10 Songs to Sip Tea To
Unlike the energetic air that surrounds coffee, tea is often paired with tranquility. In album reviews or friend recommendations, quiet and bearded folk bands or gentle introspective ambient music is associated with the act of sipping tea on a rainy day. Though many of the following artists challenge these musical pairings, what remains a constant is tea’s ability to comfort someone in times of trouble, and that it’s best served with a loved one. Steeped in excellence, these 10 songs are perfect with your next cuppa.
1. “Tea For The Tillerman,” Cat Stevens
Although all of Cat Stevens’ (now Yusaf Islam) 1970 masterpiece Tea for the Tillerman is a great tea drinking companion, for titular purposes, its final and title track gets the special mention. Clocking in at only one minute, “Tea For The Tillerman” is a simple piano-based song that near the end is met with a choral accompaniment singing “happy day.” A short song with a lot of meaning, Stevens celebrates the rewards of hard work whether that’s tea or spiritual redemption.
2. “Pennyroyal Tea,” Nirvana
Nirvana’s “Pennyroyal Tea” is one of the gloomiest songs out there that references tea. From their 1993 album In Utero, Kurt Cobain captures the psyche of a depressed person and uses pennyroyal, an herb thought to be a natural way to have an abortion, as a symbol to cleanse the body of the unwanted. As deliciously dark as the song is, you better stick with Earl Grey tea.
3. “Cup of Tea,” Kacey Musgraves
Though it’s not about actual tea, Kacey Musgraves’ use of tea references in this feel good cut from this year’s excellent Pageant Material is enough to bring a little extra pleasure to your afternoon cup. Done in her accessible country-pop style, Musgraves praises individuality and self-empowerment. Musgraves capitalizes on the phrase “you can’t be everybody’s cup of tea” with clever little replies, “some like the bitter, some like the sweet” and “some like it black, some like it green.”
4. “Tea for One,” Led Zeppelin
Led Zeppelin’s epic “Tea for One” is the sprawling closer of their 1976 album Presence. “A minute seems like a lifetime baby, when I feel this way,” cries a homesick Robert Plant in this languid, bluesy track. The melancholy that fills this mostly instrumental song is delectable making it perfect for drinking many unhurried cups of tea when you’re feeling down.
5. “Tea for Two,” Doris Day
Since featured in the 1925 musical No, No Nanette, “Tea for Two” has essentially become a jazz standard. Doris Day’s take appeared in the 1950 movie based on the musical Tea for Two. In this duet with her co-star Gordon MacRae, Day sings of finding happiness in spending time and drinking tea with a loved one: “picture you upon my knee just tea for two / and two for tea / just me for you.”