Chambermaid

Album: Flying With Angels (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • If you've ever wondered what it might be like to rummage around the corners of a Bob Dylan song and strike up a conversation with one of the characters lurking in the margins - someone with no lines, no voice, and barely a name - Suzanne Vega's 2025 single "Chambermaid" does just that. The song takes a character mentioned only in passing in Dylan's 1966 classic "I Want You" ("I'll go talk with my chambermaid") and imagines what she might actually say, given half a chance and a decent melody.
  • Vega has long made a career out of lending empathy and interiority to overlooked lives (see "Luka" and "Tom's Diner").

    "I woke up one morning with this odd notion that I'm Bob Dylan's chambermaid," Vega told Uncut magazine. "I went to explore it and the whole song came flying out."
  • The character came alive - a woman cleaning rooms but dreaming bigger, navigating the mop bucket of life while privately scribbling plans on the back of the guest ledger. Vega and longtime guitarist/producer Gerry Leonard didn't just borrow the inspiration, they pinched the riff and smuggled bits of the melody too. "There's a thrill to stealing a bit of Bob Dylan's style," she smiled.
  • "Chambermaid" is a track from Flying With Angels, Vega's first album in 11 years. Released in 2025, the album explores themes of struggle and resilience, with each track set in an atmosphere of personal or societal challenge.
  • While "Chambermaid" is the most explicit homage to Dylan in Vega's discography, his influence is woven throughout her career in her use of intricate wordplay, narrative storytelling, and a willingness to blend the real with the surreal. When Mojo magazine asked how Dylan inspires her, Vega said:

    "There's so much to admire. In a very large nutshell, it's the sense of expansion in his work; each thought and idea stretched to its outer limits, with images and metaphors piled one on top of another, each keeping its own mysterious integrity. His songs host a whole cast of characters, human and mythic, from simple love songs to political anthems, from humorous ditties to deadly serious meditations. He explores every mood and situation in life, not to mention the weather and atmospheres! It's all happening at once. A universe unto itself."

Comments: 1

  • Bx19tri from Zurich, SwitzerlandI find it obvious that Suzanne Vega does not talk about some chambermaid, but rather about herself. How much she adores Dylan, that she "steals" from him (this song), and how much she owes him. In an interview, she states: "I met Bob once, and we had a great talk for about 15 minutes. I opened for him in Norway in 2012, and I did give him a tiny little kiss goodbye on his cheek". Very sweet.
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