Yet the music remains irrepressibly upbeat even through the third and final verse, where the singer returns to her husband’s hillside grave to find the wild spring flowers blooming (full circle! life goes on! circle of life! etc.). She vows to leave a rose (love!) in the winter snow (death!) on his grave, and we have the depressing yet life-affirming moral of the story, which may as well be a European art-house flick: everything we do is done in the shadow of mortality, but we do it anyway. “Roses in the Snow” is poetic symbolism for “Love In the Face of Inevitable Doom,” and once we’ve understood and accepted that idea, there’s really nothing left to do but have a good old-fashioned bluegrass hoedown about it.
We are a diverse team of musicologists who have developed an exclusive algorithm we use to determine the one million best songs ever written. We then leverage the extraordinary power of advanced computational technology to bring the top one million to you, listed in precise order, via this web log.
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