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Belinda Lyrics

Every night around this time he has to sing 'Belinda'
"Belinda I love you, don't leave me, I need you"
He tried to stop, a while back, but what is he, without her?
A one-hit wonder with no hits is what he is.

And anyway he always hears how much it means to people
There's a lot of fortysomethings wouldn't be in the world without it
So now he has to do it with this lyric in his head

Belinda I loved you
And I'm sorry
I left you
I met somebody younger on a plane
She had big breasts
And a nice smile
No kids, either,
She gave me extra complimentary champagne

No one ever wants to hear the song he wrote for Cindy
"Cindy I love you, I need you, don't leave me"
And he can't blame them - they can tell his heart was never in it
And Cindy never liked it, but she never much liked him

Belinda I loved you
And I'm sorry
I left you
I met somebody younger on a plane
She had big breasts
And a nice smile
No kids, either,
She gave me extra complimentary champagne

So every night about this time he feels the old self-loathing
While the old folks in the audience sing along
And he smiles and waves the mike at them so they can do the chorus
He's not there
He's somewhere else
He's with Belinda in he days before he made it all go wrong

Belinda I love you
Don't leave me
I need you
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Cover art for Belinda lyrics by Ben Folds

I haven't heard anything from Folds or Hornby directly but to me the story is pretty clear, and has been stated already, but here's my version including some subtler things.

An Ageing rockstar still tours and his biggest (or only) hit is about his ex - Belinda. He mostly plays to old folks of his generation. I think the "a lot of forty-somethings..." actually refers to the offspring of couples who got together/conceived/whatever to the song, and if for arguments sake we say the "present" is 2010 that would put the release of the song in the 60s - his hay day. This probably makes him and his fans around 70.

Anyway the lyrics of the song are "Belinda I love you, don't leave me, I need you", but the songs he sings in his head are what really happened - he left Belinda for an air hostess (plane + champagne), who was superficially great (younger, breasts, etc), but whom he probably never really had a connection with. Not sure if Cindy is the same girl but either way her song comically has the same generic lyrics (perhaps just a metaphor for very similar lyrics).

The last lyric is wrong - it should simply be "Belinda, i love you / She gave me complimentary champagne (X2)" And i think that's important because this time it's just him saying it, and for the first time he dropped the "ed" from the end of love - confessing that he does in fact still love her, and then repeats the champagne lyric to pathetically try to explain he was tempted away.

One last thing - i think the "hidden" extra bit at the end could be a representation of what the song actually sounded like - it sounds like it could be from the 60s.

my two cents:

I like to think the hidden bit is what he's reffering to the "So now he has to do it with this lyric in his head" bit.

The song writer is performing the actual song but he uses the word bitch. Now he has to play the f#ckin thing over and over again and it reminds him of how he threw away his 'true love' for some free champagne, a pair of tits and a nice smile.

Cover art for Belinda lyrics by Ben Folds

Ben Folds said this song was about an older rockstar who wrote a song about his ex, and he's performed this song year after year. He's gotten really sick of this song, but he can't stop performing it. If he did he'd be a "one hit wonder with no hit." While the fans sing the chorus for him, he's sing these sarcastic lyrics in his head.

This song is part of the "Foldsby Project" The lyrics were written by the novelist Nick Hornby, and performed by Ben Folds.

I read recently where Nick Hornby was thinking about Eric Clapton and his song Layla which was supposedly written for George Harrison's wife at the time Patty Boyd. She later left George and was married to Eric but eventually they too divorced. Hornby wondered what it was like for Clapton to have to sing that song over and over after the feelings had gone away. Of course Clapton is no one hit wonder but speaking for myself as a 40 something I can say Layla has always been the song I most associated with him. Painful...

I don't think it's sarcasm... I think like Splerb said, the singer is regretting his actions and really regrets breaking his relationship with Belinda....and is now doomed to sing this song for the rest of his career.

Cover art for Belinda lyrics by Ben Folds

Of course, the storyline here is very specific and is fictional, but when I hear this song I always think of Fold's "The Luckiest". He wrote that song while married to his third wife and mother of his children. After breaking up with her he stopped playing the song live. Recently he's started playing it again due to popular demand. I imagine it must be pretty tough to perform it, or at least it was for some time.

 
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