In search of past time: The best songs about growing older or dying

February 15, 2026 • 1:45 pm

Well, I might as well reveal part of my very long list of “best music”.  This time I’ll post my choice of the best “songs about aging or dying” for Baby Boomers.  These aren’t necessarily all good (I’m not a fan of Mellencamp, for instance), but they’re all notable. And yes, I realize that “Long May You Run” is really about Neil Young’s car (a 1948 Buick Roadmaster hearse he called Mortimer Hearseburg), but it’s still appropriate.  Further, some of the songs are about lost love, but all refer to the sadness of passing time.

Father and Son                        Cat Stevens
Touch of Gray                        The Grateful Dead
When I’m Sixty-Four            The Beatles
Boys of Summer                     Don Henley
Cherry Bomb                          John Mellencamp
Long May You Run                Stills-Young Band
All Summer Long                   The Beach Boys
Caroline No                            The Beach Boys
Nick of Time                          Bonnie Raitt
When We Was Fab                 George Harrison
All those Years Ago                George Harrison
Rockin’ Chair                         The Band
Taxi                                         Harry Chapin
Cat’s in the Cradle                  Harry Chapin
Old Friends (Bookends)         Simon and Garfunkel
Don’t Fear the Reaper             Blue Öyster Cult
Wasted on the Way                 Crosby Stills & Nash

I welcome readers’ suggestions, and I’ll put up five of the songs that I think are particularly good and underappreciated:

Boys of Summer” (1984). For some reason this song absolutely brings back my own teenage years, and quite vividly:

Caroline, No” (1966), by the great Brian Wilson.

All Those Years Ago” (1981).  Nobody seems to remember this song by George Harrison, but it’s not only great, but a moving tribute to his late fellow Beatle, John Lennon. It’s clear that despite their tiffs, Harrison really loved Lennon.

Taxi” by Harry Chapin (1972).  I’m sure this song is long forgotten, but it’s among the very best ones on the list. The “soprano” part is sung by “Big John” Wallace, Chapin’s bassist; everybody thought that the original record used a female voice. You can end the song at 7:31; it just repeats with the lyrics shown.

Nick of Time” by Bonnie Raitt (1989).  I love this song; the tune is excellent, with a good hook, and the words are wonderful:

94 thoughts on “In search of past time: The best songs about growing older or dying

  1. Great list

    I know readers here diverge on late Lennon, but IMHO

    Watching the Wheels (1980) has a strong … what, looking back vibe?… and the sounds e.g. the carousel sort of sound just BAM hit hard, as a nod to Sgt. Pepper’s…

    Also a great overall tune, IMHO.

    1. “Watching the Wheels” was one of John’s best solo recordings. Speaking of late Lennon, I’m surprised no one has mentioned “Grow Old With Me”:

      John was murdered before he could make an official studio recording of the song, but the demo has a raw beauty and immediacy that probably would have been reduced by a “proper” recording, as proven by later attempts to sweeten the demo with strings and orchestration.

      1. ‘Hello In There’ is a favourite.

        ‘Sam Stone’ is another great song from John Prine, which can be added to PCCE’s list.

        ‘Sam Stone was alone when he popped his last balloon,
        Climbing walls while sitting in a chair.’

  2. “This Is All I Ask”,

    a classic popular/jazz standard written by Gordon Jenkins in 1958 (he considered it his finest composition).

    Beautiful girls, walk a little slower when you walk by me
    Lingering sunsets, stay a little longer with the lonely sea…

    Children everywhere, when you shoot at bad men, shoot at me
    Take me to that strange, enchanted land grown-ups seldom understand

    Wandering rainbows, leave a bit of color for my heart to own
    Stars in the sky, make my wish come true before the night has flown

    And let the music play as long as there’s a song to sing
    And I will stay younger than spring…

    https://youtu.be/TbkxjlBjGM8?si=tOyO7dJruOC-sMRA

    1. Tony! I love his voice. I didn’t include songs from earlier times, or I would have included “September Song”, an oldie most recently (and perhaps more plaintively) sung by Willie Nelson. Here:

  3. “Taxi”. I have probably not thought about that great song for decades. And this and so many others cannot be aired now on most radio stations bc it does not fit the ‘algorithm’.

  4. Grim list, boss. But while we’re at it:
    “Tomorrow Never Knows” (Beatles) even tho they say “This is not dying…” It is. Possibly one needs the psychedelics on board to hear it….

    All Those Years Ago is one of my all time favorites.

    D.A.
    NYC

  5. “Wasted on the Way” is one of many examples of C,S&N’s excellent harmonizing and sweet sounding yet poignant tunes filled with bittersweet thoughts. As for Blue Öyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear the Reaper”, it has just the right amount of cowbell.

  6. “Time” from Pink Floyd Dark Side of the Moon. From one of the greatest of all albums, no less.
    I have been on a PF kick lately, playing their songs very loudly (like I would in college) but also now watching YT videos about how they worked. Amazing stuff.

    1. You might want to watch the life version of Mother with the youtube search ‘mother pink floyd legendado’

    2. “Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii” is one of the best rock performances of all time IMO. Yes, watch and listen Loud! It was released right before Dark Side of the Moon, though nothing from the album was played. Later versions of the movie has studio outtakes from when they were recording Dark Side. The Directors Cut came out in 2002 which has a lot of added footage. Music maestro Steven Wilson remixed the soundtrack for a 4k resolution version released in April 2025. I would like to watch that version, but haven’t yet.

      This doesn’t add anything to the discussion, but I commented because you said you were on a Floyd kick.

      1. It was briefly in cinemas last year. Saw it there in one with a good sound system. Such a great band, and Waters had some good lyrics back in the day. What a shame that he has become so überwoke. He doesn’t seem to realize that his current behaviour is the same as much of what he objected to when he was younger. (And he even wrote an entire concept album—The Wall about that very concept.)

  7. Here are a few more, focusing on a sort of midlife crisis vibe:

    “Once In A Lifetime,” Talking Heads
    “Time,” Pink Floyd (mentioned by two others during the time it took to write this!)
    “You Can Call Me Al,” Paul Simon
    “Last Leaf,” Tom Waits, which Willie Nelson included on his most recent album and regularly performs

  8. Your list is excellent. “Father and Son” by Cat Stevens may be my favorite song of all time. Here are a few more greats.

    “Is That All There Is?” Written by Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller, and made famous by the great Peggy Lee.

    “The Impossible Dream.” Composed by Mitch Leigh, lyrics by Joe Darion, and sung by many, including Robert Goulet, Frank Sinatra, Jim Nabors (Amazing!), and baritone Ed Ames.

    “Sunrise, Sunset.” Composed by Jerry Bock with lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, from the musical Fiddler on the Roof. Sung by Tevye, Golde, Perchik, Hodel and others in the cast.

    “You Can Close Your Eyes.” By James Taylor. May or may not be about aging, but I read it that way. James Taylor and Carole King sang this together at a concert I attended. There was not a dry eye in the house.

    “September of My Years.” Written by Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn, and sung by the incomparable Frank Sinatra.

    1. “Will You Remember Me?” Rosanne Cash and John Levanthal.

      “Diamonds and Rust.” Joan Baez. On the album Diamonds and Rust. (How could I not have thought of this one earlier?)

      “Winds of the Old Days.” Joan Baez. Also on the album Diamonds and Rust.

      “Those Were the Days (My Friend).” Connie Francis. Also Mary Hopkin.

      In fear of breaking the Roolz, I will cease and desist here. Once I start into Johnny Cash’s records with Rick Rubin, I could find another half-dozen greats.

      There’s no end to wonderful and emotive songs about aging and death. It’s one musics great themes.

  9. “I Will Follow You Into the Dark” by Death Cab for Cutie. Some religious tropes are mentioned, but this doesn’t strike me as a religious song (and especially so when you get to the lapsed Catholic part):

    The opening lyrics:

    Love of mine, someday you will die
    But I’ll be close behind, I’ll follow you into the dark
    No blinding light or tunnels to gates of white
    Just our hands clasped so tight, waiting for the hint of a spark

  10. Just two from so many melancholy possibilities:
    Make Mine a Small One, by Eleanor McEvoy
    In My Life, the Beatles

  11. Many good choices, but number one for me is “Across the Great Divide” by Kate Wolf. Yes, the years have slipped by, but the third verse speaks to the finest hour ever seen.

    1. Just listened to a recording of this. So beautiful. My introduction to the song was Nanci Griffith’s version.

  12. I don’t think I am going to have a funeral, but if I did, then this would be the first song. I’m atheist, and there’s no ‘maker’, but I think the sentiment is ok in this context.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_RBtabpXjZE

    At My Funeral – Crash Test Dummies

    I’m still young, but I know my days are numbered
    1234567 and so on
    But a time will come when these numbers have all ended
    And all I’ve ever seen will be forgotten

    Won’t you come
    To my funeral when my days are done
    Life’s not long
    And so I hope when I am finally dead and gone
    That you’ll gather round when I am lowered into the ground

    When my coffin is sealed and I’m safely 6 feet under
    Perhaps my friends will see fit then to judge me
    Oh when they pause to consider all my blunders
    I hope they won’t be too quick to begrudge me

    If I should die before I wake up
    I pray that the Lord my soul will take but
    My body, my body, that’s your job

    I can’t be sure where I’m headed after death
    To heaven, hell, or beyond to that Great Vast
    But if I can I would like to meet my Maker
    There’s one or two things I’d sure like to ask

  13. What a drag it is getting old….

    He Stopped Loving Her Today
    St. James Infirmary
    Rock and Roll Never Forgets [they’re not all morbid]
    Strange Fruit
    Stagger Lee
    Last Kiss
    Dead Man’s Curve
    Knocking on Heaven’s Door
    Bad, Bad Leroy Brown
    Nobody Left to Run with Anymore

  14. Pink Floyd’s “Free Four” from their Obscured By Clouds album –
    The memories of an old man.
    Are the deeds of a man in his prime.

  15. Jethro Tull (like most of their songs, words and music by Ian Anderson, great wah-wah solo by Martin Barre), “We Used to Know”:

    Whenever I get to feel this way
    Try to find new words to say
    I think about the bad old days
    We used to know
    Nights of winter turn me cold
    Fears of dying, getting old
    We ran the race, the race was won
    By running slowly
    Could be soon we’ll cease to sound
    Slowly upstairs, faster down
    Then to revisit stony grounds
    We used to know
    Remembering mornings, shillings spent
    Made no sense to leave the bed
    The bad old days they came and went
    Giving way to fruitful years
    Saving up the birds in hand
    While in the bush the others land
    Take what we can before the man
    Says it’s time to go
    Each to his own way I’ll go mine
    Best of luck with what you find
    But for your own sake remember times
    We used to know

    1. Ian Anderson has a song about death on the latest Jethro Tull Album, “Curious Ruminant” (2025). The song, or rather spoken piece, is called “Interim Sleep”. The lyrics are about reincarnation, which I’m not on board with, but it makes for a beautiful guided meditation.

      1. I’m pretty sure that Anderson doesn’t believe in reincarnation either. Although unusual in rock music, there are songs in which the narrator is not the actual singer.

        Curious Ruminant is the latest album. While I think that The Broadsword and the Beast from 1982 is their last really good album, Anderson has continued to make good music, even though he is no longer in the biggest band in the world. What about the following, from Roots to Branches from 1994 (32 years ago; who knows where the time goes?):

        So why are you holding my hand tonight?
        I’m not intending to go far away.
        I’m just slipping through to the back room
        I’ll leave you messages almost every day.

        And who was I to last forever?
        I didn’t promise to stay the pace.
        Not in this lifetime, babe
        But we’ll cling together:
        Some kind of heaven written in your face.

        So why are you holding my hand tonight?
        Well, am I feeling so cold to the touch?
        Do my eyes seem to focus
        On some distant point?
        Why do I find it hard to talk too much?

        And who was I to last forever?
        I didn’t promise to stay the pace.
        Not in this lifetime, babe
        But we’ll cling together:
        Some kind of heaven written in your face.

        So why are you holding my hand tonight?
        I’m not intending to go far away.
        I’m just slipping through to the back room
        I’ll leave you messages almost every day.

        And who was I to last forever?
        I didn’t promise to stay the pace.
        Not in this lifetime, babe
        But we’ll cling together:
        Some kind of heaven written in your face.

  16. Buddy Guy’s version of Done Got Old by Junior Kimbrough. See That My Grave Is Kept Clean by Blind Lemon Jefferson. Old and in the Way by Hazel Dickens.

  17. I nominate “Senior Citizens,” from Pete Atkin’s 1974 album “The Road of Silk.” Atkin, whose lyricist was none other than Clive James, earned much critical acclaim in the UK during the ’70s but never sold well, so his work is one that decade’s buried treasures. “Senior Citizens” contrasts the loneliness and heartbreak of old age with the promises of youth and its illusory sense of time. The arrangement is exquisite, rising from a strummed electric guitar to bass, drums, and finally gorgeous strings. The lyrics are just as fine:

    And all the shares they ever held in laughter
    Are now just so many old engravings–
    Their sands have run out long before their savings
    And the fun ran out so long before the sands.
    They’ve lost touch with the touch of other hands
    That once came to caress, and then to help…

  18. “The Dutchman”…”Long ago, I used to be a young man, and dear Margaret remembers that for me.”
    I heard this live decades ago in Austin TX, don’t remember who sung it then, probably Steve Goodman or Jerry Jeff Walker. It is more poignant now that I too have a “long ago”.
    Here’s Jerry Jeff Walker’s version:

  19. A silly one good for a laugh that comes to mind is “Seasons in the Sun” by Rod McKuen, made into a hit song by Terry Jacks. The lyrics are pretty dumb, e.g.

    We had joy, we had fun, we had seasons in the sun
    But the only stars we could reach
    Were the starfish on the beach

  20. Rita Coolidge – “We’re All Alone” (written by Boz Scaggs, but her recording was the one which charted in the UK)
    Pulp – “Help The Aged”
    A House – “Endless Art” (basically a list of famous names who were no more)
    Yello – “30,000 Days”

  21. What about End of the Innocence by Don Henley? especially the third stanza:

    Oh, who knows how long this will last,
    now we’ve come so far, so fast.
    But somewhere back there in the dust
    is that same small town in each of us.
    I need to remember this,
    so baby give me just one kiss,
    And let me take a long, last look
    before we say good-bye.

  22. High Hopes from Pink Floyd’s Division Bell (sans Roger Waters), and two songs from David Gilmour’s latest album: Luck and Strange, and Scattered with a recommendation to listen to the live versions from his concert tours.

  23. Some latter day Dylan, Highlands, Not Dark Yet, Key West; some latter day Leonard Cohen, Leaving the Table; and a shout out to Joe Henry’s brilliant Our Song

  24. Comes a time – Neil Young
    Everyone talking – Harry Neilson
    Pirate looks at 40 – Jimmy Buffet

    I know these by dint of jamming to these tunes of late.

  25. Tom Waits’s “Shiver Me Timbers” is the most beautiful, heart-wrenching song about death that I know.

    https://youtu.be/vfLY8NZCQMg?si=DrXZRkzY9JMdD-Hr

    I’m leavin’ my family
    And leavin’ my friends
    My body’s at home
    But my heart’s in the wind
    Where the clouds are like headlines
    On a new front page sky
    My tears are salt water
    And the moon’s full and high

    And I know Martin Eden’s
    Gonna be proud of me
    Many before me
    Been called by the sea
    To be up in the crow’s nest
    And singin’ my say
    Shiver me Timbers
    I’m a-sailin’ away

    And the fog’s liftin’
    Sand’s shiftin’
    I’m driftin’ on out
    Ol’ Captain Ahab
    Got nothin’ on me
    Come swallow me, don’t follow me
    I travel alone
    Blue water’s my daughter
    I skip like a stone

    Please call my missus
    Tell her not to cry
    My goodbye is written
    By the moon in the sky
    And nobody knows me
    I can’t fathom my stayin’
    Shiver me timbers
    I’m a-sailin’ away….

    And I’m leavin’ my family
    And I’m leavin’ my friends
    My body’s at home
    But my heart’s in the wind
    Where the clouds are like headlines
    On a new front page sky
    Shiver me timbers
    I’m sailin’ away

  26. Oh, Death, Ralph Stanley
    Spirit in the Sky, Norman Greenbaum
    Long Black Veil, many versions. My choice is The Band’s.
    Pretty much all of Leonard Cohen’s final album, You Want it Darker .p

  27. Hurt, by Johnny Cash ..

    The way he sings it, seems you can feel the hurt he’s appearing to feel of being old, and knowing that death is at hand.

  28. On West Coast time here, so a late post. On the dying side of things, I’m surprised no one mentioned “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” from the the Monty Python’s movie “Life of Brian.”

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