Manchester by the Sea (2016) – Kenneth Lonergan (Friday’s Finest)

Anyone who has seen Manchester by the Sea will understand how gruelling it is to watch. I believe I saw it for the first time at the cinema. I love the stand – alone music in the movie but they introduced the music of Tomaso Albinoni’s – Adagio in G Minor showcased in Gallipoli for the harrowing scene in Manchester By the Sea which left me perturbed. Why did they need to revisit this music so strongly associated with the Australian cinematic masterpiece Gallipoli?
It threw me off despite my admiration for Manchester By the Sea. Since then, I have seen Manchester by the Sea a few more times on cable tv and my appreciation of it has only intensified, but not with that ‘1’ scene featuring the music of Adagio in G Minor.

IMDB Storyline:

Lee Chandler is a brooding, irritable loner who works as a handyman for a Boston apartment block. One damp winter day he gets a call summoning him to his hometown, north of the city. His brother’s heart has given out suddenly, and he’s been named guardian to his 16-year-old nephew. As if losing his only sibling and doubts about raising a teenager weren’t enough, his return to the past re-opens an unspeakable tragedy.

Manchester by the Sea is a 2016 American drama film written and directed by Kenneth Lonergan that stars Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams and a wonderful support cast. It revolves around the themes of depression, guilt, grief, responsibility, dysfunctional families, and post-traumatic stress disorder. So let’s just say, it’s no picnic. What it achieves is putting the viewer in the shoes of someone who has suffered an unspeakable tragedy, and it appears the fault lied with his neglect for his family while in a drunken stupor. There are two scenes for me in Manchester by the Sea which stand out above all in this:

The one where Lee Chandler is at the police station where he answers questions of the events of the night and the second is presented below with his former wife Randi Chandler played by Michelle Williams.

From Wikipedia:

Staying in Manchester is still painful for Lee, as he is surrounded by reminders of his past. One day, Lee runs into Randi with her newborn child. A sobbing Randi expresses remorse for her treatment of Lee during their divorce and asks him to have lunch. He deflects her apology, feeling that he does not deserve it. When she insists they reconnect and pleads with him not to “just die”, Lee is overwhelmed with emotion and has to leave before he breaks down.

There are two movies I love Michelle Williams in: This one and Brokeback Mountain. Casey Affleck won best actor for his role here.

References:
1. Manchester by the Sea – Wikipedia
2. Manchester by the Sea – IMDB

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Njósnavélin (The Nothing Song) (2002) – Sigur Rós

I came across ‘The Nothing Song‘ song some years ago when I watched the final scene in the movie Vanilla Sky.  Cameron Crowe, the director of Vanilla Sky has such a great taste in music as seen by the song selections in his movies. He wrote and directed a very underappreciated movie called Almost Famous which is semi-autobiographical as Crowe himself was a teenage writer for Rolling Stone.

Good on Cameron Crowe for selecting this little-known Icelandic music phenomenon – Sigur Rós to bring home his movie. The version used in the movie is from a never-released concert which took place in Denmark in 2000. The last 15 minutes of Vanilla Sky always moves me, mainly because of how effectively The Nothing Song captures the final lucid-dreaming epiphany of the protagonist.
This is music making at its finest. Njósnavélin (Nothing Song) sounds otherworldly and truly transcendental. It’s one of the most beautiful songs I’ve ever heard.

Essil on
Essil on erifet al
Essil on
Essil on eriftel al
Essil on

(I travelled through light)
(I travelled through light; I am not afraid)
(In this lake of souls)
(In this lake of souls, I lose all fear)

Sigur Rós (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈsɪːɣʏrous] (listen) is an Icelandic post-rock band that formed in 1994 in Reykjavík. It comprises lead vocalist and guitarist Jón Þór “Jónsi” Birgisson, bassist Georg Hólm and keyboardist Kjartan Sveinsson. Known for their ethereal sound, frontman Jónsi’s falsetto vocals, and their use of bowed guitar, Sigur Rós incorporate classical and minimal aesthetic elements. Jónsi’s vocals are sung in Icelandic and non-linguistic vocalisations the band terms Vonlenska. They have released eight studio albums, and attracted critical and commercial attention with their second album Ágætis byrjun.

References:
1. Sigur Rós – Wikipedia

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Ninety Miles an Hour (Down a Dead End Street) – Bob Dylan

Ninety Miles an Hour (Down a Dead End Street) is a song from Bob Dylan’s 25th studio album Down in the Groove in 1988. The album is one of Dylan’s most unfavourably received albums amongst critics and fans. It was Dylan’s second consecutive album (after Knocked Out Loaded) to receive almost unanimously negative reviews. Released during a period when his recording career was experiencing a slump, sales were disappointing. In 2007, even Rolling Stone labeled Down in the Groove as Bob Dylan’s worst album. Ouch.
I could think of a couple worse, but any-hows I like the following five songs from the record:

  • Let’s Stick Together
  • When Did You Leave Heaven?
  • Silvio
  • Ninety Miles an Hour (Down a Dead End Street)
  • Shenandoah

Ninety Miles an Hour (Down a Dead End Street) is the second song presented here from the album Down in the Groove after the previous entry Let’s Stick Together. The remaining three songs will be presented here when we get to them in the alphabetical listing.

Ninety Miles has fantastic lyrics. It was written by Don Robertson and Hal Blair, recorded by Hank Snow. In October 1963, it reached No. 2 on the country charts, and spent 22 weeks on the charts. Dylan’s gospel-oriented version of Ninety Miles couldn’t be more contrasting from the Hank Snow country version.

[Verse 1]
I took you home from a party and we kissed in fun
A few stolen kisses and no harm was done
Instead of stopping when we could we went right on
Till suddenly we found that the brakes were gone

[Verse 2]
You belong to someone else, and I do too
It’s just crazy bein’ here with you
As a bad motorcycle with the devil in the seat
Going ninety miles an hour down a dead end street
Ninety miles an hour down a dead end street

[Verse 3]
I didn’t want to want you, but now I have no choice
It’s too late to listen to that warning voice
All I hear is thunder of two hearts beat
Going ninety miles an hour down a dead end street
Ninety miles an hour down a dead end street

[Verse 4]
You’re not free to belong to me
And you know I could never be your own
Your lips on mine are like a sweet, sweet wine
But we’re heading for a wall of stone

The album features several guest appearances for the first time. Most prominent was the appearance of The Grateful Dead, who provided the album with one of its enduring tracks with the single Silvio.

References:
1. Ninety Miles and Hour (Down at a Dead End Street) – Wikipedia
2. Down in the Groove – Wikipedia

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1999 (1982) – Prince

The 80’s sound so many detest is here in all its glory. Can you imagine how good this might have sounded with crisper synth sounds, but I suppose music technology was still catching up. I’ll look for a live version with superior instrumental sound…. It didn’t happen but I found a cool 2011 version at the end of this post. Anyhow, It’s Newmannium! I do like the vocals a lot in this. 1999 is the title track from his 1982 album of the same name. Originally peaking at number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100, a mid-1983 re-release later reached number 12 in the US.

[Intro: Prince]
Don’t worry, I won’t hurt you
I only want you to have some fun

[Verse 1: Prince, Lisa, Dez, All]
I was dreamin’ when I wrote this
Forgive me if it goes astray
But when I woke up this morning
Could have sworn it was judgement day
The sky was all purple
There were people runnin’ everywhere
Tryin’ to run from the destruction
You know I didn’t even care

[Chorus: Prince and All]
‘Cause they say
2000, zero-zero, party over, oops, out of time
So tonight, I’m gonna party like it’s 1999

Prince shares lead vocals on the track with members of his band the Revolution, namely Dez Dickerson, Lisa Coleman and Jill Jones. Originally conceived to be a three-part harmony, it was later decided to separate out the voices that started each verse. Distinct scratching and explosion noises heard in the track were to cover mistakes during recording of a good take.

References:
1. 1999 (Prince song) – Wikipedia

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Nightminds (2004) – Missy Higgins

If there’s one thing, I took away from this song it is this:

But I will learn to breathe
This ugliness you see
So we can both be there
And we can both share the dark

That we don’t have to be alone and can fight it together and see the light at the end of night. It reminds me of Christina Perri’s The Lonely which is also so good!

The Sound of White is the debut studio album by Australian pop singer-songwriter Missy Higgins. It won the 2005 ARIA Music Award for Best Female Artist. Higgins released her first single from the album, Scar on 2 August 2004; it entered the ARIA Singles Chart at No. 1.

[Verse 1]
Just lay it all down
Put your face into my neck, and let it fall out
I know, I know, I know
I knew before you got home

This world you’re in now
It doesn’t have to be alone, I’ll get there somehow
‘Cos I know, I know, I know
When even springtime feels cold

[Chorus]
But I will learn to breathe
This ugliness you see
So we can both be there
And we can both share the dark

And in our honesty
Together we will rise
Out of our nightminds
And into the light at the end of the fight

Higgins learned to play classical piano from age six, but realised she wanted to be a singer at about 12. She found that piano practice helped her cope with living at boarding school. At 15, while attending Geelong Grammar’s Timbertop, she wrote “All for Believing” for a school music assignment, completing it just hours before the deadline. The assignment earned an A and she performed her song in front of classmates. She approached a Melbourne record company and was told that they wanted more than one song. She wrote more songs and in 2001, Missy’s sister Nicola entered “All for Believing” on her behalf in Unearthed, radio station Triple J’s competition for unsigned artists. The song won the competition and was added to the station’s play list. The rest as they say is history.

References:
1. The Sound of White – Wikipedia

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Next of Kin (2014) – Alvvays

I left my love in the river
The only one who sees
I lost his hand in the current
It was the life I wanted and I’d hoped for
And now I am left sifting through the leaves

I’m a big fan of Alvvays‘ self-titled debut album. This is the second track from the album after my last entry Archie, Marry Me. There isn’t a mediocre song on it. Also, I really like to watch / listen to that live performance they did on KEXP. They are no nonsense, no frills, chill-out band with great melodies and clean-cut guitar playing. Just watch their first track ‘Ones Who Love You‘ on KEXP and how the guitar sound is ramped up and organ synth added in the second verse. It’s fantastic. Their music has been described as ‘jangle – pop‘.

Their song Archie, Marry Me was included at No 98 in the Rolling Stones 100 greatest songs of this century (So far). But I like so many other songs from their record. Today’s Next of Kin is one such song.

Here, Molly Rankin sings of a lover drowning in a river. She told NME the lyrics stem from her isolated Nova Scotian upbringing. “I left a place that is surrounded by water, and now I sometimes look back on where I came from and think about all of that accessible water and space,” the singer explained. “There is still so much to be discovered. That element of wonder is still there.

Alvvays are a quintet formed from childhood friendship, Molly Rankin, Kerri MacLellan, Alec O’Hanley, Brian Murphy, and Phil MacIsaac from Toronto and Ontario, Canada.

From the article below:
Isn’t life and experience a litmus test for your hopes and dreams of permanent connections with those you love?  A simple jangly song and I have made it tough food which needs certain decisive chewing, in hopes of a satisfying digestion.

References:
1. Alvvays-Next of Kin – Immersed in Cool Music

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New York City Serenade (1973) – Bruce Springsteen

What grabbed me from the outset listening to New York City Serenade was the classical music resonance in the introduction piano solo which transforms into a jazz sound. It compares to the standout piano introduction also by Roy Bittan on Backstreets and paints such a ceremonious and rich scene from the beginning. It would have been hard for Bruce to sustain that throughout, but he did just that in both cases. As I wrote in the Incident on 57th Street article back in October last year: ‘From Bruce Springsteen’s 1973 record -The Wild the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle, I played the following 4 songs incessantly in my early adolescence‘:

4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)
Wild Billy’s Circus Story
Incident on 57th Street
New York City Serenade

These 4 songs enabled me to enjoy great story telling about topics and scenarios I wasn’t privy to, up until then. Not only did I appreciate the music, but I internalised the words because they transported me to another time and place.….There was a small band of us at school who cherished his music. We felt through his (The Boss) music we could sidestep some of those landmines in middle school. You see, he had already loved and lost. He was someone much older than us and had got out the other end and was telling us stories of what he had seen and learnt growing up.

Incident on 57th Street

Edited 5 January 2026: Joe Cool stated in his feedback on this article:
‘Think you’ll find it was David Sancious playing the killer piano. Roy Bittan wasn’t in the E Streeters on this album. Amazing, amazing song.
I like the line in Rosalita, “The record company, Rosie, just gave me a big advance”.
$750 million dollars worth from Sony, lol.​’

I consider New York City Serenade one of Bruce’s crowning achievements in his music career. It is befitting this song concludes the record. I think the moment where he sings at (3:40) is one of my favourite music moments in Bruce’s career:

So walk tall
Or baby, don’t walk at all

The rich texture of the instrumentals and his vocal input is sublime. The whole song at 10 minutes duration I believe is atmospherically and musically one of (if not) Bruce Springsteen best songwriting feats. It has everything this song.

The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle is Bruce Springsteen’s second studio album. It was well-received critically but had little commercial success at the time, nationally but locally sold well. There was very little press, no advertisements in the trade papers and no release party, possibly because of Springsteen’s deteriorating relationship with Columbia Records. Springsteen and the E Street Band played the album in its entirety for the first time during a concert at Madison Square Garden. In the 2020 updated version of Rolling Stone’s 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, the album was ranked at number 345.

[Verse 1]
Billy, he’s down by the railroad tracks
Sitting low in the back seat of his Cadillac
Diamond Jackie, she’s so intact
As she falls so softly beneath him
Jackie’s heels are stacked
Billy’s got cleats on his boots
Together they’re gonna boogaloo down Broadway
And come back home with the loot
It’s midnight in Manhattan, this is no time to get cute
It’s a mad dog’s promenade
So walk tall
Or baby, don’t walk at all

[Verse 2]
Fish lady, oh, fish lady, fish lady
She baits them tenement walls
She won’t take corner boys
They ain’t got no money
And they’re so easy
I said, “Hey, baby won’t you take my hand?
Walk with me down Broadway
Well mama, take my arm and move with me down Broadway,” yeah
I’m a young man, I talk real loud
Yeah babe, I walk real proud for you
Ah, so shake it away
So shake away your street life
Shake away your city life
Hook up to the train
And hook up to the night train
Hook it up
Hook up to the, hook up to the train


Reference:
1. The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle – Wikipedia

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Give Me Love (2014) – Christina Perri

Whatever season I’m in, if I’m going through (bad or good), that is what you will hear me singing about – I will never put on a facade or pretend to the world that my life is perfect…Since I was a child, I’ve always tried my best to be as authentically myself as possible; it’s like I don’t know any other way to be. 

As each day goes by… and if I feel a little stagnant and need a boost – it becomes ‘Perri hour‘. Now is that time. There are balladists then there is Christina Perri. This is the tenth song to appear here from Perri. I always feel grateful to present a song from her. I was just writing to a friend that Perri’s Time of Our Lives is about the best song I’ve ever heard and has just 34k views. I think that one is one of the best executed, written and constructed songs (produced) in all of music. I’m sure that won’t be known for decades. Sometimes, that’s how things go. There is no information about today’s song. As Perri said, “It’s not that I’ve recovered, it’s that I’m recovering…

When I first heard Give Me Love I didn’t like it much. But after more listens I like it little by little more. She is like a magician. The same thing happened with Perri’s A Thousand Years. I didn’t like it in the beginning and my daughter Katherine said she loved that song. So, I returned to it and now I’m in complete awe.

Give me love like her
‘Cause lately I’ve been waking up alone
Pain splattered teardrops on my shirt
Told you I’d let them go

And I’ll fight my corner
Maybe tonight I’ll call ya
After my blood turns into alcohol
No I just wanna hold ya

Give a little time to me, we’ll burn this out
We’ll play hide and seek, to turn this around
All I want is the taste that your lips allow

Some of the things I’ve experienced in my life could have made me very dark, and very closed off from the rest of the world...But I’ve made the decision to look towards the light and be a better version of myself, in spite of feeling massive amounts of pain.

Reference:
1. Christina Perri: “It’s not that I’ve recovered, it’s that I’m recovering…” -Celebex – mix

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Goodbye My Lover (2004) – James Blunt

There’s a neat song that Dylan did called ‘Don’t Fall Apart on Me Tonight‘ and I hope my readers won’t fall apart on me when they hear for perhaps the umpteenth time today’s track Goodbye My Lover by James Blunt. This is what a song sounds like when you write in Princess Leia’s bathroom. I could think of worse places to write a song. Anyway, James did exactly that writing this song (playing the piano) staying at actress Carrie Fisher’s house and it left the whole music world gobsmacked, well at least the sentimental ones. As we used to say back home: ‘Don’t Cry in your Weet-Bix‘.

[Verse 1]
Did I disappoint you or let you down?
Should I be feeling guilty or let the judges frown?
Cause I saw the end before we’d begun
Yes I saw you were blinded and I knew I had won
So I took what’s mine by eternal right
Took your soul out into the night
It may be over but it won’t stop there
I am here for you, if you’d only care
You touched my heart, you touched my soul
You changed my life and all my goals
And love is blind but that I knew when
My heart was blinded by yours
I’ve kissed your lips and held your hand
Shared your dreams and shared your bed
I know you well, I know your smell
I’ve been addicted to you

[Chorus]
Goodbye my lover
Goodbye my friend
You have been the one
You have been the one for me
Goodbye my lover
Goodbye my friend
You have been the one
You have been the one for me

While in Los Angeles, Blunt lodged with Carrie Fisher, whom he had met through the family of a former girlfriend. Fisher was very supportive of Blunt’s aspirations, and provided the use of a bathroom in her home that featured a piano for him to record “Goodbye My Lover”. Blunt later said, “Everyone sings in the shower and everyone in Los Angeles seems to have a piano in the bathroom.”

I can’t remember the last time I had a piano in my bathroom and that’s sad.

References:
1. Goodbye My Lover – Wikipedia

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New Pony (1978) – Bob Dylan

New Pony is from Bob Dylan’s 18th studio album Street – Legal. I wrote in the post Changing of the Guards – ‘if I had to choose just one album from Dylan to take with me on a Desert Island, it would be Street Legal‘. New Pony is provocative, bawdy and bluesy. When I first heard New Pony, none of that probably occurred to me. I imagine in my younger years I was wondering, ‘what the heck is this‘?
This apparent sensory misalignment is comparable with the whole record, if you haven’t truly let it sink in. To say, Street – Legal is ‘complex’ is an understatement. To get my mind and ‘ear’ tuned to it, required a lot of time, but once my senses adjusted, I found it a treasure box of contemporary music – the likes, I realise I’m doubtful to ever hear again in one package.

To gauge a sense of how deep down the rabbit hole a Dylan fan has gone; ask them what they think of Dylan’s Street-Legal. Their answer will tell you a lot!
Now onto New Pony‘s background and interpretations.

According to Wikipedia:

The song, which superficially concerns a pony called Lucifer who has broken a leg and needs to be put down, but has been interpreted as concerning Dylan’s relationship with his backing singer Helena Springs…. Dylan told Jonathan Cott in 1978 that “the Miss X in that song is Miss X, not ex-“….David Yaffee notes that the backing singers include both Dylans’s girlfriend at the time, Springs, and his future wife, Carolyn Dennis…

The song probably draws on Son House’s “Black Pony Blues”, also recorded by Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, and on Charley Patton’s track Pony Blues. “Black Pony Blues” includes the lyrics “he can foxtrot / He can lope and pace, lope and pace”, whilst Dylan’s song has “I got a new pony, she knows how to foxtrot, lope and pace”. House performed “Black Pony Blues” at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival, and Dylan may have seen the performance.

The following aligns with my interpretation of the song and it’s a fascinating read, but somewhat polemical in this day and age:

Stephen Scobie wrote that “The image of the woman as a horse needing to be tamed and broke, while undoubtedly problematic from any contemporary feminist view, is a traditional image, from a long line of blues songs”. Scobie suggested that the pony in the song appears in three different situations: “as victim, as aesthetic display and as the object of sexual desire”. The first of these is expressed in the opening verse about breaking a leg, the second in the verse about being able to foxtrot and lope, and thirdly when described in the lyrics as “bad and nasty”, after the song’s narrator has proclaimed that they want to “climb up one time on you”.

[Verse 1]
I had a pony, her name was Lucifer (How much longer? How much longer?)
I had a pony, her name was Lucifer (How much longer?)
She broke her leg and needed shooting
I swear it hurt me more than it coulda hurted her
(How much longer? How much longer?)

[Verse 2]
Sometimes I wonder what’s going on with Miss X (How much longer?)
Sometimes I wonder what’s going on with Miss X
(How much? How much? How much longer?)
She got such a sweet disposition
I never know what the poor girl’s gonna do to me next
(How much longer? How much longer?)

[Verse 3]
I got a new pony, she knows how to fox-trot, lope and pace
(How much longer?)
Well, I got a new pony, she knows how to fox-trot, lope and pace
(How much longer?)
She got great big hind legs
Long, black shaggy hair hangin’ in her face
(How much? How much? How much longer?)

Reference:
1. New Pony – Bob Dylan
2. Street-Legal (Album) – Wikipedia

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