- Helen Phillips
Alternate:
"Kissed by a rose on the grave"
Current:
"Kissed by a rose on the grey"
Seal: Kiss from a rose
Seal's 1994 hit 'Kiss from a rose' was used in the Batman Forever soundtrack.
There's something odd about the lyrics, though.
It mentions in the first line a greying tower, and is full of imagery surrounding color. So the main refrain, which many people are sure is '...kissed by a rose on the grave' is seen today as ''...kissed by a rose on the grey"
Baby, I compare you to a kiss from a rose on the grey
Ooh, the more I get of you, the stranger it feels, yeah
Now that your rose is in bloom
A light hits the gloom on the grey
- Cory Grajales
Alternate:
1970's
Current:
1930's
First appeared?
Boom boom chakka chakka boom boom.
The dance associated with the rhythmic delights of a beat box pumping out it's mega bass tunes, in which a youthful gyrator would acrobatically spin round on their head or whatever other appendage was appropriate at the time, is one most people think of as being a modern phenomenon. Certainly, they would place break dancing as a thing of the 80's, or maybe 70's if pushed.
Footage showing this exact same thing being done in the 1930's is catching many by surprise.
- Joe Hutt
Alternate:
Melody
Current:
Memory
"Son can you play me a _____?"
People have noticed something odd about the first verse of Billy Joe's "Piano Man".
They remember the line as "Son can you play me a melody", whereas now it's memory. Sure, the word "melody" does appear later in the chorus but this specific MMDE is that it was there in the first verse.
There's a thread on Reddit showing many examples of residue for this one, along with speculation regarding why in particular the word "memory" is subject to a false memory effect...
- Ian Scott
Alternate:
"She" took the midnight train, then "He" took the midnight train
Current:
"He" took the midnight train both times
More than a slip?
Here's another alternative memory which has previously been reported for a different reason. The first time was when the song "suddenly" appeared for many people and seemed to be getting played everywhere - this was discussed on Reddit. This time it's a lyric change, and a pretty obvious one too.
At the start of Journeys' "Don't stop believin'", the written lyrics are:
Just a small town girl
Livin' in a lonely world
She took the midnight train goin' anywhere
Just a city boy
Born and raised in South Detroit
He took the midnight train goin' anywhere
Yet today you can clearly hear "He" took the midnight train both times, which makes no sense.
- Ray Wu
Alternate:
Hold on
Current:
Oh Lord
I've been waiting for this moment for all my life
Was Phil Collins singing "Hold on" or "Oh Lord" in "In The Air Tonight"?
Many swear it was "Hold on", but has somehow now been changed to "Oh Lord".
There is an interesting back story to this - Phil recounted the time he saw a boy drown another one, and had it in mind when he wrote the lyrics. The problem there is it doesn't actually help clear up the mystery, since clearly either can be used whilst still making sense and fitting into that narrative.
- Ray Wu
Alternate:
Singing in the rain
Current:
Singin' in the rain
Need an umbrella?
Go on - ask most people what Gene Kelly's most famous song and dance routine is - you know, the one where he needs an umbrella. Make sure you ask them to spell it exactly. Chances are, unless they are already aware of this Mandela Effect, they'll reply with "Singing in the rain". If they do, they will be surprised to hear it's never been called that - in fact it's "Singin' in the rain".
Many of the Mandela Effects being reported today seem trivial. Sometimes it's a minor spelling change such as this one, sometime "The" is dropped from a title etc. The reason these are of interest is the idea that slight changes are far easier, and less disruptive to timelines, than larger ones. It's almost as if a test was being performed, or a minor glitch occurred which in the grand scale of things no-one would notice.
- Ray Wu
Alternate:
No person, just a feel good song
Current:
Neil Young
What's it about?
Most people know the catchy riff from the famous 1974 Lynyrd Skynyrd track "Sweet Home Alabama", but many are suprised to find out what it's actually about.
Those that don't really know usually respond with some answer about a feel-good homecoming kind of vibe. When they are told it's a dig at Neil Young, who's name is explicity mentioned in the lyrics, they are so suprised that it's being called a Mandela Effect.
There are other examples of this type of Mandela Effect, i.e. something in plain sight comes as news to many people - an example is the Razzle Dazzle ships.
For the record, the animosity was cleared up at the time and Neil Young actually paid tribute to them.