Don’t let this cold world get you down

When I was young growing up in Cleveland, I looked forward to winter. It meant I could get bundled up and go sledding, build a snowman, have snowball fights and — just maybe, if it snowed enough — get a day off from school. I don’t remember the cold temperatures bothering me much, but perhaps I had selective memory about that.

Once I became an adult, winter turned into something to be not enjoyed but endured. I cursed the cold weather — scraping ice off my windshield, jump-starting the car on frigid mornings, shoveling the driveway, having to wear heavy coats, scarves, gloves and hats to fend off bone-chilling temperatures.

During my years living in Atlanta, then Los Angeles and now Nashville, I have celebrated the far milder winters that offered nothing worse than a handful of sub-20 degree nights and the rare ice storm. Instead of four months of misery, winter in those cities lasts mere weeks and is far more bearable for this guy who has grown physically intolerant of the cold.

Popular songwriters through the years have written often about cold winter weather — perhaps not as much as the warmth and “fun in the sun” of summer climes. Indeed, this blog has featured playlists about each of the four seasons, and the one I compiled for winter includes great tunes like “Snowbound” by Genesis, “The Blizzard” by Judy Collins” and “The Hounds of Winter” by Sting.

For this week’s post, I’ve collected songs about the cold, and this time, that means emotional cold as well as physical cold. Lyricists love combining the two with thoughtful metaphors, because people (spurned ex-lovers, nasty co-workers, arrogant strangers) can be every bit as cold as the outdoors in December, January and February.

Build a fire and grab some hot cocoa as you check out these tunes!

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“Cold Sweat,” James Brown, 1967

The release of “Cold Sweat” in 1967 has been widely regarded as the first true funk song, “a radical departure from pop music conventions at the time,” said legendary producer Jerry Wexler. “It deeply affected the musicians I knew, just freaked them out. No one could get a handle on what to do next.” Brown wrote it with bandleader Pee Wee Ellis based on his earlier blues tune “I Don’t Care.” One critic called it a “rhythmically intense, harmonically static template” for much of the material Brown would release in the ensuing years, where the rhythm became more important than the melody. The lyrics celebrate how his woman’s affections “make me break out in a cold sweat.” The seven-minute album version of “Cold Sweat” was broken into a two-part single, with Part 1 reaching #7 on the pop charts.

“Cold as Ice,” Foreigner, 1977

During the recording of Foreigner’s debut LP in 1976, the producer didn’t like one of the tracks and suggested they write something else to replace it. Guitarist Mick Jones came up with “Cold as Ice,” which referred to the emotional coldness the narrator felt from his ex-girlfriend. The band worked all night at a New York studio to record the track, unaware that outside, a blizzard was raging. “It turned out it was the coldest night on record in New York, something like 20 below,” said Jones. “That seemed to be a pretty good omen for the song.” Indeed, the richly textured tune became the second single from the album, reaching #6 on US pop charts in 1977, the second of nine Top Ten songs the band achieved over the next decade.

Cold Cold Cold,” Little Feat, 1972

The New Orleans blues funk of Little Feat, led by the late great Lowell George, deserves far more attention and awards than they’ve received over the years. Their initial run in the 1970s includes some magical moments, chronicled on seven solid studio LPs and a live package. One of George’s better originals is “Cold, Cold, Cold,” a robust tune which first appeared on 1972’s “Sailin’ Shoes” and then again in a medley with “Tripe Face Boogie” on 1974’s “Feats Don’t Fail Me Now.” I chose to feature the fine in-concert version that appears on “Waiting For Columbus,” one of rock’s best live albums: “Cold, cold, cold, that woman was freezing, freezing cold, /Well, I tried everything to warm her up, /Now I’m living in the cold hotel ’cause she passed me up or she passed me by…” 

“It’s Cold Outside,” The Choir, 1966

In Cleveland, where I grew up, a local group known as The Choir earned a following playing covers of early British Invasion tunes by The Beatles, The Who and The Rolling Stones. They began writing their own songs and, in 1966, released the catchy “It’s Cold Outside,” with lyrics referred to cold rainy weather that reinforced the sadness of a romantic breakup. It stalled on the national charts at #68, but it emerged as a huge hit in Ohio in the spring of 1967, reaching #1 on several Top 40 radio stations there. It has since appeared on multiple collections that featured ’60s garage rock and power pop tunes. Three of the four members of The Choir later met up with singer-songwriter Eric Carmen in 1971 and formed The Raspberries, who had several Top Ten hits in the early ’70s.

“Cold Cold World,” Stephen Stills, 1975

From his Buffalo Springfield days through his “Super Session” work with Al Kooper and on into his classic stuff with David Crosby and Graham Nash and then Manassas, Stills has shown himself to be a multi-talented guitarist/songwriter/singer. His solo albums have been more spotty overall, but I always liked his 1975 LP, entitled simply “Stills.” He partnered significantly with newcomer guitarist/singer/songwriter Donnie Dacus on most tracks, and you’ll find great tunes here such as “Turn Back the Pages,” “My Favorite Changes,””First Tings First” and “As I Come of Age.” I really like “Cold Cold World,” a Stills/Dacus collaboration that takes aim at unnamed friends and colleagues who he felt had treated him badly: “I’ve been burned by a cold empty fire, I’ve been turned and led astray, /But you learn when you deal with a liar, it’s a cold cold world, /A cold world when it’s your friends…”

“Come In From the Cold,” Joni Mitchell, 1990

“Night Ride Home,” Mitchell’s 14th studio album, was a welcome return to form after a couple of angry, synth-laden LPs in the 1980s. The autobiographical “Come In From the Cold” is probably my favorite track here, a seven-minute treatise looking back on her childhood and middle age. Through seven verses, she offers examples of how geographical, romantic and professional isolation took their toll on her life, when she yearned for warmer climates and relationships. As a sheltered teen seeking companionship in rural Canada, Mitchell noted, “With just a touch of our fingers, we could make our circuitry explode, /All we ever wanted was just to come in from the cold.” You can hear the folk roots of her early music combined with elements of world-music syncopation and a now deeper vocal register. It was a modest hit as a single in Canada but failed to chart in the US.

“Baby It’s Cold Outside,” Idina Menzel and Michael Bublé, 2014

Songwriter Frank Loesser wrote this call-and-response number in the 1940s, and it won the Best Song Oscar in 1950 for its use in the film “Neptune’s Daughter.” The lyrics feature an insistent man trying to persuade a somewhat reluctant woman to stay longer because the weather is so cold, and in recent years, those in the Me Too movement criticized the words as condoning sexual harassment or even date rape. Interestingly, in the 1950 film, the song is sung twice, the second time turning the tables by having a reluctant man fighting off his aggressive girlfriend. As a classic duet, it has been covered dozens of times by various duos — Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Jordan, Dean Martin and Marilyn Maxwell, Ray Charles and Betty Carter, James Taylor and Natalie Cole, Rod Stewart and Dolly Parton, and Amy Grant and Vince Gill, and John Legend and Kelly Clarkson, to name just a few.

“Out in the Cold,” Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, 1991

Petty enjoyed a fruitful relationship with ELO leader Jeff Lynne when they teamed up with George Harrison, Bob Dylan and Roy Orbison on their Traveling Wilburys project. That carried over to Petty’s hugely successful “Full Moon Fever” solo LP, co-written and co-produced by Lynne. The two men worked together a third time when Petty reunited with The Heartbreakers for their 1991 album “Into the Great Wide Open,” also co-written and co-produced by Lynne and Petty. “Learning to Fly” was a decent hit, but “Out in the Cold” didn’t fare as well. Said Petty, “That one I was never particularly knocked out with. It was fun, but I thought it was a lesser song on the album.” Its lyrics speak of the pain of loneliness during colder months: “I’m standing in a doorway, I’m out walking ’round, hands in my pockets, /I’m out in the cold, body and soul, there’s nowhere to go, I’m out in the cold…”

“Cold, Cold Heart,” Hank Williams, 1950

Country music legend Williams said he wrote this iconic song after visiting his wife in the hospital, where she angrily denounced him for causing her problems. She claimed she had been provoked by his relentless womanizing to have an affair of her own, but she got pregnant, attempted a home abortion and ended up in the hospital with a serious infection. “That woman has a cold, cold heart,” Williams told a friend, which became the title of the song, written in 1950: “A memory from your lonesome past keeps us so far apart, /Why can’t I free your doubtful mind and melt your cold cold heart…” Many fine versions have been recorded, and although it was Norah Jones’s 2002 rendition that introduced me to the song, I decided to feature Williams’s original. But I couldn’t resist including covers by Jones, Nat King Cole, Norah Jones, Van Morrison, and John Prine and Miranda Lambert at the end of the Spotify playlist.

“Cold,” Annie Lennox, 1992

The incredible force that is Lennox’s voice made itself known during her time as one half of Eurythmics in the 1980s. Since going solo with her 1992 album “Diva,” her pipes have only gotten better. She has recorded numerous originals and classic covers with equal flair on her five solo LPs, all of which rank high in my record collection. From “Diva,” the single “Walking On Broken Glass” reached #14 here, while in the UK, three other singles made waves. “Cold” peaked at #26 there, with one reviewer stating, “This moody showpiece has a sparse keyboard arrangement that comes in like sheets of ice, with Lennox’s unsettling voice as harsh as an arctic frost. It also has some of Lennox’s best images and phrasing expressing heartache and regrets.” Here’s a sample: “Winter has frozen us, let love take hold of us, cold cold cold, /Now we are shivering, blue ice is glittering, cold cold cold…”

“Cold Shot,” Stevie Ray Vaughan, 1984

Vaughan, a leading proponent of the blues revival of the 1980s, is universally praised as one of the finest blues guitarists of all time, despite having his career tragically cut short in a 1990 helicopter crash when he was only 35. He and his band Double Trouble managed to release five studio LPs and an incendiary live album, all featuring both original material and traditional blues tunes. From their second LP, 1984’s “Couldn’t Stand the Weather,” you’ll likely recognize Vaughan’s astonishing cover of Jimi Hendrix’s “Voodoo Child” and the funky title track, but the song that stands out for me is “Cold Shot,” a marvelous blues shuffle by Michael Kindred on which Vaughan gives his axe a hell of a workout. “Once was a sweet thing, baby, held that love in our hands, but now I reach to kiss your lips, it just don’t mean a thing, /And that’s a cold shot, baby, yeah that’s a drag, a cold shot, babe, we’ve let our love go bad…”

“She’s So Cold,” The Rolling Stones, 1980

Following the huge success of 1978’s “Some Girls” LP and its two singles, “Miss You” and “Beast of Burden,” The Stones took their time on the next batch of songs, eventually coming up with 18 tracks, which they pared down to ten to comprise “Emotional Rescue,” another #1 LP in the US and elsewhere in 1980. The disco-ish title track reached #3 on US charts, but the punky-sounding “She’s So Cold” managed only #26 as the second single. Like other tunes selected for this blog, it uses physical metaphors for hot and cold to connote the relationship challenges when one party is fired up and the other is aloof: “I’m the burning bush, I’m the burning fire, I’m the bleeding volcano, /I think she was born in an arctic zone, I tried re-wiring her, tried re-firing her, I think her engine is permanently stalled, /I’m so hot for her but she’s so cold…”

“Cold Chill,” Stevie Wonder, 1995

After dominating the charts in the 1960s and 1970s, Wonder’s musical output slowed in the ’80s, and since the ’90s, he has released only two albums. “Conversation Peace” in 1995 is a solid effort, although mostly neglected by the press and the public. The single “For Your Love” stalled at #53 on pop charts but still earned a Best R&B Vocal Performance Grammy. I’m partial to the alluring funk groove of “Cold Chill,” which sounds to me reminiscent of his “Songs in the Key of Life” heyday. In the lyrics, Wonder’s narrator bemoans how his former lover treats him so rudely, bringing the relationship to an abrupt end: “It was a cold chill on a summer night, never thought the girlie wouldn’t treat me right, /It was a cold chill on a summer day, never thought the girl would dog me out that way, /It was a cold chill on a summer morn, never cried like a baby since the day I was born, /It was a cold chill on a summer eve, never had no chopper bring me to my knees…”

“Cold,” Elton John, 1995

One of the biggest superstars of the ’70s pop/rock scene fell on harder times in the ’80s as personal problems and declining sales took their toll (as spelled out in the recent “Rocket Man” musical biopic). John and lyricist Bernie Taupin rebounded in the ’90s with several strong studio LPs (“The One,” “The Big Picture”), a handful of Top Ten singles and the soundtrack to “The Lion King.” Another album, “Made in England,” reached #13 on US charts, as did its first single, “Believe.” Just for fun, the John/Taupin team chose to use one-word titles on almost every track (“House,” “Please,” “Lies,” “Pain,” among others). One song called simply “Cold” offered another example of equating physical and emotional cold: “‘I don’t love you’ is like a stake being driven through your heart, /But I don’t care, II came back for you, /Love is cruel, but I don’t care, /I wanted you, and I’m cold…”

“Cold Rain,” Crosby, Stills and Nash, 1977

After runaway success with their “Crosby, Stills and Nash” debut and #1 LP “Deja Vu” with Neil Young, the trio of David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash spent six years as solo artists and duos, producing some fine songs that somehow didn’t quite measure up to their initial work as a trio. In 1977, the three singer-songwriters reunited and released the triumphant “CSN” album, which reached #2 on US charts on the strength of two popular singles, Nash’s “Just a Song Before I Go” and Stills’s “Fair Game.” The LP is chock full of great tracks like “Shadow Captain,” “See the Changes,” “Cathedral,” “I Give You Give Blind” and “Dark Star.” The wistful Nash tune “Cold Rain” is a masterful example of lyrics and music merging to paint an aching, melancholy mood: “Cold rain out on the streets, I am all alone, /Cold rain down on my face, I am heading home…”

“Out in the Cold,” Carole King, 1971

King’s 1971 iconic “Tapestry” is one of the most popular LPs of all time, chock full of hits and deep tracks that cemented King’s name in the pantheon of brilliant pop songwriters as well as performing artists. Song after song after song, the album’s lineup is as consistently excellent as any from that era’s confessional singer-songwriters. I didn’t know this until one day last week, but King wrote one more song for “Tapestry” that didn’t make the cut, and was never released until 1999 when it appeared on a re-issue. “Out in the Cold” is a joy to hear all these years later. In it, the female narrator confesses to being unfaithful to her man, which costs her dearly: “If you open up a new door, you may find the old one’s closed, /So be true to your good man, take a lesson from this story I have told, /Or you just might get left out in the cold…”

“Fuck, I Hate the Cold,” Cowboy Junkies, 2012

A friend turned me on to this emphatically stated song lyric at the last minute, and I simply had to include it, because it precisely sums up my feelings about the cold. The Cowboy Junkies, an alternative country/folk group from Toronto, have been around since the mid-’80s, recording 16 studio albums over forty years and are still out there touring today. Their major label debut in 1986 included the remarkable remake of Lou Reed’s classic “Sweet Jane,” while their 1990 LP “The Caution Horses” fared the best on US charts with original tunes like “Sun Comes Up, It’s Tuesday Morning.” Being Canadians, they certainly earned the right to bitch about the frigid winters there: “Too much time on this winding trail of a tale yet to be told, /Baby, I’m getting old and, fuck, I hate the cold…”

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Honorable mention:

Cold Turkey,” John Lennon, 1969; “Cold Rain and Snow,” Grateful Dead, 1967; “Stone Cold Sober,” Crawler, 1977; “Cold Sweat,” Thin Lizzy, 1983; “Out in the Cold,” The Strawbs, 1974; “Hot Love, Cold World,” Bob Welch, 1977; “Cold Black Night,” Fleetwood Mac, 1968; “Stone Cold Crazy,” Queen, 1974.

Cold, Cold Heart,” Nat King Cole, 1964; “Cold, Cold Heart,” Norah Jones, 2002; “Cold, Cold Heart,” John Prine & Miranda Lambert, 2016; “Cold, Cold Heart,” Van Morrison, 2023.

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I’m not giving in an inch to fear

Fear — the emotional belief that something or someone is dangerous or threatening — can be crippling. It can be healthy when it warns us to keep our distance from people or situations that are likely harmful, but it can also be irrational, especially when manipulated by someone with a hidden agenda.

“The Scream” (1893) by Norwegian painter Edvard Munch

Most people suffer from at least one of a wide variety of fears — enclosed spaces, crowds, darkness, heights, the unknown, financial insecurity, abandonment, public ridicule, things that go bump in the night, DYING — all of which are ripe material for authors, screenwriters and songwriters. Horror movies and murder mysteries capitalize on common fears, and rock music has many dozens of examples of song lyrics that explore the things that scare us.

Just in time for Halloween week, I have gathered 15 songs, mostly from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, with lyrical themes that address our deep-seated fears. Some of these tunes should be familiar; most will be new to you. There’s a Spotify playlist at the end so you can check them out as you read about them.

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“Scared,” John Lennon, 1974

From mid-1973 to late-1974, Lennon went through a conflicted period he later called his “lost weekend,” when he was living in Los Angeles separated from Yoko Ono. “I loved the freedom, but ultimately, it wasn’t good for me, and I drank too much,” he recalled. “I missed her, and it showed up in the songs on ‘Walls and Bridges.'” One of the more intriguing tracks on the album is the haunting “Scared,” which explores Lennon’s fears of aging, loneliness and the emptiness of success: “I’m scared, I’m scared, I’m scared, /As the years roll away, and the price that I paid, and the straws slip away…, /Every day of my life, I just manage to survive, /I just wanna stay alive…, /Hatred and jealousy, gonna be the death of me, I guess I knew it right from the start…”

“Fear,” Sade, 1985

Nigerian-born British chanteuse Sade Adu burst on the musical scene in 1984 with her “Diamond Life” LP and big single “Smooth Operator.” Joining forces with guitarist/saxophonist Stuart Matthewman, Sade wrote most of the tracks on her hugely successful follow-up, “Promise,” which reached #1 on the U.S. album chart and included “The Sweetest Taboo,” “Is It a Crime?” and “Never As Good as the First Time.” Also found on this LP is a darkly lovely piece called “Fear” that addresses the anxiety the wife of a matador feels whenever he heads out to his death-defying pursuit at a bullfight. “Blue is the color of the red sky, /Will he, will he come home tonight?, /Blue is the color that she feels inside, Matador, I can’t hide my fear anymore…”

“Girl Afraid,” The Smiths, 1984

Hugely influential in British rock of the ’90s and beyond, The Smiths produced some of the most memorable post-punk rock and pop of the ’80s, led by singer Morrissey and guitarist Johnny Marr. One critic called their songs “intoxicatingly melancholic, dangerously thoughtful, and seductively funny.” Their first Top Ten hit in the U.K., “Heaven Knows I’m Miserable Now,” included “Girl Afraid” as its B-side, and both songs appeared on the compilation LP “Hatful of Hollow” in 1984: “Girl afraid, /Where do his intentions lay? Or does he even have any? /She says, ‘He never really looks at me, I give him every opportunity’… /Boy afraid, /Prudence never pays, and everything she wants costs money, /But she doesn’t even like me, and I know because she said so…”

“Baby I’m Scared of You,” Womack and Womack, 1983

Cecil Womack, younger brother of his more famous brother Bobby, had sung in gospel groups and behind soul greats Sam Cooke and James Brown in the early ’60s. While working as a songwriter, he met Cooke’s daughter Linda, also a songwriter, and the two married in 1978, debuting as a recording group known as Womack and Womack in 1983. Their debut LP “Love Wars” spawned three R&B hits, one of which, “Baby, I’m Scared of You,” was a catchy, call-and-response duet about a girl who’s wary of a boy’s truthfulness: “Come, if you got real love for me, /Stay away, if got games and tricks for me, /I want a man that means everything he say, /Not a boy full of play, pulling rabbits out of his hat every day, /Oh, baby, I’m scared of you…”

“Don’t Fear the Reaper,” Blue Oyster Cult, 1976

BOC’s lead guitarist and singer Donald “Buck Dharma” Roeser was frustrated when “(Don’t Fear) the Reaper” was interpreted as encouraging suicide, or even murder-suicide (the “Romeo and Juliet” reference). “My intent was ‘Don’t be afraid of death. It’s inevitable.’ It’s basically a love song where the love transcends the actual physical existence of the partners.” It became a hugely popular slab of melodic hard rock in the middle of the disco era, reaching #12 in 1976: “Came the last night of sadness, and it was clear she couldn’t go on, /Then the door was open and the wind appeared, the candles blew and then disappeared, /The curtains flew and then he appeared, saying ‘Don’t be afraid,’ /Come on baby, and she had no fear…”

“Stage Fright,” The Band, 1970

The Band’s first two LPs had been rapturously received and the third one, 1970’s “Stage Fright,” continued their musical journey but with songs that took a darker turn. As the name implies, the title track is about “the terror of performing,” according to drummer/singer Levon Helm, and was written by Robbie Robertson’s anxiety about The Band’s first live show under that name in 1969: “See the man with the stage fright, just standin’ up there to give it all his might, /He got caught in the spotlight, but when we get to the end, he wants to start all over again, /Now if he says that he’s afraid, take him at his word…” In a more general sense, the lyrics also allude to the pitfalls of fortune and fame, which profoundly affected The Band in terms of interpersonal relationships and substance abuse.

“Running Scared,” Roy Orbison, 1962

Known primarily for his distinctive, powerful voice, Orbison wrote and recorded some of rock’s most operatic, darkly emotional ballads, many of which reached the Top Ten on US pop charts in the 1960-1964 period. While other rockers of that era projected macho images, Orbison embraced a more vulnerable persona, wearing his heart on his sleeve on hits like “Only the Lonely,” “Crying,” and “Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream).” One of his biggest singles came in 1962 with “Running Scared,” a bolero-style song that reveals the narrator’s insecurity of losing his woman to another man: “Just runnin’ scared each place we go, so afraid that he might show, /Yeah, runnin’ scared, what would I do if he came back and wanted you?…”

“Fear For Your Future,” Ronnie Wood, 1992

First with the Jeff Beck Group, then with Faces and eventually with The Rolling Stones, Wood has amassed an enviable legacy as an accomplished guitarist on some of rock music’s best classic albums (“Truth,” “Ooh La La,” “Some Girls”). He has managed to release six solo albums as well, although only 1979’s “Gimme Some Neck” made much impact. On his 1992 LP “Slide On This,” his funk tune “Fear For Your Future” warns his ex-lover that her dishonesty will be her eventual downfall: “It’s too late to cry, move your sorry butt aside, /I don’t care what you say ’cause your truths are nothing but lies, /I see the time coming soon to cross you off my list, /I’ll drink to the good time we had and send you off with a kiss, /I fear for your future, I fear for your life…”

“I’m Scared,” Burton Cummings, 1976

Cummings helped lead the Canadian band The Guess Who to multiple Top 40 success (“These Eyes,” “No Time,” “American Woman,” “Share the Land”) in the 1969-1974 period in their native country as well as in the U.S. In 1975, when a couple of his songs were rejected by the band, Cummings chose to go solo, having an immediate hit with “Stand Tall.” Although the follow-up single “I’m Scared” stalled at #61 in the U.S., it became a concert favorite, with lyrics about a fearful man crying out for divine intervention: “I’m scared, Lordy Lord, I’m shaking, I’m petrified, /Never been much on religion, but I sure enough just fell down on my knees, /Come on now, give me a sign you’re listening to me, /You hear me talking, you hear me crying, /It’s confusing to me, Lord, I’m terrified…”

“Afraid of Love,” Toto, 1983

The talented musicians who comprised the lineup of Toto had been active as studio session guys for years before forming their own band in 1978, making a splash with their first single, “Hold the Line.” Four years later, their “Toto IV” LP won the Album of the Year Grammy, thanks in part to the megahits “Rosanna” and “Africa.” Guitarist Steve Lukather, keyboardist David Paich and drummer Jeff Porcaro combined forces to write “Afraid of Love,” a solid deep track that focuses on the fear of falling in love with the wrong person: “I like the way you move and just the way you are, /I can’t take anymore, ’cause girl, you’re pushing too hard, /I gotta get away from you, girl, ’cause I’ve never been afraid of love ’til I met you, /Never thought a girl could make me feel the way you do…”

“Whatever I Fear,” Toad the Wet Sprocket, 1997

Ever since I was first exposed to Toad the Wet Sprocket in the mid-1990s, I’ve been a fan. “Walk On the Ocean,” “Something’s Always Wrong,” “All I Want,” “Nanci” and others showed the fine melodic sensibilities of chief singer-songwriter Glen Phillips, and I’ve seen the band in concert twice in the past few years. Their overlooked 1997 album “Coil” needs to be rediscovered, especially the irresistible lead track, “Whatever I Fear,” which focuses on the irrationality of fearing new things we’re exposed to in our daily lives: “Whatever I fear the most is whatever I see before me, /Whenever I let my guard down, whatever I was ignoring, /Whatever I fear the most is whatever I see before me, /Whatever I have been given, whatever I have been…”

“Fearless,” Pink Floyd, 1971

Pink Floyd’s superstardom in the U.S. and around the world didn’t take hold until 1973’s seismic “Dark Side of the Moon” LP, but the first signs of the soundscapes that marked the band’s ’70s/’80s albums first surfaced on 1971’s “Meddle,” with tracks like “Echoes” and “One Of These Days.” Another memorable tune was “Fearless,” a hypnotic, acoustically driven piece which also made use of a soccer crowd chanting its team anthem “You’ll Never Walk Alone” (from Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “Carousel”). Its lyrics encourage us not to lose hope in the face of life’s challenges and adversities: “As you rise above the fear-lines in his brow, /You look down, hearing the sound of the faces in the crowd, /Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart, and you’ll never walk alone…”

“Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark,” Robert Cray Band, 1988

Cutting his musical teeth on blues guitar greats like Albert Collins, Freddie King and Muddy Waters, Cray emerged in the 1980s as a key member of the next generation of blues musicians who earned mainstream appeal. His 1986 LP “Strong Persuader,” and its single “Smoking Gun,” brought him considerable recognition. On the title track from his follow-up album “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark,” Cray tries to reassure his woman that he will remain a source of calm and comfort even if they’re cuddling in as dark bedroom: “You might tremble, you might shake, /Scream out loud, you may even pray, /I know which moves suit you right, /You’ll beg for more, you’ll forget about the night, /Don’t be afraid of the dark, baby, no no, /I’ll be there to hold you, don’t be afraid of the dark…”

“Fear (of the Unknown),” Siouxsie and The Banshees, 1991

British singer Susan Ballion, known by her stage name Siouxsie Sioux, emerged during the post-punk scene in 1978 and, with her band The Banshees, became “one of most audacious and uncompromising acts of that period,” as one critic put it. They scored nine consecutive Top 20 albums in the U.K., but didn’t make much of an impact in the U.S. until 1991’s “Superstition” LP. “Kiss Them For Me” reached #23 on pop charts here, and “Fear (of the Unknown),” which explores the anxiety known as xenophobia, received heavy airplay in dance clubs that year: “Imagine two complete strangers who suspect they were meant to be, /Both in need of love and affection, /Yet their suspicions prevent something heavenly, /Fear takes control, fear of the unknown…”

“I’m So Afraid,” Fleetwood Mac, 1975

When Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks joined Fleetwood Mac in early 1975, they each had three or four songs ready to go because they’d been anticipating making a second album as a duo following their 1973 “Buckingham Nicks” LP, but their contract wasn’t renewed. Buckingham had suffered a bout of mononucleosis that frightened him, and it surfaced in the lyrics to “I’m So bAfraid,” which one critic described as “a paranoid blues blowout.” It’s one of the hardest rocking songs in the group’s post-1974 catalog, with Buckingham performing a blistering guitar solo on record and on almost every tour since: “I’m so afraid the way I feel, /Days when the rain and the sun are gone, /Black as night, agony’s torn at my heart too long, /So afraid, slip and I fall and I die…”

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Honorable mention:

Afraid,” David Bowie, 2002; “Fear of the Dark,” Iron Maiden, 1992; “Scared,” Tragically Hip, 1994; “Don’t Be Afraid,” Boston, 1978; “Frightened,” Toby Lightman, 2004; “The Fear of Being Alone,” Reba McEntire, 1996; “Afraid,” Mötley Crüe, 1997; “Fear of Sleep,” The Strokes, 2006.

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