Classic Songs to Be Discovered, Influenced, Music

The Record I Almost Didn’t Buy and Couldn’t Escape: Marillion – Script For A Jester’s Tear

You don’t find Marillion. They find you.

Or more accurately, you hear about them sideways.

For me it wasn’t some critic, not some curated “essential albums” list. It was Dream Theater blowing up with “Images and Words”, and Mike Portnoy talking like a fan, not a technician. That’s the tell. When a virtuoso stops talking about chops and starts talking about feeling, you pay attention.

So I went digging. Early ’90s. Second-hand record store. Dust, cracked plastic CD cases, history stacked alphabetically.

And there it was: “Script for a Jester’s Tear”.

I’d seen it before. That cover lingered. You don’t forget it. The Jester, fragile, theatrical, cracked open emotionally. The kind of image that promises something deeper than hooks. Conceived by Fish, brought to life by Mark Wilkinson. Not decoration, invitation.

Still, I didn’t buy it the first time. Two bucks felt like a commitment when you’re chasing every other ’80s record you think you “need.” Funny how that works. You chase quantity until something forces you to sit still and actually feel.

This record does that.

It doesn’t care about your verse-chorus expectations. It doesn’t ask permission. It builds moods. It stretches. It circles back. It trusts you to stay.

And then there’s that middle section. Around the two-minute mark through four. That’s where the mask slips.

The structure shouldn’t work on paper, verse feel, then a lead break, then back again, but emotionally it locks in. Not because it’s clever. Because it’s honest. The music doesn’t resolve, it returns. Like memory. Like regret. Same place, slightly different weight.

And then the words hit:

So here I am once more in the playground of the broken hearts.

That’s not just a line. That’s a pattern. That’s someone recognizing they’ve been here before and still walked back in. No illusion of progress. Just awareness.

One more experience, one more entry in a diary, self-penned.

That’s the quiet brutality of self-reflection. Nobody else to blame. You wrote this chapter.

Yet another emotional suicide overdosed on sentiment and pride.

That’s the real tell. Not heartbreak. Ego. You didn’t just feel too much, you chose it. You leaned into it. Pride kept you there.

Too late to say I love you, too late to re-stage the play.

There’s no rewrite. No director’s cut. The window closed while you were thinking about it.

Abandoning the relics in my playground of yesterday.

That’s the only move left. Not victory. Not redemption. Just… leaving.

That’s why the playground imagery works. Swings. Roundabouts. Motion without progress. Up and down, but you end up where you started. And the line:

I’m losing on the swings, I’m losing on the roundabouts.

It cuts because it strips the illusion. There’s no winning version of this cycle.

And that’s the thing about this song. It doesn’t pretend resolution. Even “The game is over” doesn’t feel triumphant. It feels like someone finally putting the controller down because they’re tired of losing the same level.

The Jester’s tear? That’s the whole thesis. Not just sadness. Not just regret. It’s the awareness of both. The performance and the truth colliding. Smiling while something inside you caves in.

And then that quiet confession:

I never did write that love song, the words just never seemed to flow.

That’s the line that lingers. Because it’s not about writing. It’s about saying the thing when it mattered. And not doing it.

No guitar heroics fix that. No structure saves it. No time rewinds it.

That’s why this record sticks. It doesn’t overwhelm you with complexity, it traps you with recognition.

You’ve been in that playground.

You just didn’t have the words for it yet.

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The Song Needs To Be A Song First – Words of Wisdom from Zoltan Bathory

“Every one of us can play. We are technical players. When it comes to songs, there’s a difference between just shredding and showing of or writing songs. That’s a different talent. First and foremost, the song has to be a song then you start to think about yeah, let’s add a guitar solo.”

(Zoltan Bathory from Five Finger Death Punch in a recent interview with Loudwire.)

I remember towards the end of the Eighties, hard rock and glam rock bands are getting signed up left, right and centre by all the record labels. The greedy labels over saturated the market with diluted quality. They got talented musicians and sold them the dream of fame and fortune. Once they had their signature on paper, they told them to go and write songs like Cherry Pie.

Have you read or heard what Jani Lane (RIP) said about Cherry Pie. He wishes he never wrote the song. The album was done, it was going to be called Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The label wanted a hit song or they wouldn’t release the album. Jani had two options, tell the label to go F themselves and by doing that he knew that his songs will never be heard or he could comply with their request, write them a sugar pop song and get the album out.  We all know how the story goes?

Writing songs and playing technical are two different things and it’s good to see Zoltan make that distinction.

Would people still be interested in Dream Theater if they just played technical passages, without having a real song as the springboard. Pull Me Under is the song that you can say broke Dream Theater to the masses. It is the most simplest Dream Theater song to learn and play, however it was written by musicians who have great technical ability. The second track, Another Day is another Dream Theater  song that is simple to play and again it is from the same well. Of course Images and Words has Learning To Live, Metropolis, Take The Time and Under A Glass Moon and the reason why those songs have become cult songs in the progressive genre, is because they are songs first and technical masterpieces second.  The bottom line is, you need a great foundation.

When Ozzy relaunched his career with the Blizzard Of Ozz band (that then became the Ozzy band when the record was released), it was on the back of great songs and great technical guitar playing from Randy Rhoads. A simple catchy AC/DC style song like Flying High Again, had a dazzling tapped lead break. The Crazy Train solo is one of those songs within a song guitar leads, however who would have cared if it was there, if the song it was on is terrible.

The bottom line for both Dream Theater and Ozzy Osbourne is; if you take away the progressive instrumental breaks and guitar leads from the songs that we love, you still have a great song and that is the essence to everything.

When the Whitesnake album exploded in 1987, it was on the back of great songs and great guitar playing from John Sykes. Listen to his lead break on Crying In The Rain. John Kalodner, the A&R rep that signed Whitesnake to Geffen, knew that was a great song. It just need to be re-done in a way that it could get massive exposure. The song was a song already as it already did the rounds on the Saints and Sinners album from 1982 and by adding the one minute plus tour de force lead break by Sykes to it, it made the song even more dazzling and a product of the times. However, as I mentioned above, if you take away the lead break, you still have a great song.

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