The Most Philosophical Song You Ever Heard


This may be a little too deeply personal for some, so reader discretion is advised. Don't know the reason, stayed here all season. Nothing to show but this brand new tattoo. But it's a real beauty, a Mexican cutie. How it got here I haven't a clue.
Blew out my flip-flop, stepped on a pop top, cut my heel had to cruise on back home. But there's booze in the blender and soon it will render that frozen concoction that helps me hang on.

128x128millercarbon
Two songs off the top of my head:

1. The First Time - a love song hit in the 70s which was really a love song written in the 50s by a British man and great song writer, Ewan McCall for his life long partner Peggy Seegar, Pete's half sister.

2. And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda - especially as sung by Priscilla Herdman. It's an anti war song based on the World War 1 battle of Gallipoli, a terrible loss of lives caused by stupid generals. The words describe horror as the song proceeds and point out the futility of war as well as any song I've ever heard. Priscilla makes it especially terrifying as she has a beautiful voice and the contrast between her voice and the story only magnifies the lesson in the words. 
Guess the Band…

When a problem comes along
You must whip it
Before the cream sits out too long
You must whip it
When something's going wrong
You must whip it 
Now whip it
Into shape
Shape it up
Get straight
Go forward
Move ahead
Try to detect it
It's not too late
To whip it
Whip it good

Seems appropriate for the times…
+1 John Lennon - Imagine
Imagine by Lennon is the liberal love song. No God no heaven?
 Title should be “Nightmare”!
Meets the OP “The Most Philosophical Song You Ever Heard”, don’t necessarily agree with the philosophy.

If the OP means which lyrics spoke to one on a personal level, then that’s a different answer.
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two come to mind......

’Peace Piece’, Bill Evans......says it all with no words.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nv2GgV34qIg

’Positively 4th Street’, Bob Dylan.....

everyone thinks it’s about them.


California - Dreams So Real

"California falls in the sea,
that's when she said she'd come back to me."
DMB (not sure if it is the "most" but it surely ranks)

Standing here
The old man said to me
"Long before these crowded streets
Here stood my dreaming tree"

Below it he would sit
For hours at a time
Now, progress takes away
What forever took to find


Written by Guy Clark, performed by Lyle Lovett (this one also is at or near the top of my list)

Here's a book of poems I got
From a girl I used to know
I guess I read it front to back
Fifty times or so
It's all about the good life
And stayin' at ease with the world
It's funny how I love that book
And I never loved that girl


Some of these songs seem to be sentimental choices rather than having anything to do with a particular philosophy. Getting a bit off track.
Just about every Townes Van Zandt song, but especially The Rake, The Ballad of Pancho and Lefty, Waitin' Round to Die . . .
Fortunate Son, by John Fogerty & Creedence Clearwater Revival.  It speaks to me as I wore three stripes in the Army when it was released back in the day.
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RUSH - 2112

A bad end for a citizen of collectivist state who shows initiative.
Listen to Rick Rubin’s production of Johnny Cash……. American IV: The Man Comes Around 
and American V: A Hundred Highways. 
Eve of Destruction- Barry McGuire - 1964
”Hate your next door neighbor, but don’t forget to say grace”.
Imagine by Lennon is the liberal love song. No God no heaven?
 Title should be “Nightmare”!

“Don’t you love her as she is walking out the door”!
nothing else comes close!
A classic song about love,and love lost Marshal Tuckers classic 
Heard it in a Love song ,One good listen to its words, it hits it  home to the ♥️ and soul.

Okay, so first of all Millercarbon is right. I’m sorry, but he just is. Margaritaville is one of the greatest, and deeply meaningful songs ever written full of exquisite symbols, imagery, and metaphors. But, I would suggest I’d Love to Change the World by Ten Years After. Or Reflections of My Life by The Marmalade. Or Isn’t Life Strange by The Moody Blues. 
...on a personal plane, Punky's Dilemma....

( the whistling of the theme from The High and the Mighty on the fade-out just stitched me...)
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The Great Mandela by Peter, Paul and Mary.  One of the great anti-war songs of the 60's plus, for me anyway, a very emotional thought provoking song.  I still listened to it on a fairly regular basis.   

Also, Where Have All the Flowers Gone.  Another great anti-war song this time by Pete Seeger.

Richard
A bit long winded but worth the read based on the questions. The song is...

Dead Can Dance
How Fortunate the Man with None

You saw sagacious Solomon

You know what came of him

To him, complexities seemed plain

He cursed the hour that gave birth to him

And saw that everything was vain

How great and wise was Solomon

The world, however, did not wait

But soon observed what followed on

It's wisdom that had brought him to this state

How fortunate the man with none


You saw courageous Caesar next

You know what he became

They deified him in his life

Then had him murdered just the same

And as they raised the fatal knife

How loud he cried "you to my son!"

The world, however, did not wait

But soon observed what followed on

It's courage that had brought him to that state

How fortunate the man with none


You heard of honest Socrates

The man who never lied

They weren't so grateful as you'd think

Instead the rulers fixed to have him tried

And handed him the poisoned drink

How honest was the people's noble son

The world, however, did not wait

But soon observed what followed on

It's honesty that brought him to that state

How fortunate the man with none


Here you can see respectable folk

Keeping to God's own laws

So far he hasn't taken heed

You who sit safe and warm indoors

Help to relieve out bitter need

How virtuously we had begun

The world, however, did not wait

But soon observed what followed on

It's fear of God that brought us to that state

How fortunate the man with none


hilde452,541 posts10-07-2021 10:17pmIf anyone quotes a Doors song, I'm outta here.

Five To One!
Thanks to the Abominable Snowman for Monty Python's "Philosopher's Song." That belongs here in response to MC's OP—for its sarcasm. It has always seemed to me that skit's point was to poke fun at Australians. The Aussie philosophy department where everyone is called Bruce has departmental rules that include "This term I don't want to catch anyone not drinking." Chapman, Cleese and Idle all met at Cambridge, and all studied philosophy there. The pun that motivates this sketch, I take it, is a familiar English condescension toward those moronic Aussies, who have misunderstood and believe that philosophers are supposed to "drink" instead of "think."

I teach a university course on "Philosophy and Music." But that's meant somewhat tongue in cheek, too, as it isn't at all clear that music has even a potential to be "philosophical" in any serious sense of the word. Still, Plato (and Pythagoras before him) believed that mathematical relations were audible in music and, as math expresses eternal Being (not the mere appearances of "becoming" in the realm of the senses, the shadow realm of the famous cave allegory), Plato considered music to be a very high form of philosophical expression. He wasn't, of course, the last to do so; my favorite would have to be Schopenhauer, for whom music functions as a kind of empirical validation of his entire metaphysics. 

Be that as it may, what does, or can, music—sequences of tones—"express"? The examples in this thread, from the OP's onward, cite lyrics, which might as well be "poetry" and not "music." But can instrumental music express ideas? Or, for that matter, even "emotions"? I know we all think it can—obviously, dance music at a funeral would be inappropriate, while languid melodies in a minor key will hardly enliven your party. But why do we think this? How can it do this?

Maybe that's a topic for another thread. In any case, with this problem in mind, I'll mention again John Cage's 4'33". 
The Bloody Violation of Mickey Mouse's Virginity on 59th Street         Bedtime For Bonzo
The Grateful Dead:  "Ripple" and "Box of Rain" have eternity shining through them.
Alber Collins- "I aint't drunk" , I'm just drinkin.

Indigo girls "Closer to Fine"
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First off, great topic MC.

I find a lot of the songs mentioned walk a fine line between being "observational" about the human condition versus being philosophical about it, although sometimes both will happen within the same song. Both perspectives are probably valid; so, here's a couple of more observational songs:

Think For a Minute - Housemartins
Don't Interrupt the Sorrow - Joni Mitchell