10 Greatest Classic Rock Songwriters

Pure Poets of Rock's Golden Age.

By Tim Coffman /

When rock was rising to prominence, many elders accepted that the genre would last a few years before being virtually obsolete. Oh how wrong they were. What made rock change into a legitimate genre of music was the amount of time put into the lyrics of these classic rock tracks.

Advertisement

Rock in general tracks in a lot of haters that say that these lyricists have nothing to say with the exception of partying, sex, drugs. However, artists in the golden age of rock took proper care of their songs by sprinkling in lyrics that were absolutely breathtaking. Instead of just being about rock, these songs could speak to your soul and make you see the world in a different light. Whether it be wholesome or disturbing, these lyrics hit a certain emotion in the listener that you didn't see in most rockers.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to write odes to sex and drugs, but the types of lyrics that are truly nerve-gripping only come around every once in a while. Across these artists' discographies, they make writing those heart-wrenching lyrics seem almost easy.

10. Phil Lynott

Thin Lizzy were a beautiful hard rock monster in the 70's. Under the watchful eye of frontman Phil Lynott, the band pumped out blistering hard rock music and developed a unique dual-guitar sound that influenced everyone from Def Leppard to Metallica. In fact, Lizzy's sound is so good that their impeccable lyricism could easily be overlooked.

Advertisement

Phil Lynott's style of lyric-writing was far more intricate than his contemporaries by taking poetry and putting it to the melody. Instead of constantly writing lyrics with the right syllabic structure for the song, Lynott would simply write prose independently from the music and would write terrific songs around them. These included everything from the cinematic escape of the song "Jailbreak" to the epic battle reveries of "Emerald." Even songs where Lizzy would slow the pace gave Lynott a chance to show his sensitive side on love songs like "Sarah" and "Dancing in the Moonlight."

Unfortunately, the band's hard living on the road led to Lynott succumbing to his drug addiction in the early 80's. However, more and more young rockers are combing through Lizzy's lyrics to this day to tap into the poetic magic that Lynott possessed when composing the band's classics.

Advertisement