Good Riddance
Green Day’s acoustic ballad, a perennial favorite for greatest prom song, was never intended to be a love affair. Billie Joe Armstrong, a brooding frontman, wrote the song about a lover who was relocating to Ecuador and titled it “Good Riddance” out of frustration over the breakup. Armstrong is unconcerned by the ballad’s misunderstanding as a high school slow dance tune, telling VH1’s Behind The Music, “I sort of enjoy the fact that I’m misunderstood most of the time. That’s fine.”
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Good Riddance
Born In The U.S.A.
“Born in the U.S.A.” is a must-have on any list of misunderstood songs. The usage of The Boss’s smash as a rah-rah political anthem, according to music critic Greil Marcus, drives its legacy: “Clearly the key to Bruce’s popularity is in a misunderstanding,” he said. “He is a tribute to the fact that people hear what they want to hear.” Most people mistook it for a patriotic song about American pride, when it was actually a condemnation of America’s treatment of Vietnam veterans.
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Born In The U.S.A.