Skylark
Linda Ronstadt Lyrics


Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴  Line by Line Meaning ↴

Have you anything to say to me
Won't you tell me where my love can be
Is there a meadow in the mist
Where someone's waiting to be kissed

Oh skylark
Have you seen a valley green with spring
Where my heart can go a-journeying
Over the shadows and the rain

To a blossom-covered lane
And in your lonely flight
Haven't you heard the music in the night
Wonderful music

Faint as a will o' the wisp
Crazy as a loon
Sad as a gypsy serenading the moon
Oh skylark

I don't know if you can find these things
But my heart is riding on your wings
So if you see them anywhere
Won't you lead me there





Oh skylark
Won't you lead me there

Overall Meaning

The song "Skylark" by Linda Ronstadt is a tender plea to a bird, seeking guidance to find the singer's love. The opening lines of the song ask the skylark if it has any information about the whereabouts of the singer's lover. The following lines describe a picturesque meadow in the mist, where the singer hopes to find their love awaiting a kiss. The skylark is asked to take the singer's heart to this beautiful meadow, where it can journey over the shadows and the rain, to a blossom-covered lane.


The song then asks the skylark if it has heard the wonderful music in the night, which the singer, riding on its wings, hopes to hear. The bird is depicted as being one with the natural world, faint as a will o' the wisp, crazy as a loon and sad as a gypsy serenading the moon. The final plea of the song is to the skylark to help the singer find the things they seek.


Line by Line Meaning

Have you anything to say to me
Linda Ronstadt is asking the Skylark if it has any information to share with her


Won't you tell me where my love can be
Linda Ronstadt is asking the Skylark to reveal the whereabouts of her lover


Is there a meadow in the mist
Linda Ronstadt is inquiring if there is a particular meadow shrouded in mist


Where someone's waiting to be kissed
Linda Ronstadt is questioning if there is someone who is longing for a kiss at that meadow


Oh skylark
Linda Ronstadt is addressing the Skylark with affection


Have you seen a valley green with spring
Linda Ronstadt is asking the Skylark if it has seen a lush, green valley in the springtime


Where my heart can go a-journeying
Linda Ronstadt wants to visit that green valley as it stirs her soul


Over the shadows and the rain
Linda Ronstadt wants to journey there despite the shadows and rains that may come her way


To a blossom-covered lane
Linda Ronstadt desires to visit a path covered with blooming flowers


And in your lonely flight
Linda Ronstadt understands that the Skylark flies alone


Haven't you heard the music in the night
Linda Ronstadt asks the Skylark whether it has heard the music in the night


Wonderful music
Linda Ronstadt describes the music as wonderful


Faint as a will o' the wisp
Linda Ronstadt describes the music as elusive and ethereal


Crazy as a loon
Linda Ronstadt describes the music as wild and unrestrained


Sad as a gypsy serenading the moon
Linda Ronstadt describes the music as melancholic and nostalgic


Oh skylark
Linda Ronstadt addresses the Skylark again


I don't know if you can find these things
Linda Ronstadt is unsure if the Skylark is capable of finding these things


But my heart is riding on your wings
Linda Ronstadt's heart is yearning for these things and she hopes to follow the Skylark's guidance to find them


So if you see them anywhere
Linda Ronstadt implores the Skylark to lead her if it does indeed see these things anywhere


Won't you lead me there
Linda Ronstadt requests the Skylark to guide her to these places she longs to find




Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Universal Music Publishing Group, Peermusic Publishing, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: HOAGY CARMICHAEL, JOHNNY MERCER

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

@ezraclemons2603

My wife bought this album for me and I couldn’t have been more pleased.
Those wonderful standards brilliant beautifully arranged by the late great Nelson Riddle, truly a winning combination.

If indeed you imitation is the greatest flattery, Linda paid TRIBUTE to the singers of those days.
The days where the singer’s voice was the centerpiece of the number, not electronic flash and wizardry.
In those days, as a singer you either had it or you didn’t.
Regardless if you were being backed by a single piano or an entire orchestra.

In short I love what she did with the songs on all the three of the albums of old standards.

WELL DONE



@stevieray56

Linda Ronstadt’s instincts were obviously correct when she felt that a switch from her rock and country leanings might do well with the public, maybe believing that a good song was a good song, period. When asked about the recording by DownBeat magazine in 1985, she said, “’Skylark’ is just an incredible adventure to sing – I just love it.” The three albums of standards (the other two were What’s New and For Sentimental Reasons) sold in the millions, with exceptional performances by Ronstadt and arrangements by Nelson Riddle.

“Skylark” was first recorded in 1941 by three different female big band vocalists. With lyrics by Johnny Mercer and music by Hoagy Carmichael, the song was about the universal search for love, with the singer asking the titular bird if it has any idea where the man or woman of one’s dreams can be found:

"Skylark
Have you anything to say to me?
Won’t you tell me where my love can be?
Is there a meadow in the mist
Where someone’s waiting to be kissed?"

By many accounts, the song was inspired by Mercer’s ill-fated affair with the much younger Judy Garland. It also may have had something to do with his love of birds, or at least a love of writing about them. In addition to “Skylark,” Mercer was known for such songs as “Little Birds” (performed by Julie Andrews) and “Bob White,” which name-checks more than a dozen birds in a duet he sang with Bobby Darin. The music to “Skylark” was written by Carmichael in a nod to the late jazz trumpeter Bix Beiderbecke, but it supposedly took Mercer a year to write lyrics he was happy with. The song has been recorded by dozens of artists, including Dylan on his album Fallen Angels.

By recording “Skylark” and other classics, Ronstadt introduced a new generation to some of the finest songs ever written in America.

Mercer wrote lyrics to hundreds of recorded songs for some of the most iconic artists in the world from the 1930s through the 1960s. He died in 1976. But even if he’d only been mildly successful as a writer or singer, he wouldn’t have needed to worry much about money, as he was one of the three founders of Capitol Records.



All comments from YouTube:

@ezraclemons2603

My wife bought this album for me and I couldn’t have been more pleased.
Those wonderful standards brilliant beautifully arranged by the late great Nelson Riddle, truly a winning combination.

If indeed you imitation is the greatest flattery, Linda paid TRIBUTE to the singers of those days.
The days where the singer’s voice was the centerpiece of the number, not electronic flash and wizardry.
In those days, as a singer you either had it or you didn’t.
Regardless if you were being backed by a single piano or an entire orchestra.

In short I love what she did with the songs on all the three of the albums of old standards.

WELL DONE

@scoutfinch2466

Linda RONSTADT. You either get it or you don't. Gorgeous pipes.

@johnfulton4921

I totally get it I adore Linda but you have hear Aretha sing this

@justme7255

My absolute favorite version of this song. Perfect voice, perfect styling, perfect arrangement.

@kristin1533

And can we mention those lovely lyrics? We'll never see this type of song again. Thank you, Johnny Mercer!

@BrickPa

Linda did 3 albums of "classic" American pop tunes and she did them in the style of the 40s and 50s when they were written. Wonderful work by her!

@davidmathews2124

This comes from a time when a singer had to just get up in front of a mike and do it. Just sing the damn song. Very few today can even think about doing that...but Linda can. She can sell every single one like they’re made out of gold. I can just see Hoagy sittin’ on his piano bench in front of an old upright and tickling his way around the keyboard while Linda stands up there in some smokey joint belting this out. They were made for each other.

@kairotic1

Nicely put. This is a great nexus of writer, arranger, and performers (don't forget the band!). All seem on the same page - making a moment so rich it almost bursts, then landing the whole affair.

@grownup8146

I love the purity of her voice and she knows what to do with it.

@nemo227

This is clearly one of the best performances of this tune. Very few contemporary popular singers can approach Linda when she was at her best.

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