I have one above all others but I can't say it, it's still too personal and I hope I get over it enough to open up to the song again.
A few specifics otherwise:
Hearing All You Need Is Love on the car radio, Wednesday Sept. 12, 2001, while driving to work on the same route at the exact same time at the same spot on the road as "The Beatles Breakfast Block" played in the car the day before...but the previous morning gave absolutely no indication of how everything would change within an hour of my driving to work that Tuesday. It was any other sunny day on Tuesday listening to the Beatles on the drive, but on Wednesday hearing All You Need Is Love made me fall apart as I was driving. That was the first time the weight of it came crashing in for me, and The Beatles triggered it.
Hearing "In Blue Hawaii" for the first time on those dinky preview Smile mp3 tracks, I just lost it, it was so beautiful and felt like something great had just happened - can't explain other than that.
Skeeter Davis' "The End Of The World".
Joe Jackson's "Steppin' Out" makes me think of things I haven't yet done, and keeps things hopeful at the same time. This one lyric near the end: "We are young but getting old before our time. We'll leave the T.V. and the radio behind. Don't you wonder what we'll find? Steppin' out tonight." That is an absolutely brilliant line and a very moving sentiment, and it hits me right in the heart and mind every time I hear it. It's one that you so very much want to heed the call and head out and do something, then reality sets in. But there is always hope.
