Daily Mail

Pop’s most weather-obsessed star? The answer is blowing in the wind

- By Colin Fernandez

HE is one of the most influentia­l musi- cians of his generation.

And yet Bob Dylan seems to have found a great deal of inspiratio­n in that most mundane of subjects – the weather.

Research has found that 163 of Dylan’s 542 songs reference the climate – almost a third – making him the musician most likely to mention weather.

Dylan famously sang Blowin’ in the Wind, while the song Subterrane­an Homesick Blues includes the lyrics: ‘You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.’

It took climate scientists from five leading universiti­es, including Southampto­n, Oxford, Newcastle, Nottingham and Reading to come up with the findings.

The Beatles came in at number two, mentioning the weather in 48 of the 308 songs they wrote or sang – 16 per cent – including Good Day Sunshine and Rain. Researcher­s suggest Dylan may have been so influenced by weather because he grew up in the harsh climate of the northern state of Minnesota.

The researcher­s – who were working in their spare time – analysed database KaraFun, which stores 15,000 songs. They found 419 songs about the weather – 190 times as a main theme and 229 where it was a theme, repeated line or chorus.

Lead author Dr Sally Brown, from the University of Southampto­n, said: ‘We were all surprised how often weather is communicat­ed in popular music, whether as a simple analogy or a major theme of a song, such as Bob Dylan’s Blowin’ in the Wind or the Hollies’ Bus Stop, where a couple fall in love under an umbrella.’ Sun and rain featured in 37 per cent of the references to weather, with wind in third place. The researcher­s found more extreme weather, such as tornados and blizzards, barely feature.

And many of the songs with secondary references in the database had little or nothing to do with the weather, such as Ice Ice Baby by Vanilla Ice, Daddy Cool by Boney M, and Benny and the Jets by Elton John.

No one has taken nearly as much inspiratio­n from the weather as Dylan or the Beatles, meaning there is not a number three, four or five in the list.

But other songwriter­s who refer to climate include Taylor Swift, Bruce Springstee­n and the Beach Boys.

The researcher­s found that 30 bands had weather-related names, such as Coldplay and Wet Wet Wet.

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