of "All distance has a way of making love understandable."

February 17, 2009 2:53 PM

David said:

"No Woman, No Cry" isn't about breaking up.  He's trying to comfort his woman.  Think "No woman, don't cry".  

There's a great line in Leonard Cohen's "Closing Time" that would fit in this list: "I loved you when our love was blessed / I love you now there's nothing left / But sorrow, and a sense of overtime."

February 17, 2009 3:06 PM

Maxwell Hammer said:

"Please please please let me, let me, let me, get what I want, this time. Lord knows it would be the first time."

February 17, 2009 3:39 PM

jezebel9 said:

If we're talking Wilco breakup songs, I prefer "I Am Trying to Break Your Heart." That should be on this list somewhere. Much better than Alanis and captures the same mood. It's also good if you're sad about a breakup and want to imagine that the dumper has regrets.

And thanks for that Ani song... for some reason I hadn't heard it before (yeah, yeah... I live in a cave and went to suburban high school where Hootie and Blowfish was subversive shit). Untouchable Face perfectly captures my current post-break up mood. I'm going to repeat this crap out of that for the rest of the day.

February 17, 2009 4:03 PM

Fad23 said:

I have been listening to Let it Die by Feist. Man that song wrecks me every time I hear it.

February 17, 2009 4:15 PM

TheHobo said:

My favorite Ani break up song is "superhero"

I used to be a superhero

No one could touch me

Not even myself

You are like a phone booth

I somehow stumbled into

And now look at me

I am just like everybody else

February 17, 2009 4:47 PM

solstice2005 said:

"sarah", Bob Dylan on the Desire Album

February 17, 2009 5:34 PM

heroicmedicine said:

Wait, it's "IN your untouchable face?"  I always thought it was "AND your untouchable face."  This adds a whole new and violent aspect to this tune.  Ani's pretty badass!

February 17, 2009 6:10 PM

jbdb said:

I don't know if it's about a breakup, but Beck's "Nobody's Fault but My Own"

February 17, 2009 8:12 PM

its_a_familyname said:

Somebody Pick Up My Pieces. Bettye LaVette (orig. Willie Nelson).

It has the advantage of being openly and unabashedly pathetic.

February 18, 2009 3:25 AM

ms. morphia said:

pretty much the entire "pretty hate machine" album by nine inch nails

February 18, 2009 12:18 PM

Peter Smith said:

I Know It's Over.

Boots of Spanish Leather.

Tornado of Souls.

Purple Rain.

February 18, 2009 1:20 PM

Emily Farris said:

Oooh, I know it's over is a good one!

February 18, 2009 2:23 PM

Corey said:

"Dont Think Twice Its Alright" by Dylan is a classic. She screwed him over but he's forgiven her.

February 18, 2009 3:18 PM

Gordon Gartrelle said:

No George Jones? C'mon!

"She Thinks I Still Care"

"A Good Year for the Roses"

"He Stopped Loving Her Today"

I burst into tears just typing this up.

February 18, 2009 4:01 PM

The Sassy Sexpert said:

I know it may be more than just a little cliche but few songs capture the sadness of a breakup better than "Nothing Compares 2 U" - that song gets played on repeat for hours, I must admit when going through a breakup personally.

It's beautiful and more than a little heartwrenching. Also, on that Sinead O'Connor album is a song called "The Last Day of Our Acquaintance" about just entering a breakup. It's amazing and so true when she sings that they will later meet and it will be like they are strangers. And, it's the little things sometimes that show you a relationship is over....she sings this when she says "I know you don't love me anymore, you used to hold my hand when the plane took off"

Finally, Elton John's "Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word" is another breakup theme song of mine. Its so sad and desperate. Of course, this one is better if you are the broken-up with...

February 18, 2009 5:17 PM

About Brian Fairbanks

Brian Fairbanks, the Senior National Political Correspondent for Nerve, is a filmmaker living in Brooklyn or New Orleans, depending on the season. He is a heavily-armed advocate of gun control.

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