Torn Between Grief and Glory

Greetings and salutations Hivers. Today let’s go into another Three Tune Tuesday post.

As always, thanks to @ablaze for making this series. Lots of people participate in it! Follow the tags to find a ton of good music recommendation.

Today I’m taking a brief detour back to the era of post-grunge glory and emotional vulnerability—the late ’90s and early 2000s. All three of these were huge hits. They were all over the radio, all over any show that featured any live music, all over MTV…. no wait, scratch that — MTV had already abandoned music by that point.

All still stuck in my head and bubbling up at various times.

Creed - Higher

Before the memes and the mockery, Creed was everywhere. And “Higher” might be their most iconic track. It has all the ingredients: the pseudo-spiritual lyrics, the crunchy guitars, and Scott Stapp’s voice, which walks the line between raw and ridiculous. As over the top as this song can be, there is something about it that just carries us along, at least while it is playing. It’s aspirational, dramatic, and somehow still cathartic all these years later.

If you were alive in the late ’90s, you probably know the chorus by heart. Even if you didn’t want to.


Hootie and the Blowfish - Let Her Cry

This one cuts deep. “Let Her Cry” is a simple song. A man watching the woman he loves unravel, and realizing that letting her go might be the only kindness left. Darius Rucker’s gravelly voice carries that ache beautifully — it’s understated, never overdone. In the 90s, Hootie was everywhere, and you can kind of understand why.

Anyway, this is a song of helplessness, of drinking to forget, of staying even when you know you shouldn’t. And yet, there’s compassion underneath all of it.


Natalie Imbruglia - Torn

One of the best pop-rock songs of the ’90s—and yes, we all thought it was hers, but it’s a cover[1]. Or maybe we just wanted to think it was hers because she’s so damn cute. Still, Natalie owns it. That trembling vulnerability, the cold realization, the flatly sung phrases that match the emotional numbness she’s describing.

It’s breakup music, but it’s also an existential crisis wrapped in denim and soft lighting. The music video is iconic too: just Natalie in a bare apartment, emotionally unraveling in real time.

So what’s your favorite?


  1. Originally written and recorded in 1993 by Ednaswap—a much rougher, grungier version. Imbruglia’s take polished it into a worldwide hit.  ↩

Hi there! David is an American teacher and translator lost in Japan, trying to capture the beauty of this country one photo at a time and searching for the perfect haiku. He blogs here and at laspina.org. Write him on Bluesky.

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13 comments
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You received an upvote of 99% from Precious the Silver Mermaid!

Please remember to contribute great content to the #SilverGoldStackers tag to create another Precious Gem.

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Torn was brilliant, and a still love it, even if I'm not a fan of most popular music. And she's one of ours as well.

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The music videos are simple but very powerful. Creed and Natalie made songs that stay in our hearts and they bring back so many memories of the past.

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You carefully made these selections 😄😄

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The late ’90s and early 2000s really were a golden era for music that wore its heart on its sleeve. I love Natalie’s songs,I actually just watched her concert here in Dubai last week and it was incredible!

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That's great to hear she's still performing!

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Great songs this week. I really want to like Creed, but they were so overplayed. It's just a bit painful now. Let Her Cry is so good. Darius Rucker did a Crossroads with Black Crowes where he said that "She Talks To Angels" was his inspiration for Let Her Cry. He wanted to write a song as good as the Black Crowes one and that is what he came up with. I'd say he did a pretty good job.

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