(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
Heloísa Eneida Paes Pinto Mendes Pinheiro was her name.
She is real....
...and she was apparently...SPECTACULAR!
Otherwise every song title with a vague reference to a real woman qualifies. Way too cumbersome.
(no message)
Her name is not in the song. It can’t be named after her.
It’s a creepy song. Written by leering pervs.
Carry on. I’m done. Be frankonian if you like.
I understand what you meant.
I was just funnin' you over a literal interpretation.
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9uYu4R2nk8
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
I assume she was real. Where can I find a woman like that?
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
'Layla' by Eric Clapton. Written as a tribute to Patti Boyd. Unfortunately for Eric, Patti was married to Eric's best friend, George Harrison.
(no message)
Don't be so goddamned anal.
If you want to go that route, there are several to consider....
Roseanna by Toto, which may or may not have been a tribute to Roseanna Arquette
Melissa by the Allman Brothers. I guess is doesn't meet your anal criteria, since it was named after a child and not a woman.
Jolene by Dolly Parton. Same....written about about chlld, not a woman.
But just fuck off anyway, for good measure.
You arrogantly insisted there was but one obvious answer. You did not read "named after". Others did so correctly and submitted fine selections. Grow up.
Clapton was inspired by a poem called "The Story of Layla and Majnun," which portrayed the poet as a man driven to madness by his unattainable love. In Clapton's case it was Patti Boyd.
Thousand of songs written "about" real women. Fewer actually named after them.
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)
(no message)