Drawing from Paul Ricoeur’s work on how the uncertainties of temporality are given coherence through narrative, this essay explores how popular songs mediate the human experience of time. It develops this idea via a brief illustrative study of how “Waterloo Sunset” refashions an ordinary experience of time through a narrative that celebrates the cyclical repetition of a moment, and suggests a more general tendency for pop songs to humanize the paradoxes of the “triple present” and to harmonize the tensions between phenomenological “lived time”, “cosmic time” and “clock time” (categories drawn from Ricoeur). The essay outlines ways that a cyclical popular song aesthetic resonates with a broader series of temporal experiences understood in re...