Property Management
A Playlist to Get You in a Homey State of Mind
Last Updated Feb 1, 2021
We hope the songs compiled here trigger within you, as they do within us, the power of home – especially relevant after Thanksgiving and before Christmas.
We here at Belong are constantly obsessing over all things home-related. Our ears — and hearts — perk up whenever we hear the word. Which is probably why we respond so immediately and emotionally to the songs collected on this playlist -- songs that communicate what we feel when we help connect people to the places where they live -- and the people they live with.
Without further ado, our favorite songs about home from the 60s and 70s:
1. Homeward Bound — Simon and Garfunkel
2. Our House — Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
Sure, boomers got a lot of things wrong — we’re not going to position ourselves on the unfashionable side of that argument — but it’s hard to deny the appeal of these two songs, which we’ve always thought of as two sides of the same coin. The Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young song revels in the comfort and stability promised by home, while the Simon and Garfunkel tune longs for those very qualities. It’s the difference between being there and wanting to be there.
3. Wouldn’t It Be Nice — The Beach Boys
The other thing about boomers is they know from their harmonies. Though the word “home” never appears in the lyrics of this song, the bliss they describe is specifically domestic. It’s the joy of living with someone you love, in a house that you love, that makes this song so timeless.
4. The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest — Bob Dylan
Surrealistic, yet earthy, it’s difficult to pin down the exact meaning of this song (as is often the case with Dylan’s lyrics). Though when Dylan sings “It’s not a house / It’s a home” we know precisely what he’s talking about. In fact, it’s this idea that Belong is built on — the idea that a house only becomes a true home through the relationship its residents develop with it. It’s love and familiarity that make a house a home: without that emotional component, it’s just wood and cement.
5. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere — Neil Young
The title song of Young’s breakthrough as a solo artist, “Everybody Knows” expresses how meaningful home is to the singer, by telling us how unimportant everywhere else is. If he’s not there, he’s nowhere, drifting in the void. A powerful thought, set to a jaunty, gutbucket guitar figure. And something you can imagine exerts a powerful lure to a musician who spent so much time on the road.
6. Take Me Home, Country Roads — John Denver
Though Belong doesn’t yet operate in West Virginia – yet! – we still relate to the warm, ecstatic love for home that this song expresses, and the sense of yearning we feel when we’re anywhere else but home.
7. Two of Us — The Beatles
Having spent Thanksgiving week in a tryptophan dream watching Get Back on Disney Plus, we are fonder than ever of this acoustic ditty that finds Paul McCartney and John Lennon duetting for one of the very last times. Like the John Denver song, it has a homey tug, a nostalgic vibe perfectly suited to the subject matter. Which is the beautiful thing about a home you love — you feel wistful thinking about it, but unlike most things that make you feel that way, it’s always there waiting for you at the end of the day.
Like Robert Frost said, “Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.”
You own a home.
We have someone to ❤️ it.
8. Looking Out My Back Door — Creedence Clearwater Revival
One of the Dude’s favorites — and one of our favorites, too — this Creedence classic tells the story of a man coming home and immediately feeling so comfortable there that he stumbles into a surrealist fantasia. From his porch he sees a giant doing cartwheels and a statue in high heels, imploring the listener to “look at all the happy creatures dancing on the lawn.” Rarely has the surreal and psychedelic felt so comforting and familiar.
9. Sweet Home Alabama — Lynyrd Skynyrd
We’d be remiss if we didn’t list this roots-rock staple, which proves that home isn’t only where the heart is, but where the imagination thrives.
10. The House I Live In – Frank Sinatra
And to conclude, something a little different – this classic ballad sung by the inimitable Frank Sinatra, that broadens the definition of home, taking in not only the building you live in, but the neighborhood, the state, and the country. In these trying times, it is songs like these that remind us of the spirit that unites us all.
This holiday season, we hope that this collection of songs makes you feel the way we do -- like you Belong somewhere.