Dancing in the Dark (1984) – Bruce Springsteen


Today we look at Bruce Springsteen’s most popular song according to Spotify streams, with 1.2 billion plays (at the time of writing), well surpassing his next most streamed song, I’m On Fire, at 778 million. It’s easy to see why Dancing in the Dark is so crowd-pleasing. It’s a pop-rocker that appeals to young and old alike, with a feel-good, danceable melody that edges on euphoria and sees Bruce and the E Street Band supercharged and effervescent in their performance.

Then there’s THAT video! It has become culturally iconic, featuring a young Courteney Cox (Friends) towards the end, and was a defining moment of the MTV era. It even features Bruce dancing in that awkward and goofy 1980s way, which was somehow all the rage back then. The song reached No. 2 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Male.

Despite its overwhelming popularity, Dancing in the Dark probably doesn’t rank especially high among many hardcore fans’ favourite Springsteen songs. Even so, I don’t doubt that nearly all of them were as captivated by it as everyone else when they first heard it. Beneath its catchy exterior lies a powerful statement on modern isolation and the need for connection, which of course resonates with so many people.

While I wouldn’t place it among my personal top-shelf Springsteen songs, I still enjoy hearing it from time to time. It also takes me back to when I first started listening to the Boss’s music. It was one of the first Bruce songs I introduced my children to, which seemed as good a place as any to begin exploring his extensive discography.

Dancing in the Dark comes from Bruce Springsteen’s most popular and commercially successful album, Born in the U.S.A. It has sold more than 30 million copies worldwide, making it one of the best-selling albums of all time. Dancing in the Dark was its biggest hit, too.


Snippets from Wikipedia:

Springsteen wrote it overnight after Jon Landau convinced him that the album needed a single. Springsteen was not impressed with Landau’s approach. “Look“, he snarled, “I’ve written seventy songs. You want another one, you write it.

Despite this reaction, Springsteen sat in his hotel room and wrote the song in a single night. It sums up his state of mind, his feeling of isolation after the success of his album The River, and his frustrations of trying to write a hit single.

Directed by Brian De Palma (Scarface), the video below was shot at the Saint Paul Civic Center in Saint Paul, Minnesota, on June 28 and 29, 1984.

Springsteen thought Courtney Cox was just a pre-selected fan attending and did not know until afterward that she was a professional actress brought in from New York City.

[Verse 1]
I get up in the evening
And I ain’t got nothing to say
I come home in the morning
I go to bed feeling the same way
I ain’t nothing but tired
Man, I’m just tired and bored with myself
Hey there, baby
I could use just a little help

[Chorus]
You can’t start a fire
You can’t start a fire without a spark
This gun’s for hire
Even if we’re just dancing in the dark

[Verse 2]
Messages keep getting clearer
Radio’s on, and I’m moving ’round my place
I check my look in the mirror
I wanna change my clothes, my hair, my face
Man, I ain’t getting nowhere
Ah, just living in a dump like this
There’s something happening somewhere
Baby, I just know that there is

[Chorus]
You can’t start a fire
You can’t start a fire without a spark
This gun’s for hire
Even if we’re just dancing in the dark

[Bridge]
You sit around getting older
There’s a joke here somewhere, and it’s on me
I’ll shake this world off my shoulders
Come on, baby, the laugh’s on me

[Verse 3]
Stay on the streets of this town
And they’ll be carving you up all right
They say, “You gotta stay hungry”
Hey, baby, I’m just about starving tonight
I’m dying for some action
I’m sick of sitting around here trying to write this book
I need a love reaction
Come on now, baby, give me just one look

References:
1. Dancing in the Dark (Bruce Springsteen song) – Wikipedia

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Great Sporting Moments 8 – Australia’s Win over Turkey at the 2026 World Cup

They call my home country Australia ‘the lucky country’, and one not so discerning could have applied that label to Australia’s fantastic win against Turkey two days ago. Turkey had a whopping 72% possession and 30 shots on goal, but it was Australian coach Tony Popovic’s game plan of compact defence and counter-attacking football, along with its near-faultless execution by his players, that proved to be the trump card of the encounter. At the end of this post is a very short highlights video.

Turkey were heavy favourites against the Aussies, with opening odds of 1.69 for a Turkey win and 5.17 for an Australia win. But as former Australian coach Ange Postecoglou put it in an interview just prior to the match (or words to that effect), if there’s one thing about Australia in any sport, it’s that you discount them at your own peril. As an aside, Australia is often described as a secular country, but I like to think our religion is fundamentally of the sporting variety.

Anyhow, Ange’s words appeared prophetic as Australia pulled off a massive upset. It wasn’t just that we won by a commanding 2-0 scoreline; it was the way it was achieved. The analogy that comes to mind is that Turkey were like a soaked sponge at the start of the match, and as each minute wore on Australia wrung that sponge ever so deftly, its liquid content diminishing incrementally throughout the game. By the end, the sponge had been exhausted and left dry. The Turks had no answers and looked depleted and dishevelled.

It was such a masterclass technical display, but of a highly unusual nature. The counter-attacking football playing using pace down the widths and the long ball were exceptional. The speed of our dual attacking forwards, namely Mohamed Toure and Nestory Irankunda was unlike anything I can recall and the through balls to them were sublime culminating in Nestory Irankunda’s first goal. It was truly was one for the ages as far as Australian football-lore is concerned – At 20 years-old he was the youngest Australian to score a goal at the world cup.

Now to herald and rejoice in the clear man of the match. You see that young lad at the top of this article? Well, his name is Patrick Beach. He was Australia’s goalkeeper on that unforgettable night. Not only does he possess one of the coolest names I’ve heard, but he also produced one of the greatest debut performances you are ever likely to see.

He remarkably made his Australian debut in this opening World Cup match. Coach Tony Popovic put his faith in the 22-year-old Patrick Beach ahead of Australia’s captain and long-time goalkeeper, Mat Ryan. Yes, you read that correctly. And the proof was in the pudding: Beach made an incredible eight saves, and some of them were nothing short of spectacular.

As my son Jesus Mateo (a football nut like his old man) commented, “I haven’t seen reflexes in a goalkeeper like that before.” Hear, hear! And I replied, “I’ve never seen a goalkeeper move so quickly to make his saves.” It was thrilling to watch. No Australian goalkeeper has ever made that many saves in a World Cup match, and it was the highest save tally by any keeper in the tournament up to that point. The stuff of legend!

Speaking of legend, below is a video of Jesus scoring a last minute goal for his former club Millonarios (Eng. Millionaires).
Please excuse my poor camera work and unruly yelling.

I have a personal connection with the Socceroos, as they are affectionately known, that goes way back. In my youth, after winning our local club’s Footballer of the Year award, I was honoured by the club president to present Australia’s then national team coach, Frank Arok, with a small token of memorabilia from our club in appreciation for a training clinic his team conducted at my high school, Colo High (image inset).

Australia’s next match is a mouth-watering one against tournament co-hosts the United States, who played a near-faultless game themselves in their commanding victory over Paraguay. I fear that contest above any other imaginable, as the United States are playing better football than I can ever remember seeing from them, and they will also have the advantage of home support. In fact, it makes the build-up to the Turkey match seem subdued by comparison.

That’s all for now. Until next time, thanks as always for reading.

References:
1. World Cup: Socceroos’ great gamble pays off as Patrick Beach vindicates Tony Popovic’s big call – ABC News Australia

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Kathy’s Song (2000) – Eva Cassidy

While researching my previous article on Eva Cassidy, I came across her beautiful cover of Paul Simon’s Kathy’s Song and was enamoured with it. It showcases her signature acoustic guitar fingerpicking and pure, emotive vocals. When I hear her voice, it’s as though a light surrounds it. There’s something angelic in its aesthetic and tone that I haven’t really heard in another singer.

Eva was blessed with such a wondrous and authentic voice and, when you consider her tragic passing at such a young age, it makes you wonder if she was sent down here to give us a fleeting glimpse of what heaven sounds like.

I agree with Arun Starkey, writing for Far Out, who opined that Cassidy’s version of Kathy’s Song could make a “strong claim to be better than the original“. She recorded the song on January 3, 1996, just ten months before her passing from melanoma on November 2, 1996, at the age of 33.

She was virtually unknown outside her native Washington, D.C. area at the time of her death. Her music reached a global audience in late 2000 when BBC Radio 2 DJ Terry Wogan began playing her version of Over the Rainbow from the compilation album Songbird. Since then, her music has featured in countless films and continues to receive significant airplay.

Eva’s version of Kathy’s Song was released posthumously on Time After Time (2000), four years after her death in 1996.


Kathy’s Song was from Paul Simon’s 1965 debut album The Paul Simon Songbook and re-recorded for Simon & Garfunkel’s second album Sounds of Silence, released in 1966.

It has been described as one of Simon’s most personal songs; it is dedicated to Kathy Chitty, Simon’s girlfriend and muse during his mid-1960s sojourn in England.

References:
1. Kathy’s Song – Wikipedia

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Skeleton Tree (2016) – Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

Nick Cave is widely recognised as one of Australia’s most influential indie music exports, and he is back again with the title track, Skeleton Tree, from his 2016 album of the same name. I covered a lot of music from his follow-up 2019 album Ghosteen, and in those discussions Skeleton Tree was mentioned, so I did some digging and found a couple of nuggets.

Skeleton Tree is one of those songs that made me wonder how I hadn’t heard it already, and I felt some remorse that it hadn’t been with me earlier. It’s a wistful and dreamy song carried by a delicate yet alluring piano melody and imagery that is both desolate and evocative.

As the title suggests, the tree has been stripped of its canopy and foliage, leaving only its exposed frame – a skeleton tree. The narrator is alone; a solitary candle burns in the window and the television glows white like fire. He calls out across the sea, yet not even his own echo returns. Still, he repeats, “it’s alright now,” as though he is trying to reassure himself and find solace in his desolation.

Skeleton Tree was written around the period of the death of Cave’s son, so it can be read not just as a portrait of loneliness but also as a landscape of grief. Musically, its minimal production and less polished sound feel stripped back to the essentials, reflecting the aftermath of immense loss. However, as the information below suggests, the song may be more allegorical and not directly related to the death of his son.

Nick’s follow-up album Ghosteen was more focused on, and reflective of, how he processed grief over time, while Skeleton Tree in some respects captures the immediate impact of bereavement. Even so, as mentioned earlier, this remains conjecture, as most of the Skeleton Tree album was written before the death of Nick Cave’s son, Arthur, in July 2015

Some lyrics were altered after Arthur’s death and came to feature stronger themes of loss, mortality, and personal grief. Like the stark black album cover, which seems to depict a state of mourning, one might naturally make that connection.

Cave himself has remarked that people found it hard to believe that most of the album predated the accident because the lyrics appeared almost prophetic. The lyrics of Skeleton Tree are often described as allegorical and, according to Cave, never directly address the death of Arthur.

One More Time with Feeling, a documentary film about the aftermath of Cave’s son’s death and the recording of Skeleton Tree, accompanied the album’s release. You can watch it in its entirety via the previous link.

Both the film and the album received widespread critical acclaim. Skeleton Tree became one of only two albums by the band to enter the U.S. Top 30, reaching No. 27, which remains their highest chart position there.

[Verse 1]
Sunday morning, skeleton tree
Well, nothing is for free
In the window, a candle
Well, maybe you can see
Fallen leaves thrown across the sky
A jittery TV
Glowing white like fire
Nothing is for free

[Chorus 1]
I call out, I call out
Right across the sea
But the echo comes back empty
And nothing is for free

[Verse 2]
Sunday morning, skeleton tree
Pressed against the sky
A jittery TV
Glowing white like fire

[Chorus 2]
I call out, I call out
Right across the sea
I call out, I call out
Nothing is for free

[Outro]
And it’s alright now
And it’s alright now
And it’s alright now

References:
1. Skeleton Tree – Wikipedia

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Watermark (1988) – Enya

Watermark is my joint favourite Enya song alongside A Day Without Rain. These two soft piano pieces are nearly indistinguishable, so much so that I often confuse one for the other. When I listened to Watermark this morning, I was certain I had already written about it. No, I hadn’t – I had written about A Day Without Rain.

This is where things get a little whacky, because in that article I wrote how I used that piece for a family DVD I created for my son’s third birthday (image inset). But after hearing the two songs side by side and reviewing the DVD, I can now confirm that I had in fact used Watermark and not A Day Without Rain.

I’m still baffled by how I made that error, but by golly they do sound remarkably similar. They are like sister songs, at least to my ears, and both are as adorable as each other. So, there you go – I had my ontological shock for the morning.

I know Enya is not everyone’s cup of tea because her “sound” has saturated the commercial landscape, but it’s typically those songs that aren’t so well known – mostly instrumental and musically simple – that draw me in.

The piano-driven instrumentals are about as elementary as Enya’s music gets, but call me ol’ sentimental, I think they are quite simply some of the most beautiful tunes I’ve ever heard. They feel homely and nurturing, yet spiritual and renewing, with an almost maternal warmth.


Most of the following is abridged from the Wikipedia below:

Watermark is the title track from Enya’s second album. It became an unexpected commercial success, which propelled Enya to worldwide fame. She recorded the album in ten months with her long-time collaborators: manager, producer and arranger Nicky Ryan and his wife, lyricist Roma Ryan. 

The album features music in different styles with elements of Celtic, ambient, and new-age music, though Enya believes her music does not belong in the latter genre.

Watermark (album) peaked at No. 5 on the UK Albums Chart and No. 25 on the US Billboard. It was certified quadruple Platinum. 4 singles were released from the album, remarkably didn’t include today’s featured song – Watermark.

Enya’s biggest hit was with Orinoco Flow which remains by far the most famous and which spent three weeks at No. 1 in the UK.

References:
1. Watermark (Enya album) – Wikipedia

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Waterloo (1974) – ABBA


Despite all the offshoots, including musicals and movies, that the Swedish pop group ABBA has produced, that spectacular harmony created by the two ladies, namely Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad, has never been matched. ABBA remains something of an enigma because their pure talent as singers and songwriters for producing pop hits was immense.

They were a true global sensation of the 1970s that caused a fervour and frenzied mania among both fans and the press that perhaps only the Bee Gees during their disco phase, particularly with the soundtrack album Saturday Night Fever, were able to rival.

I remember seeing an ABBA documentary where Benny and Björn described locking themselves away in a secluded cabin in the snow to work. It was much like what you might imagine a dedicated author doing while writing a book, and it was no easy task.

While their songs have saturated radio and other media, are instantly distinguishable, and might sound effortless, there is no doubting how finely crafted these pop songs are. Their composition is outstanding and would have taken enormous dedication to achieve, making the difficult look very easy.

Today’s featured song, Waterloo, launched ABBA onto the world stage and remains one of their most recognisable songs, alongside Dancing Queen.

The music of ABBA featured prominently in the much-underrated Australian movie Muriel’s Wedding, which I featured here on my Friday’s Finest segment back in 2021. The movie helped introduce the group to a younger generation. Waterloo is also performed in the movie, which I have included at the bottom of this post.


Wikipedia:

Waterloo
was their first single and title track from their second album, and also the first to be credited performing under the name ABBA. It also represented Sweden in the 19th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest held in Brighton, England, famously winning the contest. It topped the charts in several countries, reached the Top 10 in the United States.

The title and lyrics reference the 1815 Battle of Waterloo and use it as a metaphor. The music was composed by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus and the lyrics written by Stikkan Anderson. The song’s production style was influenced by Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound. Furthermore, ABBA had also originally cited the song See My Baby Jive, by English glam rock band Wizzard, as a major influence (it was produced in the same style and has a similar structure).

References:
1. Waterloo (song) – Wikipedia

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Waterfall (2004) – Reuben Morgan

Waterfall is a Christian worship song by Reuben Morgan. As a worship pastor, he sang and wrote for the Pentecostal megachurch Hillsong Church for many years. When I was a member of Mornington Baptist Church in the early 2000s, a small entourage from Hillsong, including Reuben as the principal guest, came to perform. My job was to operate the video setup and lyrics during their performance.

As part of the “team,” we got to spend time with Reuben and company over a meal. It was a real thrill for me to talk with him in person, since I was such a big admirer of his work.

His contributions on the live worship album For All You’ve Done at the Sydney Entertainment Centre were brilliant. I cannot begin too tell you how big that album was ….hitting the mainstream charts at No. 1. I had also recently bought his solo album World Through Your Eyes (image inset), which I was playing to death at the time.

Today’s featured song, Waterfall along with the title track, were my favourite songs from the record. The latter will feature here in the not-too-distant future due to the alphabetical order of listing.

World Through Your Eyes, debuted at No. 3 in the Australian Christian Charts. As of at least 2025, he is no longer involved with Hillsong, but along with fellow former Hillsong vocalist Ben Fielding, started a band called CXMMXNS.

Here I am dieing to say
I am desperate for your touch
I fall upon this desert ground and I am empty at your feet
Will you break me now
Will you take me in your grace

Take me deeper in love
Take me deeper with you
Where the streams of your mercy run
Feel your waves over me
Feel your power over me
In the roar of your waterfall

Wash away the hidden stains
Of my falleness I pray
I’ll tell the world
Of all you’ve done
Of your saving power in me

Saturate me now
Ever leave me in your grace

References:
1. Reuben Morgan – Wikipedia

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1/06/26 – 7/06/26 – Judas, Harper Lee, Shapiro on Springsteen

news on the march

Welcome to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world.

My last News on the March post was way back in March, so it’s nice to return to it again. I hope it becomes a more regular feature this year since I enjoy writing them, even though they can be a little time-consuming to put together – not unlike the Wednesday literature extract features. At least I’ve been more consistent with those lately.

Bob Dylan: How I found the man who shouted ‘Judas’
Article at the Independent

I recently came across this article on the Bob Dylan Expecting Rain website, which posts a daily stream of Dylan-related news and content. In fact, I’m humbled to say that articles from my own music blog have appeared there on occasion. Sometimes when I look at my statistics and find that a Dylan article has approached 1000 views in a single day, I’m almost certain that Expecting Rain played its part.

Many followers of rock ’n’ roll history will know of the famous ‘Judas!’ shout during Bob Dylan and the Band’s 1966 Manchester Free Trade Hall concert. It became far more than a heckle from the crowd. Symbolically, it captured one of those signpost moments in modern music history that represented not only Dylan’s transition from folk singer to rock star, but also the emergence of a new genre itself: folk-rock.

On that world tour Dylan famously went fully electric with the Band in the second half of the show, much to the disdain of many folk purists in the audience. Then someone shouted ‘Judas!’ towards the end of the concert in clear protest at the music on offer. Dylan retaliated by shouting back, “I don’t believe you… you’re a liar!” before turning to the Hawks and commanding them in no uncertain terms: “Play it f&cking loud!” They then launched into Like A Rolling Stone. You can listen to the interchange here.

Decades of speculation followed over who had actually yelled it. In 2005, broadcaster Andy Kershaw claimed in an article that the culprit was John Cordwell, after an earlier claim by a Canadian fan had largely been dismissed.

To give John Cordwell his due, he later defended his ‘Judas!’ outburst by saying:

I think most of all I was angry that Dylan… not that he’d played electric, but that he’d played electric with a really poor sound system. It was not like it is on the record [the official album]. It was a wall of mush. That, and it seemed like a cavalier performance, a throwaway performance compared with the intensity of the acoustic set earlier on. There were rumblings all around me and the people I was with were making noises and looking at each other. It was a build-up.

It is difficult to know exactly what is true even after all these years. At the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, where Dylan first went electric in such a public way, there was a similarly feverish backlash. Some insist the anger was largely due to the poor sound quality rather than the electric music itself. Pete Seeger, according to legend at least, was so frustrated that he supposedly threatened to cut the cables with an axe.

So was the hostility really about the sound, or was it more deeply tied to Dylan’s dramatic break away from the folk purist movement that had embraced him? Perhaps it was both. Whatever the case, that cry of ‘Judas!’ still echoes through rock history as the sound of an audience witnessing one of music’s great transformations in real time.

Harper Lee’s mysterious and reclusive story | Full Documentary | American Masters | PBS
Documentary at American Masters

Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird was mandatory reading for us in secondary school. Along with the poetry of Robert Frost, the book made the biggest impression on me of all the literature we studied in English classes.

I suspect I wasn’t the only teen who held it in such high esteem, since the book was, I imagine, integrated into many school programs not only in Australia, but internationally. It is, of course, one of the great American novels.

The movie of the same title adapted from the book, starring Gregory Peck, was also shown to us. It sits at No. 4 on my list of 100 favourite movies. Not to take anything away from the legendary book, there exist few movie adaptations which rival their respective books, but for me this movie was one of them.

Decades later I saw the biographical movie Capote about Truman Capote’s research for In Cold Blood. In Cold Blood is renowned as one of, if not the greatest, works of literary journalism ever realized. The movie shows Lee accompanying Capote to Kansas in 1959 to help research the Clutter family murders that became the basis for In Cold Blood. Many scholars believe her interviewing skills and observations were crucial to the project.

I had also read elsewhere that Capote may have assisted Lee in the writing of her masterpiece. You see, they were both childhood friends in Alabama, and it appears almost certain that Capote read drafts of To Kill a Mockingbird and offered feedback and editorial suggestions. So the assistance flowed both ways.

What I found so interesting about the Harper Lee documentary is how it explores the context and history of the novel’s Deep South setting, along with the social changes inspired by both the book and the feature film after their release. The documentary also explores Go Set a Watchman, Lee’s controversial later-published novel. I hope you enjoy it.

Why Bruce Springsteen (and All Liberals) Are Total Frauds
Video presentation by Ben Shapiro

When this video appeared in my YT feed showing Ben Shapiro and Bruce Springsteen in the same image, I clicked on it faster than you could say, “Facts don’t care about your feelings.”

Ben Shapiro lets rip into Bruce Springsteen after Bruce’s recent blast at the Trump Administration during his Boston show. I know people who have been turned off Bruce’s music altogether because of his forceful political rhetoric as a staunch lifelong Democrat and his consistent endorsement of Democratic presidential candidates since 2004.

There are also Democrat-leaning supporters here too, so I’m going to be careful what I write because people can get pretty touchy when it comes to politics. What do they say for civil purposes in social settings? Avoid the subjects of “sex, politics and religion” – all the juicy stuff.

What I’m instead going to do is have a lend of both Shapiro and Springsteen in my assessment of their recent vitriol. First and foremost, almost nothing Bruce says politically will dim my adoration of his music and its impact on me since I was a kid. It’s a free country and he can say what he likes.

While I personally don’t share Bruce’s political views, I still love the guy’s music. Do I wish he kept his political views to himself? I sure do! He’s a singer-songwriter, and an amazing one at that, but I don’t believe he should step into this stuff during one of his shows – with a teleprompter no less. Give me a break, man.

I think if Bruce wants to demonstrate politically and unleash his opinions, he could instead do so outside the realm of his musical artistry – like on a blog or Instagram. Go for it Bruce, “whatever”, as Mark Knopfler sang here Friday.

Now over to Shapiro. He is a political and news commentator, and in my opinion he is very good at what he does, much like Bruce is with music. So he can rebuke all he wants Bruce’s sledge at Trump, and what have you with his usual astute counter punches of the content of the message. That’s all well and good.

But sometimes Shapiro is too smart for his own good, where he overextends himself by doing exactly what Bruce did at the Boston show. He starts ripping into Springsteen as a has-been and one of the most overrated contemporary music artists. Hey Ben, I thought you were better than this? Talk about the pot calling the kettle black. This is insane!

That’s all for now – until next time. Thanks, as always, for reading.

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Watching The Wheels (1981) – John Lennon

I remember years ago watching Catholic Bishop Robert Barron discussing the old medieval metaphor called the Wheel of Fortune, which is occasionally seen in medieval churches and cathedrals. It was derived from the Roman goddess Fortuna.

At the top is a king, at the bottom a pauper, on one side a king who has lost his crown, and on the other a man climbing a ladder. It symbolizes the unpredictable rise and fall of human fate. According to the Christian interpretation, Christ is at the centre of the wheel – pure love.

The Christians say where you should live is at the centre of the wheel, where Christ is. The secular interpretation like the Christian one might be finding a form of ‘indifference’ and detaching oneself from the rim of the wheel – detached from success, failure, more success or less success.

The Bishop mentioned how today’s featured song Watching the Wheels refers to the Wheel of Fortune. Lennon’s song, he said, is straight out of the medieval mystics. John Lennon acknowledged he had ridden this wheel like crazy, but near the end of his life he found a certain indifference to it, along with relief and a sense of bemusement through detachment.

No longer ridin’ on the merry-go-round
I just had to let it go

The song appears on Lennon’s posthumous compilation The John Lennon Collection shown inset. I don’t know how many times I put the needle down on this record as a kid, but it was a lot. We had one of those old wooden turntables which looked like a dresser, and I remember sitting in front of the fireplace listening to it.

My memories are thick with Watching the Wheels and his other big songs from his final record Double Fantasy including [Just Like] Starting Over, Woman and Beautiful Boy. In fact, Watching the Wheels was the third single released from Double Fantasy, after (Just Like) Starting Over and Woman.

Lennon addresses those who were confounded by his “househusband” years from 1975 to 1980, during which he stepped away from the music industry to concentrate on raising his son Sean with Yoko Ono.

“I hadn’t stopped from ’62 till ’73 – on demand, on schedule, continuously. Walking away was hard…”

For someone who had been globally famous since his early twenties, stopping meant confronting a frightening question: Who am I if the world stops watching?

The single was released posthumously in 1981 after Lennon’s murder. It reached No. 10 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and No. 30 in the UK.

[Verse 1]
People say I’m crazy
Doin’ what I’m doin’
Well, they give me all kinds of warnings
To save me from ruin
When I say that I’m okay
Well, they look at me kinda strange
“Surely you’re not happy now?
You no longer play the game”

[Verse 2]
People say I’m lazy
Dreamin’ my life away
Well, they give me all kinds of advice
Designed to enlighten me
When I tell ’em that I’m doin’ fine
Watchin’ shadows on the wall
“Don’t you miss the big time, boy?
You’re no longer on the ball”

[Chorus]
I’m just sittin’ here watchin’ the wheels go ’round and ’round
I really love to watch them roll
No longer ridin’ on the merry-go-round
I just had to let it go

[Verse 3]
Ah, people askin’ questions
Lost in confusion
Well, I tell them there’s no problem
Only solutions
Well, they shake their heads and they look at me
As if I’ve lost my mind
I tell them, “There’s no hurry
I’m just sittin’ here doing time”

References:
1. Watching the Wheels – Wikipedia

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Watching The River Flow (1971) – Bob Dylan

This little bluesy rocker from Dylan certainly kicks the day into gear with its toe-tap-inducing rhythm, screeching guitar and saloon bar piano. And wouldn’t you know it? This was recorded in 1971 at Blue Rock Studio in New York City.

It seems like Dylan is having a rollicking good time on this one too. I recently wrote about how the likes of Bob Dylan and John Lennon tried to emulate pioneering artists such as Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and Jerry Lee Lewis. Well, this is one of Dylan’s many forays into that style.

I love the laid-back writing in this one too, and what’s astounding is that producer Leon Russell recalled that when developing the song, the basic track was formed and Dylan then wrote the lyrics in several minutes.

It makes me recall that conversation when Dylan and Leonard Cohen were sitting in a cafe in Paris. Dylan asks him, ‘How long did it take you to write Hallelujah?’ Cohen responds, ‘Oh you know, a couple of years.’ Cohen then returned the favour and asked, ‘How long did it take you to write Just Like a Woman?’ and Dylan said, ‘Fifteen minutes.’

In Watching The River Flow, Dylan finds himself at dawn in an all-night cafe. He’s out in the middle of nowhere, watching trucks roll by until he sits down on a bank and watches the river flow. He misses the city and wishes he had wings and could fly, but for now he’ll just have to be content and watch the river flow.

Dylan is pretty chill here, like the river flowing by. It represents, both artistically and privately, his more relaxed nature after settling down with Sara and having kids. He doesn’t want to get caught up in petty disagreements or changing the world anytime. It’s interesting that he’s growing fond of just sitting there watching the river flow while all this stuff is swirling around in his brain.

For someone who initially wanted to leave the river and get back to the city quick smart, he gradually finds after some contemplation that the river is bringing a state of serenity and calm. For those of us who live in the hustle and bustle of the city, I think every now and again we need to reunite with Mother Nature.


Wikipedia:

Dylan in March 1971 asked Leon Russell, who made his name with Joe Cocker, to assist in finding a new sound after a period of immersion in country rock music. Watching the River Flow was recorded with Dylan singing live with the band. The next day he recorded When I Paint My Masterpiece.

Four and a half months after the recording session, Russell backed Dylan on bass at the Concert for Bangladesh, organized by George Harrison. Then in November 1971, Russell accompanied Dylan into a studio again to record Dylan’s next single, George Jackson

Watching the River Flow has been interpreted as Dylan’s wish to deliver less politically engaged material and to find a new balance between public and private life.

The journalist Bob Spitz has likened it to Dylan’s Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat.

[Verse 1]
What’s the matter with me
I don’t have much to say
Daylight sneaking through the window
And I’m still in this all-night café
Walking to and fro beneath the moon
Out to where the trucks are rolling slow
To sit down on this bank of sand
And watch the river flow

[Verse 2]
Wish I was back in the city
Instead of this old bank of sand
With the sun beating down over the chimney tops
And the one I love so close at hand
If I had wings and I could fly
I know where I would go
But right now I’ll just sit here so contentedly
And watch the river flow

[Chorus]
People disagreeing on all just about everything, yeah
Makes you stop and all wonder why
Why only yesterday I saw somebody on the street
Who just couldn’t help but cry
Oh, this old river keeps on rolling, though
No matter what gets in the way and which way the wind does blow
And as long as it does I’ll just sit here
And watch the river flow

[Outro]
Watch the river flow
Watching the river flow
Watching the river flow
But I’ll sit down on this bank of sand
And watch the river flow

References:
1. Watching the River Flow – Wikipedia

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