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This is a Music Trope where the chorus is intentionally written to have two or more interpretations, frequently a literal one and a metaphorical or spiritual one. Each verse sets up a new and different interpretation for the chorus. Done well, it makes the audience say, "Ohh, that puts it in a whole new light." A staple of country music, but not exclusive to it. Can also show up in poems that have a repeating refrain.

Here we're just including cases where the chorus remains mostly identical, with maybe a few small changes. In some cases the lyrics don't clearly have multiple meanings by themselves, but the meanings are suggested by the accompanying video.

Compare Dark Reprise. Often overlaps with Age Progression Song. Subtrope of Double Meaning.

Examples of Dual-Meaning Chorus include:


Country Music[]

  • Dean Brody: "Brothers". The narrator begs to do anything to keep his older brother from going off to war, and is told "this is what brothers are for". They interact through letters in the second verse, once again echoing that sentiment. When the brother finally comes back, he's in a wheelchair and apologizes for having to be pushed in one, but the narrator says "this is what brothers are for" yet again.
  • Garth Brooks: "The Thunder Rolls" goes from the literal thunder of a stormy night to the emotional thunder of a woman who realizes her husband's been cheating on her. And the long version's third verse gives a third meaning...the thunder of a gunshot.
  • Kenny Chesney: "There Goes My Life" (the first one describing how his life is over because he's going to be a young father, the second about how his daughter is his life, and the third is about how his daughter is going away to college.)
  • Bucky Covington - "I'll Walk". The first chorus is about the girl getting upset at the boy after the prom and getting out of the car to walk home. Second chorus is after the girl gets hit by a car and paralyzed, sung from her hospital bed. Third chorus, the boy proposes; the girl sings this to her father, explaining she doesn't want to go down the aisle in her wheelchair.
  • Sara Evans' "You'll Always Be My Baby" is similar to "Love Without End, Amen" (see below), with the God and mother-to-daughter verses reversed.
  • In comedy country singer Kinky Friedman's "We Reserve The Right To Refuse Service To You," the narrator is denied entrance to a cafe with the title words, as he looks like a Communist and a Jew.
    • In the next verse, the rabbi at the synagogue tells him that because he doesn't have a ticket and tie, "We reserve the right to refuse services to you."
    • The next verse takes a more serious anti-war tone as the narrator wishes he could refuse military service to U.S. troops in South Asia.
    • Finally, the narrator fears that when he tries to get into heaven, he'll be told, "Our quota's filled for this year / On singing Texas Jews, / We reserve the right to refuse service to you."
  • George Jones's "The One I Loved Back Then" has a variation, in that both iterations are about the same thing, with the effect achieved through misdirection. Or, as the song goes, "it ain't the car I want/it's the Brunette in your 'Vette that turns me on".
  • "The Call" by Matt Kennon: The first chorus is about a suicide, the second an abortion. They don't go through with it.
  • Patty Loveless' "How Can I Help You Say Goodbye": First to a friend, as the main character is moving away. Second to her husband or, more specifically, married life, since they're getting a divorce. Third to the mother who's singing the chorus, as she's dying.
  • Kathy Mattea's "Where've You Been" focuses on the relationship between the song's two characters Edwin and Claire. The first time the chorus is sung, it's as Claire and Edwin fall in love. The second time the chorus is sung, it's as Edwin comes home after being late enough to scare Claire half to death. The final time the chorus is sung is a Tear Jerker as the doctors wheel Edwin in after the much older Claire has lost her memory and hasn't spoken for who knows how long.
  • Reba McEntire's "What Do You Say" asks the eponymous question in three delicate family situations: a boy's first exposure to pornography, a daughter who becomes drunk at a party and has to ashamedly call her parents, and a terminally ill woman who informs her husband she can no longer go on. The music video depicts all four characters as members of the same family.
  • Tim McGraw does this in "Don't Take the Girl". The first chorus is about a boy asking his father not to bring "the girl" with on their fishing trip. Second chorus is about him asking a mugger not to kidnap his girlfriend. Third chorus is about him asking God not to take his wife away.
    • Not exactly a chorus, but every verse of "Felt Good on My Lips" ends with the title sentence. It refers, respectively to him saying the girl's name, singing her favorite song, drinking the drink she gives him, and their goodnight kiss.
  • John Michael Montgomery's "It Rocked" refers to the narrator being lulled to sleep by his mother in a rocking chair, receiving his first kiss, and joining a rock band.
  • The Joe Nichols song "If Nobody Believed In You" starts with a little boy at a baseball game giving up because his father wouldn't believe in him. The second verse has an old man giving up on driving because his son wouldn't believe in him. And in the third verse, Nichols protests the excising of religion from the schools and the final time the chorus is sung, it's talking about the possibility of God giving up because no one will believe in him.
  • Collin Raye: "Love, Me". The chorus switches from literal to spiritual.
    • Raye did it again in "One Boy, One Girl": in the first two choruses, it's talking about two lovers; in the last chorus it's talking about newborn fraternal twins.
  • Julie Roberts's "Break Down Here": The first chorus is about literally driving a car and not wanting to have it break down in an isolated location. The second chorus is about escaping a failed relationship and trying to stay strong and not "break down."
  • Sawyer Brown's "The Walk". In the first verse, the son is afraid to walk down the driveway to the bus on his first day of school, and the dad says "I took this walk you're walking now, boy, I've been in your shoes..." In the second verse, the son is now walking down the same driveway to drive off for a life on his own. And in the third verse, the son helps his now elderly dad walk down the driveway, since he can no longer do it himself.
  • Crystal Shawanda's song "You Can Let Go" has the chorus "You can let go now, Daddy / You can let go / Oh, I think I'm ready / To do this on my own / It's still a little bit scary / But I want you to know / I'll be okay now, Daddy / You can let go"
    • In the first verse, the narrator is five years old, learning to ride her bike without training wheels, and her father is running beside her, holding her bike steady.
    • In the second verse, the narrator is getting married, and when the chorus comes, it's time for her father to give away the bride, but he's still holding her arm.
    • In the third verse, the narrator's father is in the hospital with a terminal disease, and his daughter is trying to convince him to stop fighting.
  • Ricky Van Shelton: "Keep It Between the Lines" (driving, coloring in a coloring book, dealing with the death of a spouse). Yeah, it didn't always work so well.
  • In George Strait's "Love Without End, Amen" the line "Let me tell you a secret about a father's love" is repeated three times, one from Dad to Main Character, one from Main Character to Son, and the last from God the Son to Main Character (as he imagines his arrival in Heaven to go).
    • Also used by Strait in "The Best Day," which involves a son telling his father that "today's the best day of my life" after going camping as little kid, receiving a car for his sixteenth birthday, and getting married.
  • Daryle Singletary: "I Let Her Lie" (chorus switches from letting his girlfriend lie about her affairs, to leaving her lying in their bed)
  • "Already Gone" by Sugarland. In the first verse, she's already gone off to live on her own; in the second verse, she's already gone and fallen in love; and in the third, she's already gone and left him.
    • Also, "Stay". In the first verse, she's asking her lover to "stay" instead of returning home to his wife. By the end, she realizes she will never have "the best of him," so she says "So the next time you find you want to leave her bed for mine / Why don't you stay?"
  • Randy Travis' "Spirit of a Boy, Wisdom of a Man" has the main character choosing between the two options in three different life scenarios: whether to consummate a teenage romance, whether to support the resulting child, and whether to commit adultery.
  • Tanya Tucker's "Two Sparrows in a Hurricane" takes this to the extreme. The entire first and third verses are the same, with only a single word changed at the beginning ("She's (sixteen/eighty-three), and he's barely driving a car," etc.) At the beginning, they're about to leave home to start a new life together, and at the end, they're about to die of old age.
  • Carrie Underwood: "Jesus, Take The Wheel" (from literally taking the wheel in a car crash, to "taking the wheel" of the singer's life)
    • Also, "Temporary Home" (little boy about his new foster home, single mom about the halfway house where she and her baby are staying, old man as he's about to die and says 'I'll see you again someday')
  • The chorus of Mark Wills' "Wish You Were Here" is the words a man writes on a postcard that he sends to his wife before going a trip. The words ("The weather's nice, it's paradise, it's summertime all year, and there's some folks we know, they say hello?") take on a different meaning after his plane crashes.

Other music[]

  • DMX's "Damien" and "The Omen" use nearly the same chorus, somewhat reflecting the stage of DMX's character's possession. The first- "The Snake, the Rat, the Cat, The Dog, how're you gonna see him if you're in the fog," is used in the first song, when X first meets Damien. The second-"The Snake, the Rat, the Cat, the Dog, how're you gonna live when you're in the fog?" is used in the second, after he's been doing Damien's bidding for quite awhile, and is having second thoughts about it. For an added bonus, it's sung by Marilyn Manson.
  • Joni Mitchell - "Big Yellow Taxi": the operative line is "You don't know what you've got till it's gone" and refers first to the environment and later to the singer's relationship with her boyfriend.
    • The "big yellow taxi" in the final verse is a reference to the yellow police cars used by the Toronto police department at the time, and "old man" ambiguously refers to either a lover or a father figure, so the verse can be interpreted as either the arrest by the authorities or the abandonment and departure of either the singer's lover (in the present day) or father (as a child), yielding four possible meanings.
  • The X Japan song "Week End." The song's chorus is about the suicidal/homicidal narrator being at "his wit's end" and "at the world's end" due to Yoshiki's odd wordplay. It makes sense, though: the idea being, "the end of a life" is indeed the "end of the world." For who's dying, anyway....
  • Shel Silverstein's "I Got Stoned And I Missed It." The first and second verses are about the narrator missing specific events because he was too wasted to pay attention. After the third verse, the "it" is his entire life.
  • "Lady Madonna" by The Beatles; "See how they run" starts by referring to her children, and ends by referring to her stockings.
  • Bob Carlisle - "Man of His Word" (same artist as "Butterfly Kisses"). It starts out referring to his father as the "man of his word" and then goes on to have it refer to Jesus as "Man of His Word".
  • Lupe Fiasco's "Intruder Alert." The phrase "Intruder, Intruder, Intruder, Intruder, Alert, Alert, Alert, Alert" is repeated in the chorus every time.
    • The first time, the lead in was "The alarms in her mind didn't tell her 'he didn't belong,' There was no..." and referred to a rape victim finally being able to love someone again.
    • The second time, the lead in was "Loves to allow these demons to come in with no...", and referred to a drug addict who didn't care that he was one.
    • The third and final time, the lead in was "...Treat you like equals, decieve you, stamp you and call you 'illegal' when there's an..." referring to an illegal Cuban immigrant making it to America.
      • Let's just agree, a vast majority of Lupe Fiasco's songs have double meanings, he's even said it. I'd say the hardest song to figure out is Twilight Zone, which is one giant, freaky metaphor.
      • Kick Push--Originally sounds like a song about a skateboarder's tale/ Also tells about how people are hated for things they love to do.
  • Kind of a stretch, but this is definitely a related idea: the song "I Can Hear You" by They Might Be Giants. The chorus is "I can hear you / I can hear you / I can just barely hear you."
    • The first verse sets it up with "This is a warning. / Step away from the car. / This car is protected by Viper."
    • Another verse sets it up as: "Guess where I am. I'm calling from the plane. I'll call you when I get there."
    • And another: "You won't hear a buzz, but I'm buzzing you in. I'm buzzing you in."
    • And another: "What's your order? I can supersize that. Please bring your car around."
    • For bonus points, the song is recorded on a 19th century wax phonograph, so it is indeed difficult to understand the words.
  • Paul Simon's "Graceland" initially has the refrain "I'm going to Graceland, Graceland, Memphis Tennessee". The reference to Memphis is subsequently dropped. Simon says that from that point on "Graceland" is a metaphor for "something else".
  • The Protomen: "Unrest In The House Of Light" has a refrain that proceeds a bit further every time.
    • Near the start, "There was another who came before you / He was a hero and your brother and my son / He fought the darkness, the darkness won." ... "You need to know / you are not him."
    • By the end, "You need to know / you are not him / this fight's not yours / you cannot win.
  • "Message in a Bottle" by The Police. Chorus is "I'll send an s.o.s. to the world/I'll send an s.o.s. to the world/I hope that someone gets my/I hope that someone gets my/I hope that someone gets my/Message in a bottle, yeah/Message in a bottle, yeah." First verse suggests that it's a straightforward song about someone stranded on a desert island. Second verse hints that there's something more going on. Third verse makes it clear that the "deserted island" is a metaphor for loneliness, and the "message in a bottle" is a metaphor for attempts to reach out to others and make connections.
  • Rackett's "Got It Made" - the eponymous phrase is used continuously to refer to success, of course, but in the final verses the narrator realizes he has cancer. The last verse is about the coffin maker - looks like he's already got it made...
  • Van Halen's "Running with the Devil" has two dual-meaning verses that differ by only one word. "I found the simple life / It's/wasn't so simple / when I jumped out / on that road."
  • Simon and Garfunkel's Richard Cory has the chorus "I wish that I could be ... Richard Cory", originally the singer seemingly envying his boss's wealth in comparison to the singer's poverty. We later learn that Richard Cory has commited suicide, changing the implication of the chorus considerably.
  • The Barenaked Ladies song "Tonight Is The Night I Fell Asleep At The Wheel" doesn't have a chorus per se, but the line "You're the last thing on my mind" is repeated. The first time, it just means he's not thinking about his significant other; when it's repeated, it refers to that she's the last thing he ever thinks about... you know, in his life. Because he dies.
    • Off the Hook repeats the title lyrics throughout. First, the boyfriend is cheating and being let "off the hook". Later, it's a vengeful thing about him eating his words. At the end, the woman has left him and leaves her phone "off the hook". The Barenaked Ladies do this trope quite a bit.
  • DC Talk has a song called "What if I stumble?" In the early verses, it's "what will happen if I stumble?" as in, being afraid. After the last verse, the meaning has changed to "if I stumble, so what?"
  • "The Kids are Alright" by The Who. Mastery of this trope. First a chorus, a two-line bridge, then the chorus takes on a completely new meaning.
  • "Hopeless Bleak Despair" by They Might Be Giants. The verses tell the ways that his depression has ruined his life, but the chorus promises that "then, one day, it disappeared". So it's a hopeful song, right? No, because at the end, it's revealed that the day that he "finally got rid of it" was when he died and went to Hell, while the despair itself went to heaven.
  • Sparks' "Without Using Hands" has a Title-Only Chorus that the verses give different contexts to. The first verse describes men and women meeting up under the shelter of the canopy of the Paris Ritz Hotel in the rain, planning to "love tonight, without using hands". In the second verse, a couple is showing off slides of their vacation at the same hotel to their kids; the children start misbehaving, and the father laments that "the only way children are punished, unlike old times, is without using hands". Finally, it turns out that during this vacation there was an explosion at the hotel - only the hotel manager had any serious injuries, and everyone else seems pretty unconcerned that he's "going to live his entire life... without using hands".
  • In the musical Golden Boy, "No More" is sung by Joe as a bitterly personal Break Up Song, and by the chorus as an outspoken Protest Song.
  • "Walking Her Home" by Mark Schultz - in the first verse, he is literally walking her home (after their first date), but by the end he is walking her home (to heaven).
  • In the musical When Midnight Strikes, Christopher West sings "Like Father, Like Son" wherein the same chorus occurs three times (including the title words) with three different meanings - an affectionate observation from a loving mother, a vow from a beareaved son that he will follow in his father's footsteps, and finally a disgusted realisation that he has done so in ways that he never intended.
  • Peter Schilling's "Major Tom" (and its cover by Shiny Toy Guns). "Earth below us, drifting, falling, floating weightless, calling, coming home..." means one thing during a successful launch to orbit and another during a return plagued by mechanical problems.
  • Sonata Arctica does this in the song "Letter to Dana". The beginning of the song is about a man whose crush has decided to leave him and go away. The chorus ends with : "Little Dana O'Hara decided one day to travel away, far away..." Second verse ends with "I won't write again 'till the sun sets behind your grave..." Knowing there is another chorus afterward, I think you can guess the second meaning...
  • Disgaea: The lyrics to "Red Moon" in chapter 8 first refer to the Prinnies being literally reborn... and then, repeated at the end, refer to Laharl being figuratively reborn by rediscovering love.