One Sunday Morning
Wilco Lyrics


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This is how I tell it
O' but it's long
One Sunday morning
O' One son is gone

Against the weather dawning
Over the sea
My father said what I had become
No one should be

Outside I look lived in
Like the bones in a shrine
How am I forgiven
O' I'll give it time

This I learned without warning
Holding my brow
In time we thought I would kill him
O' but I didn't know how

I said it's your God I don't believe in
No your Bible can't be true
Knocked down by the long lie
He cried I fear what waits for you

I can hear those bells
Spoken and gone
I feel relief I feel well
Now he knows he was wrong

Ring 'em cold for my father
Frozen underground
Jesus I wouldn't bother
He belongs to me now

Something sad keeps moving
So I wandered around
I fell in love with the burden
Holding me down

Bless my mind I miss
Being told how to live
What I learned without knowing
How much more I owe than I can give

This is how I tell it
O' but it's long




One Sunday morning
One son is gone

Overall Meaning

Wilco's song "One Sunday Morning" is a melancholic ballad that tells a story about a son leaving home and the strained relationship he had with his father. The lyrics are deeply emotional, and the music is mellow and atmospheric, which adds to the mood. The song is characterised by Jeff Tweedy's soulful vocals and the delicate guitar work, which creates a contemplative and reflective atmosphere.


The song paints a picture of a son who runs away from home and becomes disillusioned with religion. He comes to realise that his father's faith is misguided, and he does not share the same beliefs. The son's journey ends with his father's death, and he reflects on the burden that his father's belief system has placed on his life. He is left to reconcile with the fact that he will never know if his father truly understood his point of view before he passed away.


The song is Wilco's longest studio recording, lasting a total of twelve minutes and nine seconds. Despite its length, it remains one of their most popular tracks to date. "One Sunday Morning" was released in 2011 and appears on Wilco's album "The Whole Love." The album received critical acclaim and was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rock Album.


Line by Line Meaning

This is how I tell it
I am about to recount a long story


O' but it's long
The story I am about to tell is lengthy


One Sunday morning
On a particular Sunday morning


O' One son is gone
One of the sons was missing


Against the weather dawning
As the stormy weather started


Over the sea
Near the ocean


My father said what I had become
My father told me that I had changed


No one should be
My father wasn't happy with my transformation


Outside I look lived in
From the outside, I appeared worn out


Like the bones in a shrine
Like the preserved bones in a holy structure


How am I forgiven
I wonder how I can be forgiven for my mistakes


O' I'll give it time
I hope to get forgiveness eventually


This I learned without warning
I discovered this fact unexpectedly


Holding my brow
Touching my forehead


In time we thought I would kill him
In the past, we assumed I would harm him


O' but I didn't know how
However, I didn't have the intention to cause him harm


I said it's your God I don't believe in
I expressed my disbelief in his religious beliefs


No your Bible can't be true
I countered his assertion that the Bible was truthful


Knocked down by the long lie
He was taken aback by my argument


He cried I fear what waits for you
He lamented that I would face dire consequences for my disbelief


I can hear those bells
I can hear the church bells ringing


Spoken and gone
Their sound fades away quickly


I feel relief I feel well
I feel relieved and content


Now he knows he was wrong
He now realizes that he was mistaken


Ring 'em cold for my father
Funeral bells should chime when my father dies


Frozen underground
Buried beneath the frozen soil


Jesus I wouldn't bother
I don't see the need to pray


He belongs to me now
I am now in charge of my life


Something sad keeps moving
I continue to feel melancholy inside


So I wandered around
I searched for something to alleviate my sadness


I fell in love with the burden
I learnt to accept and embrace my troubles


Holding me down
Weighting me down


Bless my mind I miss
I yearn to have guidance and discipline


Being told how to live
Being given advice on how to conduct my life


What I learned without knowing
Lessons I intuitively picked up


How much more I owe than I can give
I have learned that my existence is predicated on giving more than I receive


This is how I tell it
I have come full circle in my story


O' but it's long
Though long, this is how I remember and recount it




Lyrics © BMG Rights Management
Written by: JEFF TWEEDY

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

@harveyjones1245

This is how I tell it
O' but it's long
One Sunday morning
O' One son is gone
Against the weather dawning
Over the sea
My father said what I had become
No one should be
Outside I look lived in
Like the bones in a shrine
How am I forgiven
O' I'll give it time
This I learned without warning
Holding my brow
In time we thought I would kill him
O' but I didn't know how
I said it's your God I don't believe in
No your Bible can't be true
Knocked down by the long lie
He cried I fear what waits for you
I can hear those bells
Spoken and gone
I feel relief I feel well
Now he knows he was wrong
Ring 'em cold for my father
Frozen underground
Jesus I wouldn't bother
He belongs to me now
Something sad keeps moving
So I wandered around
I fell in love with the burden
Holding me down
Bless my mind I miss
Being told how to live
What I learned without knowing
How much more I owe than I can give
This is how I tell it
O' but it's long
One Sunday morning
One son is gone
Source: LyricFind
Songwriters: Jeff Tweedy
One Sunday Morning (Song for Jane Smiley's Boyfriend) lyrics



@CieaoMelano

This is how I tell it
Oh, but it's long
One Sunday morning
Oh, one son is gone

I can see where they're dawning
Over the sea
My father said what I had become
No-one should be

Outside I look lived in
Like the bones in a shrine
How am I forgiven?
Oh, I'll give it time

This, I learned without warning
Holding my brow
In time he thought I would kill him
Oh, but I didn't know how

I said it's your god I don't believe in
No, your Bible can't be true
Knocked down by the long life
He cried, 'I fear what waits for you'

I can hear those bells
Spoken and gone
I feel relief, I feel well
Now he knows he was wrong

I am cold for my father
Frozen underground
Jesus, I wouldn't bother
He belongs to me now

Something sad keeps moving
So I wandered around
I fell in love with the burden
Holding me down

Bless my mind, I miss
Being told how to live
What I learned without knowing
How much more that I owe that I can give

This is how I tell it
Oh, but it's long
One Sunday morning
One son is gone



@Samsasrenjet

This song is about a man coming to terms with his estranged father's death and the religious fanaticism that ruined their relationship.

The first verse prefaces the core narrative. "One son is gone" refers to the death of the narrator's father, who is someone's son. 

"Against the weather dawning...": The second verse begins the narrator's digression into the core narrative. It sets up the song with some foreboding imagery and establishes the narrator's father's disdain.

"Outside I look lived in...": Verse 3, lines i and ii, develop the narrator's emotional dishevelment. His condition is so poor that he has physically grown frail.

"How am I forgiven...": Verse 3, lines iii and iv, reveal a braveness within the narrator, who no longer needs God's forgiveness for atonement, just the time it takes for him to overcome any damage, by his own hard work.

"This I learned without warning...": Verse 4, lines i and ii is a phrase that references the narrator's spontaneous loss of faith. Out of nowhere, hatred for his entered the narrator. Toward the end of the core narrative, the narrator reuses this line very poetically.

"In time we thought I would kill him": Although immediately evidence for the narrator's vigorous hatred toward his father, this line also establishes some solidarity within the narrator's family. The "we" covers people the narrator and his father mutually know, so as I interpret it, it shows that the narrator had family in-tune with his spiteful emotions. I like this verse because it develops some additional subtext by espousing a gradient of fanaticism, and shows that typical religious families have members with variable religious commitment - This line also shows that the narrator's father is particularly angry, since he is apart from his family.

"O' but I didn't know how": This isn't a death metal song, so the narrator probably wouldn't kill his father. However, this line underscores the pain caused by ultimately loving someone but being in immense conflict with them all at once.

"I said it's your God I don't believe in...": As I see it, verse 5, lines i and ii eliminate any ambiguous interpretations of this song. The narrator is pretty clear; he told his dad he no longer shared his beliefs.

"Knocked down by the long lie": Religion is the offender in question, and the narrator has called it the long lie. His father was its victim.

"He cried I fear what waits for you": Classic doomsday fear-mongering on the father's part.

"I can hear those bells...": I doubt the narrator's hearing wedding bells.

"I feel relief I feel well...": By verse 6, lines iii and iv, the narrator is still conflicted about his father's death. His proclaimed relief could stem from many things. The narrator could be relieved in knowing that the animosity between him and his father was buried along with him; the narrator could be relieved smugly. Interpreting verse 6, line iv literally reveals a blatant paradox, but what it really means is that the narrator is confident his father isn't scolding him from the afterlife.

"Ring 'em cold for my father...": In verse 7, the narrator reclaims his father. In the words "ring 'em", I tonally hear something of a jovial farewell, with any hints of sarcasm rapidly fading. The narrator has decoupled his father from the religious fanaticism that wrenched them apart by poetically telling Jesus off.

"Something sad keeps moving...": Solace has not found the narrator by verse 8, lines i and ii, so he "wandered around." This sentiment should ring loud with the song's listeners, who must empathize with the confusion associated with grief. I personally get a vibe of drugs, sex, and self-destruction although those first two are nowhere to be found in the lyrics.

"I I fell in love with the burden...": The narrator has become consumed by his father's death, which by verse 8, lines iii and iv, has finally hit him face first. I imagine the narrator vehemently combating religious ideology, and/or perhaps mentally cycling through the vicissitudinous relationship with his father to a crippling extent.

"Bless my mind I miss...": By verse 9, lines i and ii, the narrator confesses his truth; he misses his father! Here, the narrator makes a huge concession to his father's ways in an ironic, but endearing tone. The cry for true relief, "bless my mind", is phrased piously despite the narrator's atheistic convictions. Longing for "being told how to live" is quite unlike the narrator. Nevertheless, these were his father's traits which he is now looking beyond.

"What I learned without knowing": The core narrative returns to this phrase, this time to tell us the narrator's love for his father. All throughout their ideological conflict, the narrator was clouded from all the good his father brought to life, now missing being told how to live - advice in a loving, paternal way. This phrase ties the narrator's relationship with his father together; although he was a harsh and didactic man, as we learned when this phrase first took meaning, the narrator's father is still his god damn father!

"How much more I owe than I can give": The narrator acknowledges how much of an impact his father has had on him, now expressing regret because he can no longer reciprocate.

Verse 10 is a repetition of the first verse. It ends the core narrative which is the narrator's meditation. By the lyric's end, much clarity has been accomplished, but the narrator's emotional rubble has yet to settle. Instrumentation completes the song's story.

First, the song lingers on a painful, monotonous bass segment. The mundane thuds audibly construct a rut. A guitar flourish and a piano key start a cautious transition back into the post-verse refrain. There is a different outlook to be had now; even though everything's the same, we are different. The bass begins to skip melodically with pleasant reverberation from keys and chords. The story about grief has ended, but from it continues a story of happiness.

I love you, grandpa.



All comments from YouTube:

@Wraedeohed

It's taken me years to find this song, and tonight I finally found it! Seriously cried through most of the song. So happy.

@justiniath

The only thing I don’t like about this song is that it isn’t longer. It’s just so addictive in its tone and pace. I feel so involved and I am constantly thinking about so many new things each time I listen to it.

@hostage3232

They opened with this song when i saw them live in Seattle this past tuesday. I had actually not heard this song before then. When he does the 'oooooh" part and its perfectly in tune with the strong bass (which was especially prevalent in the performance) it was more than perfect. I sat there in absolute awe in their amazing musical ability. WILCO never lets me down

@Rob954ever

As a longtime fan of Wilco,I can honestly say that this one of the few (if not,the ONLY) song in their catalog that captivates me solely on the merit of the beautiful music. I find myself getting lost in the sound of the gentle percussion and the delicate melody. I get lost in my thoughts and within this song. Truly gorgeous.

@Steve-uv9kb

+Robert P Really? Do you not like the lyrics? They are brilliant

@seanstrider2185

+Steve You missed his point.

@michaelmcabee4358

Yup, this one really sends me.

@Shlooomth

Wilco is absolutely magical. Props for the cloud footage, it matches the song well.
Whenever I'm sad I listen to Wilco and slowly everything gets better

@foundtheirhome

How many bands can come up with a song this great so deep into their careers? I love it. Instant classic from one of my favorite bands ever.

@TukkerKM

When my uncle died they played this on the funeral, 12 minutes of pure emotion. Boy , that was one sunday morning.

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