Weeping in the Forest (1993) – Archie Roach

Wikipedia:

Jamu Dreaming is the second studio album by Australian singer song writer Archie Roach. The album was released in March 1993 and peaked at number 55 on the ARIA Charts. The album was recorded with musical assistance from David Bridie, Tiddas, Paul Kelly, Vika and Linda Bull, Ruby Hunter, Dave Arden and Joe Geia.

Jamu is the Pitjanjatjara word for grandfather or old one. 


One, two,three, four

Uncle Benjo called me
Before the children went a while
Life was good Life was free
Not like it yesterday

Children running everywhere,
and the tree were looking after Little spirits dancing there
Among the sweet sweet laughter

Oh but there’s weeping in the forest
Now that the children have gone
And the trees at night get no rest
They were there when the children were born

Hmm hmm hmm
Uncle let me fly, away with you
Let me see thing you see
The children laugh, the children do
As they play among the tree

Oh but there’s weeping in the forest
Now that the children have gone
And the trees at night get no rest
They were there when the children were born

Hmm hmm hmm Hmm hmm hmm

References:
1. Jamu Dreaming – Wikipedia

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Wedding Song (1974) – Bob Dylan

[Verse 1]
I love you more than ever, more than time and more than love
I love you more than money and more than the stars above
Love you more than madness, more than dreams upon the sea
Love you more than life itself, you mean that much to me

[Verse 2]
Ever since you walked right in, the circle’s been complete
I’ve said goodbye to haunted rooms and faces in the street
To the courtyard of the jester which is hidden from the sun
I love you more than ever and I haven’t yet begun

[Verse 3]
You breathed on me and made my life a richer one to live
When I was deep in poverty you taught me how to give
Dried the tears up from my dreams and pulled me from the hole
I love you more than ever and it burns me to the soul

[Verse 4]
You gave me babies one, two, three, what is more, you saved my life
Eye for eye and tooth for tooth, your love cuts like a knife
My thoughts of you don’t ever rest, they’d kill me if I lie
I’d sacrifice the world for you and watch my senses die

[Verse 5]
The tune that is yours and mine to play upon this earth
We’ll play it out the best we know, whatever it is worth
What’s lost is lost, we can’t regain what went down in the flood
But happiness to me is you and I love you more than blood

[Verse 6]
It’s never been my duty to remake the world at large
Nor is it my intention to sound a battle charge
’Cause I love you more than all of that with a love that doesn’t bend
And if there is eternity I’d love you there again

[Verse 7]
Oh, can’t you see that you were born to stand by my side
And I was born to be with you, you were born to be my bride
You’re the other half of what I am, you’re the missing piece
And I love you more than ever with that love that doesn’t cease

[Verse 8]
You turn the tide on me each day and teach my eyes to see
Just being’ next to you is a natural thing for me
And I could never let you go, no matter what goes on
‘Cause I love you more than ever now that the past is gone

References:
1. Dylan’s Wedding song: the meaning of the music and the words – Untold Dylan
2. DB’s Song of the Day (day 270): “WEDDING SONG” (1974) Bob Dylan – blogocentrism

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Open All Night (1982) – Bruce Springsteen

From Genius Lyrics:

The eighth track on Springsteen’s 1982 album ‘Nebraska’ ‘Open All Night’ is another song that takes on the American ideal of having the self attached to vehicle. A trend across the album and a lot of Springsteen’s career, cars were central to most of his character’s stories.

“Open All Night” can be seen as the positive flip-side to the earlier “Nebraska” track “State Trooper”: the two songs share a number of lyrics, but whereas the narrator of “State Trooper” is a desperate man on the verge of violence, the narrator of “Open All Night” is joyful and upbeat, happy to be off work and heading home to his baby.


From Wikipedia:

Of the 10 songs on Nebraska, “Open All Night” is the only one to feature an electric guitar. With a Chuck Berry-style guitar riff, the song tells the story of an unnamed narrator’s all-night drive across industrial New Jersey to reach his girl, Wanda, whom he met when she was a waitress at the Route 60 Bob’s Big Boy.

Though never released as a single in the United States, it garnered enough album oriented rock airplay to reach No.22on the U.S. Billboard.

[Verse 1]
Well, I had the carburetor, baby, cleaned and checked
With her line blown out, she’s hummin’ like a turbojet
Propped her up in the backyard on concrete blocks
For a new clutch plate and a new set of shocks
Took her down to the carwash, checked the plugs and points
Well, I’m goin’ out tonight, I’m gonna rock that joint

[Verse 2]
Early, North Jersey industrial skyline
I’m a all-set Cobra Jet, creepin’ through the nighttime
Gotta find a gas station, gotta find a payphone
This turnpike sure is spooky at night when you’re all alone
Gotta hit the gas, baby, I’m runnin’ late
This New Jersey in the mornin’ like a lunar landscape

[Verse 3]
Now, the boss don’t dig me, so he put me on the nightshift
Takes me two hours to get back to where my baby lives
In the wee, wee hours, your mind gets hazy
Radio relay towers, won’t you lead me to my baby?
Underneath the overpass, trooper hits his party light switch
Goodnight, good luck, one-two, powershift

[Verse 4]
I met Wanda when she was employed
Behind the counter at the Route 60 Bob’s Big Boy
Fried chicken on the front seat, she’s sittin’ in my lap
We’re wipin’ our fingers on a Texaco roadmap
I remember Wanda up on Scrap Metal Hill
With them big brown eyes that make your heart stand still

Wooh-ooh… woo!
Ah!
(Oh, now…! Crazy…!)

Hey!

[Verse 5]
Well, 5 a.m., oil pressure’s sinkin’ fast
I make a pit stop – wipe the windshield, check the gas
Gotta call my baby on the telephone
Let her know that her daddy’s comin’ on home
“Sit tight, little mama, I’m-a comin’ ’round
I got-a three more hours, but I’m coverin’ ground”

[Verse 6]
Your eyes get itchy in the wee, wee hours
Sun’s just a red ball risin’ over them refinery towers
Radio’s jammed up with Gospel stations
Lost souls callin’ long distance salvation
Hey Mr. DJ, won’t you hear my last prayer?
Hey ho, rock ‘n’ roll, deliver me from nowhere

[scatting ’til end]

References:
1. Open All Night (song) – Wikipedia
2. Open All Night – Genius Lyrics

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We Can Work it Out (1965) -The Beatles

[Verse 1]
Try to see it my way
Do I have to keep on talking till I can’t go on?
While you see it your way
Run the risk of knowing that our love may soon be gone

[Refrain]
We can work it out
We can work it out

[Verse 2]
Think of what you’re saying
You can get it wrong and still you think that it’s alright
Think of what I’m saying
We can work it out and get it straight or say good night

[Refrain]
We can work it out
We can work it out

[Bridge]
Life is very short, and there’s no time
For fussing and fighting my friend
I have always thought, that it’s a crime
So I will ask you once again

[Verse 3]
Try to see it my way
Only time will tell if I am right or I am wrong
While you see it your way
There’s a chance that we might fall apart before too long

[Refrain]
We can work it out
We can work it out

[Bridge]
Life is very short, and there’s no time
For fussing and fighting my friend
I have always thought, that it’s a crime
So I will ask you once again

[Verse 3]
Try to see it my way
Only time will tell if I am right or I am wrong
While you see it your way
There’s a chance that we might fall apart before too long

[Refrain]
We can work it out
We can work it out

References:
1. We Can Work It Out – The Beatles

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Treaty (2016) – Leonard Cohen

By the time this music library is complete, almost all of the songs on Leonard Cohen’s last record, You Want It Darker, will have featured here. That goes to tell you what I think of this record. It was recorded in his house in Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles, and released just 17 days before his death. Due to Leonard Cohen’s mobility issues, the album was largely recorded in the living room and then sent by e-mail to his musical collaborators.

Just when people, including yours truly, after much anticipation of its release, were starting to listen to and absorb his latest spiritual reckoning of a record, the news came through of Leonard’s passing. It really upset me and still does. I didn’t want to fathom a world without Leonard Cohen in it. When you listen to him still, with his voice almost whispering in your ears, he feels ever-present and as current and real as any singer can sound. I also don’t think there is another album where he focuses so heavily on his own spirituality, death and God.

It’s difficult not to see this second song from the record as an accompaniment piece to the title track and opening song, You Want It Darker. Come to think of it, every song feels interconnected and part of one body of work. The references to the Bible, love and war in these first two songs are profuse.

In both, Leonard seems resigned to his inability to become a person who is reconciled with ‘the message’ and at peace with it or himself. Cohen spent his whole career circling Jewish scripture, Christianity, Buddhism and human desire without ever claiming to possess certainty. He isn’t trying to resolve spiritual tension; he inhabits it:

I’m angry and I’m tired all the time
I wish there was a treaty, I wish there was a treaty
Between your love and mine


But here’s the irony. Leonard appears at peace with the existence of contradiction, and it is that acknowledgement which gives him some measure of peace as he approaches his own departure from this great ‘play’ we call life. He isn’t happily accepting division; rather, he seems to realise the treaty probably won’t come.

I’m so sorry for that ghost I made you be
Only one of us was real and that was me

The “ghost” is the imagined beloved. That realisation in itself is profound, and there’s so much humility and openness in it. You could call it a profound spiritual epiphany that refuses easy religious answers. He’s accepting responsibility for much of the relationship’s failure. And the more you hear and take in, the more cans of worms Treaty opens.

One also gets a sense of just how uniquely qualified the individual is in interpreting the scriptures and the events of history and adopting them for themselves. Treaty may not be in concordance with your own beliefs and ideas, but that’s the whole point. It demonstrates how every individual ultimately has to wrestle with scripture and history for themselves.

[Verse 1]
I’ve seen you change the water into wine
I’ve seen you change it back to water, too
I sit at your table every night
I try but I just don’t get high with you

[Verse 2]
I wish there was a treaty we could sign
I do not care who takes this bloody hill
I’m angry and I’m tired all the time
I wish there was a treaty, I wish there was a treaty
Between your love and mine

[Chorus]
Ah, they’re dancing in the street – it’s Jubilee
We sold ourselves for love but now we’re free
I’m so sorry for that ghost I made you be
Only one of us was real and that was me

[Verse 3]
I haven’t said a word since you been gone
That any liar couldn’t say as well
I just can’t believe the static coming on
You were my ground, my safe and sound
You were my aerial

[Chorus]

[Verse 4]
I heard the snake was baffled by his sin
He shed his scales to find the snake within
But born again is born without a skin
The poison enters into everything

[Verse 5]
And I wish there was a treaty we could sign
I do not care who takes this bloody hill
I’m angry and I’m tired all the time
I wish there was a treaty, I wish there was a treaty
Between your love and mine


References:
1. You Want It Darker – Wikipedia

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We Didn’t Start the Fire (1989) – Billy Joel

We Didn’t Start the Fire is a song which spiels off historical figures and events (with a heavy North American slant) from the mid to late 20th century. The meaning and suggestion of the title reminded me of comments by historian Dominic Sandbrook in a recent Triggernometry podcast. When he was asked if he was worried about the current state of the world, he replied, “Why worry?” If history teaches us anything, it is that terrible and unpredictable events occur all the time, often without warning.

If you asked an average German in 1911 to speculate about Germany’s future, they might have been optimistic given the country’s prosperous position. The terror, complete upheaval and eventual defeat Germany experienced through World War I and World War II would have seemed unimaginable. Things can change with dizzying speed.

We also now have a highly sanitised, self-deluding and idealistic view of human nature. Many – like the moral exhibitionists and virtue signalists they are – sit in judgement of historical figures, acting like hanging judges over people who lived in an entirely different age with different moral and political frameworks, worldviews and customs. Think again sunshine. Judging the past by today’s standards is easy; understanding it is much harder.

So, with that hindsight, why worry about what is beyond your control and impossible to predict? We also like to think the age we live in is unique, and that whatever happens in it is something uniquely our own that we somehow began. No, we didn’t start the fire, as Billy Joel sings:

It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning.

And this is the big revealer:

But when we are gone
It will still burn on, and on.

That is what history has taught us.

We Didn’t Start the Fire is my desert island Billy Joel song. Songs like Piano Man and Just the Way You Are haven’t aged as well to my ears in comparison with We Didn’t Start the Fire, which I still love rattling off word for word whenever it comes on. When “Dylan, Berlin” is recited, it makes the hairs on my arms stand up.

I mean, the song isn’t exactly a work of genius, since the words could have been taken from any encyclopaedia or history essay. It panders to Baby Boomers and Generation X by focusing on the history they lived through, but that’s fair enough because it makes the song relatable and something they can reflect on from a personal perspective. Even critic Steven Ettinger said, “What was truly alarming was the realization that we, the listeners, for the most part understood the references.”

The real punch, as alluded to above, is the chorus. It gives everyone a moment to pause and put history into perspective, in keeping with the arguments I described earlier.

Joel fans may have a completely different perspective and still hold his classic output in the highest esteem while playing down his late-’80s material. That’s perfectly fine, because opinions on music can vary enormously. I’ll give you one example of that, which is a story I love to recall from my secondary school days that I’ve told before – my apologies to those who’ve already read it.

I saw Billy Joel’s Storm Front tour in 1991 (which included We Didn’t Start the Fire) in Sydney with my schoolmate Gary, who also happens to be the artist behind the caricature of my family featured in the ‘Reflection‘ menu. Gary was an enormous Billy Joel fan. We’d go back and forth over music – he was all about Billy, while I leaned more toward Elton John.

I still remember when Elton’s Kiss the Bride came out. Gary would badger me by singing, “I want to kiss the bridegroom!” instead of “I wanna kiss the bride, yeah!” A clever jab, much like his caricature. So yes, I went to the concert mostly to humour Gary, though I did (and still do) have a soft spot for some of Joel’s music, especially today’s featured track.

As mentioned, We Didn’t Start the Fire is my favourite. I’m also very fond of history and politics, as they were my major at university, and they remain subjects I love reading and learning about. Despite Joel’s own disdain for the song – calling it “terrible, like a dentist drill” and “a terrible piece of music” – it became one of his signature songs. It has also been criticised by many later music critics as one of the weaker songs in his catalogue.


Snippets from Wikipedia:

(We Didn’t Start the Fire) – A list song, its fast-paced lyrics include a series of brief references to 119 significant political, cultural, scientific, and sporting events between 1949 (the year of Joel’s birth) and 1989, in mainly chronological order.

(We Didn’t Start the Fire) – Joel’s third single to reach number one in the United States BillboardStorm Front became Joel’s third album to reach number one in the US.

Joel conceived the idea for the song when he had just turned 40. He was in a recording studio and met a 21-year-old friend of Sean Lennon who said “It’s a terrible time to be 21!” Joel replied: “Yeah, I remember when I was 21 – I thought it was an awful time and we had Vietnam, and y’know, drug problems, and civil rights problems and everything seemed to be awful.” The friend replied: “Yeah, yeah, yeah, but it’s different for you. You were a kid in the fifties and everybody knows that nothing happened in the fifties.” Joel retorted: “Wait a minute, didn’t you hear of the Korean War or the Suez Canal Crisis?” Joel later said those headlines formed the basic framework for the song.

[Verse 1]
Harry Truman, Doris Day
Red China, Johnnie Ray
South Pacific
Walter Winchell, Joe DiMaggio
Joe McCarthy, Richard Nixon
Studebaker, television
North Korea, South Korea
Marilyn Monroe

[Verse 2]
Rosenbergs, H-Bomb
Sugar Ray, Panmunjom
Brando, The King and I
And The Catcher in the Rye
Eisenhower, vaccine
England’s got a new queen
Marciano, Liberace
Santayana goodbye

[Chorus]
We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning
We didn’t start the fire
No, we didn’t light it
But we tried to fight it

[Verse 3]
Joseph Stalin, Malenkov
Nasser and Prokofiev
Rockefeller, Campanella
Communist Bloc
Roy Cohn, Juan Peron
Toscanini, Dacron
Dien Bien Phu Falls, “Rock Around the Clock”
Einstein, James Dean
Brooklyn’s got a winning team
Davy Crockett, Peter Pan
Elvis Presley, Disneyland
Bardot, Budapest, Alabama, Khrushchev
Princess Grace, Peyton Place
Trouble in the Suez

[Chorus]

[Verse 4]
Little Rock, Pasternak
Mickey Mantle, Kerouac
Sputnik, Zhou En-lai
Bridge On The River Kwai
Lebanon, Charles de Gaulle
California baseball
Starkweather Homicide
Children of Thalidomide
Buddy Holly, Ben-Hur
Space Monkey, Mafia
Hula Hoops, Castro
Edsel is a no-go
U-2, Syngman Rhee
Payola and Kennedy
Chubby Checker, Psycho
Belgians in the Congo

[Chorus]

[Verse 5]
Hemingway, Eichmann
Stranger in a Strange Land
Dylan, Berlin
Bay of Pigs invasion
Lawrence of Arabia
British Beatlemania
Ole Miss, John Glenn
Liston beats Patterson
Pope Paul, Malcolm X
British politician sex
J.F.K. blown away
What else do I have to say?

[Chorus]

[Verse 6]
Birth control, Ho Chi Minh
Richard Nixon back again
Moonshot, Woodstock
Watergate, punk rock
Begin, Reagan, Palestine
Terror on the airline
Ayatollahs in Iran
Russians in Afghanistan
Wheel of Fortune, Sally Ride
Heavy metal suicide
Foreign debts, homeless vets
AIDS, crack, Bernie Goetz
Hypodermics on the shores
China’s under martial law
Rock and Roller cola wars
I can’t take it anymore

[Chorus]

We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning
We didn’t start the fire
But when we are gone
It will still burn on, and on
And on, and on

[Outro]
We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning
We didn’t start the fire
No, we didn’t light it
But we tried to fight it
We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning
We didn’t start the fire
No, we didn’t light it
But we tried to fight it
We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning
We didn’t start the fire
No, we didn’t light it
But we tried to fight it
We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning

References:
1. We Didn’t Start the Fire – Wikipedia

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Tropic Morning News (2023) – The National

It became a song about having a hard time expressing yourself, and trying to connect with someone when the noise of the world is drowning out any potential for conversation.
– Matt Berninger

I like the manic and restless nature of this song. It expresses a whirlwind of confused emotions and, as the song progresses, it builds in intensity. His scrambled thoughts keep pace with the growing vigour of the music, becoming even more frenetic.

Matt Berninger had been struggling with severe depression, which resulted in writer’s block. Tropic Morning News became the turning point that allowed the band to continue work on their next record, First Two Pages of Frankenstein.

Guitarist and pianist Aaron Dessner recalled: “When Matt came in with that song in the depths of his depression, it felt like a turning point for us. It’s almost Dylan-esque in its lyrics and it’s so much fun to play; everything suddenly felt like it was coming alive again.”

You can sense his frustration throughout this song. I was so distracted then / I didn’t have it straight in my head, he sings in the chorus. It’s as though he’s half talking to himself and half to another person, someone he feels he has let down. The term “tropic morning news” was coined by Berninger’s wife, Carin Besser, to refer to the practice of doomscrolling; the information overload caused by incessant exposure to the world’s bad news.

Tropic Morning News has this alluring, poppy rhythm that keeps circling back, while slowly building as if something big is about to happen. Overall, I’d describe The National’s music as mood pieces. Tropic Morning News has a surprisingly cheerful beat, glossing over the rather sombre lyrics. I find it engaging and relatable. It’s like discovering an inner state of happy sorrow in their sound.

Their music takes you on a trip rather than just beating out a by-the-numbers ‘gotcha’ chorus. One analogy I could use is that it’s like floating in the sea, rising and falling with the waves, while the current gently carries you along. There’s no resolution, no final destination, or great epiphany. It just meanders, like his thoughts as they come to him.

I’ll be over here lying near the ocean
Making ocean sounds

The National’s music might not hit on the first listen, but there’s typically something cool in the song that entices you back for repeated listens, each one building on the last. I find that some of their music, at least the songs I’ve presented here, has a way of etching itself into your skin. Sometimes you simply want to feel more deeply, and it’s good music to hear now and then when you want to feel more reflective and a little less alone.


After the cancellation of The National’s touring as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the band members retreated from each other. Lead singer and lyricist Matt Berninger released the solo record and, worked on film scores and classical compositions. 

Work on a ninth National album was initially stalled while Berninger navigated “a very dark spot where I couldn’t come up with lyrics or melodies at all. Even though we’d always been anxious whenever we were working on a record, this was the first time it ever felt like maybe things really had come to an end.

Tropic Morning News was the lead single from the National’s 2023 album First Two Pages of Frankenstein. It included collaborations with Phoebe Bridgers, Sufjan Stevens, and Taylor Swift. Additionally, they embarked on a world tour in 2023, with opening acts including Soccer Mommy, The Beths, and Bartees Strange.

[Verse 1]
I wasn’t starting yet
I didn’t even think you were listening
I wasn’t ready at all
To say anything about anything interesting
It’s a thing you have
You just don’t know that you do it
You wait around in a conversation
While I get in and start stumbling through it

[Chorus]
I was so distracted then
I didn’t have it straight in my head
I didn’t have my face on yet or the role or the feel
Of where I was going with it all
I was suffering more than I let on
The tropic morning news was on
There’s nothing stopping me now
From saying all the painful parts out loud

[Verse 2]
Got to my feet
Feeling that I’d let you down
Wanted to say it slow and perfect
But it all somehow got switched around
Something went off on its own
My dumb, automatic chit-chat
It’s not what I meant to say at all
There’s no way you can attach me to that

[Chorus]
Got up to seize the day
With my head in my hands feeling strange
When all my thinking got mangled
And I caught myself talking myself off the ceiling
I was suffering more than I let on
The tropic morning news was on
There’s nothing stopping me now
From saying all the painful parts out loud

[Post-Chorus]
Oh, where are all the moments we’d have?
Oh, where’s the brain we shared?
Something somehow has you rapidly improving
Oh, what happened to the wavelength we were on?
Oh, where’s the gravity gone?
Something somehow has you rapidly improving

[Bridge]
You found the ache in my argument
You couldn’t wait to get out of it
You found the slush in my sentiment
You made it sound so intelligent
You can stop and start an athlete’s heart
How do I feel about it?
I would love to have nothing to do with it
I would like to move on and be through with it

[Verse 3]
I’ll be over here lying near the ocean
Making ocean sounds
Let me know if you can come over
And work the controls for a while

References:
1. The National – Tropic Morning News (When the Horn Blows)
2. First Two Pages of Frankenstein – Wikipedia

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Tú Estás Aquí (2004) – Jesús Adrián Romero (Ft. Marcela Gándara)

Tú Estás Aquí (Eng: You Are Here) is the second Christian worship song written by Mexican Christian singer-songwriter Jesús Adrián Romero to feature here in succession after Un Viaje Largo (Eng: A Long Trip). Both songs showcase my favourite Latin American voice, Marcela Gándara, – the former of her alone, but this time the two join forces on stage for this unforgettable performance.

Anyone who can share the stage with Marcela and hold their own must have something going for them, and Jesús Adrián Romero certainly does. The timbre of his voice is so richly textured – it’s intimate, reflective, rugged and masculine at the same time. Combine that with the depth of tone and character in Marcela’s voice, and it makes for a delectable melting pot of two greats of contemporary Latin Christian music.

To give you some idea of the impact and popularity of Tú Estás Aquí, at the time of writing this article the video below is approaching 900 million views. That seems extraordinary to me for a Christian song. I find it hard not to be swept away by it, and I can see why people love it so much.

Despite the melodic and lyrical repetitiveness of the song – as is common in many evangelical worship songs – it works because these songs are often presented as a form of meditation or prayer, encouraging listeners to reflect on their own spiritual relationship with God.

And despite considering myself more of an agnostic Judeo-Christian these days, I still hold dear The Logos, archetypes, meta-heroes and the spiritual truths of the Bible. It goes without saying that I’m still enamoured with this kind of music and the intensity of its message.


Tú Estás Aquí is from Jesús Adrián Romero’s fifth praise and worship album – Te daré lo mejor (Eng: I’ll give you my best), recorded live in the city of Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico. It was performed in an auditorium with more than 3,000 fans on November 20, 2004.

Aunque mis ojos / Though my eyes
No te puedan ver / Cannot see you
Te puedo sentir / I can feel you
Se que estas aqui
/ I know you are here

Aunque mis manos / Though my hands
No puedan tocar / Cannot touch
Tu rostro seсor / Your face, Lord
Se que estas aqui
/ I know you are here

[Chorus:]
Mi corazon puede sentir tu presencia / My heart can feel your presence
Tu estas aqui 2x / You are here 2x
Puedo sentir tu majestad / I can feel your majesty
Tu estas aqui 2x
/ You are here 2x

Mi corazon puede mirar tu hermosura / My heart can behold your beauty
Tu estas aqui 2x / You are here 2x
Puedo sentir tu gran amor / I can feel your great love
Tu estas aqui 2x
/ You are here 2x

References:
1. Te daré lo mejor – Wikipedia

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We Are All Made Of Stars (2002) – Moby

“On a basic quantum level, all the matter in the universe is essentially made up of stardust.”
– Moby

Like the picture above and the title suggest, We Are All Made Of Stars has this airy, space-like feel. Despite seeming simple, it deceptively goes pretty deep and becomes wonderfully atmospheric, just like many of Moby’s productions. It edges towards techno with a world music sensibility and a trance-like feel.

I like that loopy guitar in the chorus. It’s so groovy. My favourite part of the song is where it feeds back on itself and comes full circle at 2:35, staying like that for the rest of the song.

What Moby had to say below about why he chose We Are All Made Of Stars as the lead single from his album 18 is how I feel too whenever I hear it:

I chose this song because every time I listen to this song, it makes me smile. I made the song, I’ve heard it a million times, but every time the chorus comes, it makes me smile. 

The song reminds me a bit of David Bowie’s Heroes. Interesting too, since Moby has repeatedly acknowledged David Bowie as one of his greatest musical influences. You can’t help but hear Bowie’s influence here, along with a spacey vibe that also recalls his earlier Space Oddity era.

As you can imagine, there are remixes galore that lean even further into techno and dance music, with some listeners even citing them as superior to the original.


Wikipedia:

We Are All Made Of Stars reached number 11 on the UK Singles Chart and became a top-10 hit in several other European countries.

We Are All Made of Stars was written by Moby in New York after the September 11 attacks to express a sense of hopefulness. Moby has stated that the song was inspired by the song Flowers from the album Today by American alternative rock band Galaxie 500.

The song’s music video below points out the excesses of the typical “Hollywood” lifestyle, showing celebrities in seedy environments, while Moby, an outsider to that world, portrays a spaceman. 

Richard Melville Hall known professionally as Moby is considered by some to be among the most important dance music figures of the early 1990s, helping bring dance music to a mainstream audience both in the United States and the United Kingdom.

[Verse 1]
Growing in numbers
Growing in speed
Can’t fight the future
Can’t fight what I see

[Chorus]
People they come together
People they fall apart
No one can stop us now
‘Cause we are all made of stars

[Verse 2]
Efforts of lovers
Left in my mind
I sing in the reaches
We’ll see what we find

[Chorus]
People they come together
People they fall apart
No one can stop us now
‘Cause we are all made of stars
People they come together
People they fall apart
No one can stop us now
‘Cause we are all made of stars

[Breakdown]
Slow slow slow, come come
Someone come come come
Someone’s come come
Someone’s come
Even love is going round
You can’t ignore what is going ’round
You can’t ignore what is going ’round
You can’t ignore what is going ’round

[Verse 3]
Slowly rebuilding
I feel it in me
Growing in numbers
Growing in peace

References:
1. We Are All Made of Stars – Wikipedia

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It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry (1965) – Bob Dylan

You can see Dylan holding his sunnies there on the Highway 61 Revisited cover. I bet he didn’t find them broken like I did mine this morning when I took them out of their case. I didn’t dwell on it for long though. I put on this lazy, toe-tapping acoustic-electric blues number and that lifted me out of my little lull. I must go back to ‘Dollar City’ first thing tomorrow and buy me a new pair.

The jolly saloon piano sounds so good here, Mama. It merrily rolls the whole song along and has such a great vibe. How does he do it? The music itself feels like a train gently rolling down the tracks. It differs from some of the aggression in other songs Dylan wrote during this period. Speaking of which, on the same day he recorded It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry, he also recorded Positively 4th Street and Tombstone Blues.

The song closes with the sweetest wailing harmonica solo, providing a lovely counterpoint to the light-hearted feel of the rest of the music. Dylan’s cutesy voice here also adds so much to the whimsical nature of the song. It’s relaxed, lilting, and carries a conversational tone with a touch of world-weary resignation.

I always got a kick out of the title too. It’s like – wait, what?! Read that again. It’s a nice play on words with a bit to unpack, even in that sentence alone. I certainly can relate to “It takes a train to cry,” since that’s how it feels sometimes. It would also take a train not to enjoy this song. Such is its catchiness and wry, grinning delivery. It’s one of the coolest songs.


Snippets from Wikipedia:

(It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry) is one of three blues songs on the album (the others being “From a Buick 6” and “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues“.

It is made up of lines taken from older blues songs combined with Dylan’s own lyrics. The imagery is sexual, and the song can be interpreted as an allegory of someone who is sexually frustrated.

Musically, the song has a lazy tempo driven by lazy-slap drumming with a shuffling beat and slight emphasis on the offbeat from session drummer Bobby Gregg. There is also a barrelhouse piano part played by Paul Griffin, a raunchy bass part played by Harvey Brooks, an electric guitar part played by Mike Bloomfield and an unusual harmonica part.

An earlier version of the song went by the title “Phantom Engineer“. This version has a more upbeat tempo and four lines of different lyrics.

Steely Dan borrowed a line from the song as the title of their debut album Can’t Buy a Thrill (1972).

[Verse 1]
Well, I ride on a mail train, baby
Can’t buy a thrill
Well, I been up all night
Leanin’ on the windowsill
Well, if I die
On top of the hill
And if I don’t make it
You know my baby will

[Verse 2]
Don’t the moon look good, mama
Shining through the trees?
Don’t the brakeman look good, mama
Flaggin’ down the “Double E?”
Don’t the sun look good
Goin’ down over the sea?
But don’t my gal look fine
When she’s comin’ after me?

[Verse 3]
Now the wintertime is coming
The windows are filled with frost
I went to tell everybody
But I could not get across
Well, I want to be your lover, baby
I don’t want to be your boss
Don’t say I never warned you
When your train gets lost

References:
1. It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry – Wikipedia

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