Lzzy Hale
Pull a thread

Dear Daughter: How Lzzy Hale Rewired Rock's Parent-to-Child Song
Rock has been writing letters to its kids for fifty years. Halestorm’s ‘Dear Daughter’ is the first one addressed to a child who doesn’t exist — and that’s exactly why it works.
The lineage: rock’s closed letters
There’s a whole branch of the rock family tree that most people never map, because the songs on it don’t sound alike. They’re connected by who they’re written to.
Bob Dylan’s “Forever Young” is the structural grandparent — a blessing-list, one wish per line, sealed and handed down. John Lennon’s “Beautiful Boy (Darling Boy)” did it for Sean. David Bowie’s “Kooks” did it for Duncan, with a wink. Billy Joel’s “Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel)” did it for Alexa. On the heavier side of the family, Staind’s “Zoe Jane” is the closest hard-rock analogue, and Creed’s “With Arms Wide Open” did it for a son who hadn’t even arrived yet.