

On the “Can You ‘Place’ These Songs’ playlist, we highlight 10 songs that are either named after, reference, or are loosely associated with a particular place.


Ah, another playlist! Who would have it any other way? This particular playlist features 10 songs that are either named after a place, reference a place, or are loosely associated with a place…somehow. In some cases, the place ‘fuels the fire’ on a given song, while in other cases, it’s not necessarily key to the song’s success. Among featured artists are Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Camilla Cabello, and Harry Styles.
[/nextpage] [nextpage title=”2″ ]
1. Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, “Cumberland Gap”
Album: The Nashville Sound
Southeastern, 2017
Place Referenced: Cumberland Gap (Kentucky, Virginia & Tennessee)
“Maybe the Cumberland Gap just swallows you whole.”
What’s the context? Isbell paints a picture of living life in a box, without more variation and aspirations. Hence, living the life in (around) the Cumberland Gap – literally or metaphorically – can seem like a deathtrap of sorts because of limited opportunities.
2. Camila Cabello, “Havana”
Ft. Young Thug
Epic, 2017
Place Referenced: Havana, Cuba
[/nextpage] [nextpage title=”3″ ]
3. 2 Chainz, “Riverdale Rd”
Album: Pretty Girls Like Trap Music
Def Jam, 2017
Place Referenced: Riverdale Rd., College Park, Georgia
4. blackbear, “Santa Monica & La Brea”
Album: cybersex
Interscope, 2017
Place Referenced: Santa Monica, California; Santa Monica Boulevard; La Brea Avenue
5. Lorde, “The Louvre”
Album: Melodrama
Republic, 2017
Place Referenced: The Louvre, Paris, France
“Well, summer slipped us underneath her tongue / Our days and nights are perfumed with obsession / Half of my wardrobe is on your bedroom floor / Use our eyes, throw our hands overboard.”
It gets even more passionate as the song progresses. The rush is real:
“Megaphone to my chest / Broadcast the boom, boom, boom, boom / And make ‘em dance to it.”
She knows it’s risky and superficial, but being young, she’s willing to “Blow all my friendships / To sit in hell with you.”
6. Childish Gambino, “California”
Album: “Awaken, My Love!”
Glassnote, 2017
Place Referenced: California
7. Harry Styles, “Ever Since New York”
Album: Harry Styles
Columbia, 2017
Place Referenced: New York
“Brooklyn saw me, empty at the news / There’s no water inside this swimming pool / Almost over, had enough from you / And I’ve been praying, I never did before / Understand I’m talking to the walls / I’ve been praying ever since New York.”
Clearly, whatever went down in New York has affected Styles deeply. The result is one of the best songs of his debut album.
8. Tim McGraw & Faith Hill, “Telluride”
Album: The Rest of Our Life
Sony, 2017
Place Referenced: Telluride, Colorado
9. Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, “Tupelo”
Album: The Nashville Sound
Southeastern, 2017
Place Referenced: Tupelo, Mississippi
“There is a girl out there that will treat me fair…/ There ain’t no one from here that will follow me there.”
Tupelo, like the Cumberland Gap, can be viewed both literally and figuratively. Ultimately, more trouble would find the singer/songwriter any place he goes, even as he seeks to escape personal hell.
10. David Rawlings, “Cumberland Gap”
Album: Poor David’s Almanack
Acony, 2017
Place Referenced: Cumberland Gap (Kentucky, Virginia & Tennessee)
David Rawlings, like Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, sings about the famous, sometimes infamous place.
“Cumberland Gap, it’s a devil of a gap / That’s what the scouts all tell ya / Sure enough it may get tough / If it doesn’t kill ya, kill ya.”
Leave a Comment