It began as a theme for a little‑known prison film, a song about distance and aching time that should have faded with the closing credits. Instead, “Unchained Melody” escaped its origins, carried first by Todd Duncan’s dignified sorrow, then hurled into immortality by The Righteous Brothers, with Bobby Hatfield’s voice climbing higher than the arrangement seemed built to hold. When Ghost revived it in 1990, the song became a cinematic shorthand for love and loss, binding new memories to an already crowded history.
Elvis Presley’s late‑career performances added another layer: a fragile king at the piano, forcing beauty through exhaustion, turning the song into a confession. Each cover since has been a negotiation with that legacy, proof that a simple melody and plainspoken lyric can bear infinite emotion. “Unchained Melody” endures because it feels less like a composition and more like a shared wound the world keeps singing through.