"Song to the Siren" | |
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Song by Tim Buckley | |
from the album Starsailor | |
Released | February 1970 |
Recorded | 1969 |
Genre | Folk |
Length | 4:36 |
Label | Straight |
Composer(s) | Tim Buckley |
Lyricist(s) | Larry Beckett, Tim Buckley |
Producer(s) | Tim Buckley Executive producer: Herb Cohen |
Starsailor track listing | |
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Audio sample | |
from Starsailor
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Audio sample | |
"Song to the Siren" from Morning Glory: The Tim Buckley Anthology
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"Song to the Siren" | |
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Single by This Mortal Coil | |
from the album It'll End in Tears | |
Released | September 1983 |
Label | 4AD |
Songwriter(s) |
"Song to the Siren" is a song written by Tim Buckley and his writing partner Larry Beckett and was first released on Buckley's 1970 album Starsailor. It was also later released on Morning Glory: The Tim Buckley Anthology, the album featuring a performance of the song taken from the final episode of The Monkees TV show which aired on March 25, 1968.
Pat Boone was the first to release a version of the song when it was featured on his 1969 album Departure, predating Buckley's Starsailor release. However, the song has become perhaps Buckley's most famous due to a number of artists covering the song after his death in 1975, notably This Mortal Coil.
The song was written in 1967, but Buckley was dissatisfied with the early attempts at recording it. It would finally appear on Starsailor three years later.The Monkees TV show version featured the song in its original folk song style, with Buckley playing solo with a 12 string guitar. This stands in contrast to the lusher, reverb-filled version present on the Starsailor album. The Monkees television spot features the song in the key of E while the later album version is played in Bb. The album version also features heavy reverb on the electric guitar and high pitched background vocals. In comparison, the live version is more lo-fi, with no effects, and Buckley's voice is accompanied only by his guitar. The 1968 performance also features different lyrics with the phrase "I am puzzled as the oyster" later being changed to "I'm as puzzled as the newborn child" in the album version. This was reportedly because when Buckley played the song to Judy Henske, wife of then producer Jerry Yester, she responded to the line with laughter.