Pop songs may last only a few minutes but some of them carry stories that are hundreds of years old. Writers, poets and other myth-makers have long inspired musicians. Sometimes directly. Sometimes subconsciously. Here four songs that show how classic literature quietly lives on in pop music.
Kate Bush, ‘Peter Pan Syndrome’ (1975)
Inspired by: 'Peter Pan' by J. M. Barrie (play 1904 and novel 1911). In Barrie’s original story, Peter Pan refuses to grow up and lives in Neverland, this is a magical place that never changes. But beneath the fantasy lies something unsettling: Peter forgets people, avoids emotional depth, and remains stuck.
Kate Bush, writing 'Peter Pan Syndrome' in 1975, turns this myth into psychology. Her song isn’t about flying boys or pirates, but about adults who cling to childhood to avoid responsibility. What was once magical becomes limiting. Eternal youth is no longer freedom, but emotional paralysis.
Roxy Music, ‘Avalon’ (1982)
Inspired by: 'Avalon' from the Arthurian legends. In medieval legend, Avalon is the island where King Arthur is taken after being mortally wounded. A place of mist, healing and rest beyond the world of conflict.
Roxy Music’s 'Avalon', released in 1982, transforms this mythical island into an emotional refuge. The song is about exhaustion giving way to intimacy. Battles are over not because they were won, but because they no longer matter. Avalon becomes a private space of calm, love and surrender.
Robbie Williams, ‘The Road to Mandalay’ (2001)
Inspired by: 'Mandalay' (1890) by Rudyard Kipling. Kipling’s poem describes a British soldier longing for Mandalay, a distant place associated with warmth, beauty and freedom. It is a poem of nostalgia and escape.
Robbie Williams’ 'The Road to Mandalay', released in 2001, turns the idea inward. His Mandalay is not a place on a map, but a metaphor for reflection. The song looks back on excess, mistakes and fame, searching for meaning before it’s too late. The journey is no longer geographical, but moral and emotional.
Taylor Swift, ‘This Love’ (2014)
Inspired by: 'Ophelia' from Hamlet by William Shakespeare (around 1601). Ophelia, one of Shakespeare’s most tragic figures, is silenced, overwhelmed and ultimately lost to the water. Later paintings, especially Millais’ famous Ophelia, fixed her image as drifting, beautiful, and undone.
In the song 'This Love' (2014), Taylor Swift draws on this Ophelia-like imagery of water, drifting and surrender. But where Ophelia disappears forever, Swift’s narrator returns. The song rewrites tragedy into survival: love may overwhelm, but it does not erase the self.
A shared pattern
Across these four songs, old stories are not retold, but translated:
• Neverland becomes psychology
• Avalon becomes emotional peace
• Mandalay becomes self-reflection
• Ophelia becomes recovery
Pop music may feel modern and fleeting, but it often carries echoes of ancient myths, classic plays and old poems. These songs remind us that stories never really disappear. They adapt!
P.S. #Painting. John Everett Millais, 'Ophelia' (1851–1852). Source: wikipedia.

No comments:
Post a Comment