Jackson Browne wrote “For A Dancer” in memory of a modern dancer friend who died tragically in a fire. When Jackson’s wife, the model Phyllis Major, died suddenly in 1976, “For A Dancer” mysteriously took on a new meaning. “That’s how songs work,” Brown said in an interview. “They migrate into other parts of your life and other experiences.”
Browne eventually played the song at the funerals of two other celebrity friends. And if one listens to the lyrics closely, “For A Dancer” becomes a larger commentary on the intransience of life itself. We cling to it like a thread, and nothing is certain.
To me, the larger meaning of the song underscores the necessity of using every precious moment wisely. Here’s my cover.
3 replies on “‘For A Dancer’: Life Lessons in Jackson Browne’s Lyrics”
I love this song and haven’t heard it for years. It’s like meeting with an old friend that I’ve missed and didn’t know it. Brings up a real heartfelt ache that’s sad and good to feel at the same time. It’s being alive. Thank you David.
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i love this song and I love your
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cover of it here . I had not heard it for years either and you remind me of Richard Thompson too so I shall be looking you both up again soon. Thanks so much, Annabelle X
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