
Words Are Enough: Brief Profiles of Incomparable Lyricists
The July 2006 issue of Harper's reported that scientists discovered the
ability of male putty-nosed monkeys in Nigeria to speak the sentence "pyow hack hack pyow hack hack," which means "it's time to move on."
This exchange is no small feat one monkey mutters something, another monkey moves. After rounding up our
favorite songs from last year and exhausting all synonyms to describe the sounds of those songs, we've taken
on the task of focusing on the poets of pop and other genres, the lyricists who pen the lines that move us.
Some lyricists write only one great song (or only one great line), some build genre-bending multi-year careers,
some go unrecognized until well after their careers are over. All of the lyricists who will be featured here over
the next few weeks have made lasting impressions on the authors who've chosen them as subjects. They're genius to us, which means
this list is by no means exhaustive or complete it's a mere fraction of the English-speaking world's musical output. But
when the record stops or the mp3 player needs to be charged again, their words are the ones we remember.
The lyricists (in no particular order):
Elvis Costello
Morrissey
Björk
Jello Biafra
Craig Finn
Paul Westerberg
Ween
Tom Waits
Michael Stipe
Ani Difranco
Stephin Merritt
Patty Griffin
Leonard Cohen
Chuck D
Dead Prez
Mos Def
Lucinda Williams
Robert Johnson