It's time for a new blog, not much for writing, perhaps a few words accompanying a song I plan and will try to post everyday.

Thursday 16 May 2013

Day 69, last day with a song that doesn't leave me alone, even in The Great Gatsby



When I started this blog, I thought I would post a song everyday for a year. After a few weeks, I changed my mind and made a 100 days my target. Now I want to end it on 69. It's a beautiful number now that I look at it, so symmetrical, in Roman at least. If a link on the net leads you to the last page of this blog and you're in a good mood and everything is in order in life, you can see and enjoy that symmetry. If you were enhancing your physical aptitude in bed till late last night it reminds you of one of the exercises you joyfully performed. I have other interpretations of this number but would rather keep it to myself and let you imagine yours. The abrupt decision to stop this blog here, is a miniature version of one of the unpredictable outcomes of the decisions you plan in life. Besides, I, like many others, have a huge number of favorite special songs, so this blog from the beginning could go on forever but I slammed on the brakes here.

From the day that I started this blog, I was hesitating to post a song towards which I have the most mixed feelings; it opens a wound, it caresses it gently and when the voice of the singer soars, it squeezes my heart and throws it up in the air.

On the day the singer died, I was having dinner at a pub with a group of my friends in Toronto, on the 23rd of July, 2011. I remember the song was played after the news of her death was announced. I could eat with difficulty and while I was trying to be sociable and smile, some agonizing feeling harrowed my heart. The overdose is not uncommon among musicians. I just saw something more to it, pain, sadness, devastation, unrequited love, loneliness, too much goodness maybe, I don't know, maybe all, maybe some, maybe one, but she died.

I wrote this last night in bed:

They say there is no coincidence and everything that happens in this world has a reason. I'm wavering between quantum mechanics and the certainty of Einstein.

Tonight, when I saw him after almost 3 weeks, before which, I hadn't really seen him for almost 6 months, it was for a movie, like those first days that we met. This time it was "The Great Gatsby", the man who built a mansion but instead "lived on a boat that looked like a house and was moved secretly up and down the Long Island Shore."He threw glamorous parties for five years, in the hope that the love of his life, Daisy, would come to the party and he would get back his past love.

When a cover of "Back to Black" was played at a party scene, I just closed my eyes behind those 3D glasses I was given to watch the film without knowing why the heck it was made in 3D. Why that song again? Why in all the songs on Earth, they had chosen that song to cover while I was sitting beside him in the theatre? That same song which was played on our first night out to Brutopia and we both said, "I love this song" after hearing the first few beats. That cold night in the end of January when we went out into the patio to smoke and a guy came and started a conversation about Freud and Jung because he wanted to talk to us and to finally get a cigarette from him. After I didn't see him, as if I had to be reminded of what didn't happen and what happened that he disappeared into thin air, I am obliged to listen to this song when I enter a shopping mall, a pharmacy, or worse than that, a bar. It is as if the random number of the shuffle algorithm that points to this song is calculated by the invisible scanners at the entrance of the place I step into, the scanners that pass their piercing eyes over me to scrutinize my body and its measurements to match it with a profile of ME, the same girl; It's her, play the song; play it loud and make it last longer by repeating the chorus; play it and let Amy Winehouse cry; play it and paralyze her for four minutes and one seconds; play it while she's in the line and can't get away; play it when her shopping cart is half full, she has an appointment in half an hour and she can't leave the supermarket; play it when she's having a good time in a bar and make her speechless for two hundred and forty one seconds; just play it, she will never have enough; she will never be overdosed, unlike the singer of this song.

Tonight, he didn't come to my place for a drink; he was dating someone and was being considerate! What the heck did he think, that I wanted to sleep with him?! I told him this to make sure he didn't assume anything. He didn't know that the song was played in the film; he didn't know... he just didn't know... He described himself best when I once told him that I thought he was mature enough to understand that my expressing my feelings towards him didn't come from a teenager. He replied: "I'm not mature, just old." Yes, I said to myself that night, remembering this. He's not mature enough to know that what goes around, comes around; to know that this world is constantly balancing itself. If there is a valley, there is a mountain. If there is richness here, there is poverty there. If you feel shitty now, you will be in the peak of joy another time. No one can get away with this ever present balance system that has governed our world.
May one day he be treated the same way he treated me. I think that's the fairest way of falling from his peak to maintain the balance.


I need an overdose and everything will be fine when the bubble magically bursts.

1-F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby (1925; New York; Scribner, 1995), p. 9.



Wednesday 15 May 2013

Day 68: Matinee

Franz Ferdinand





I time every journey to bump into you,
 accidentally I charm you and tell you of the boys I hate
All the girls I hate, all the words I hate
All the clothes I hate, how I'll never be anything I hate



Tuesday 14 May 2013

Day 67: Down in the Mexico

The Coasters


Tarantino is doubtlessly one of those directors with epic music taste. There couldn't be a better song for this lap dance.


Monday 13 May 2013

Sunday 12 May 2013

Day 65: The Rose With a Broken Neck

Danger Mouse, Daniele Luppi



I discovered this band a few years ago through one of their collaborations with Norah Jones. It became my second favorite album of 2011, after King Creosote and Jon Hopkins collaboration.

"Lonely I see
Lonely I need
Lonely I feel
Lonely I bleed
Lonely I trust
And lonely I must
Be the rose with the broken neck"

 

Friday 10 May 2013

Day 64: A Lady of Certain Age

The Divine Comedy


You had to marry someone very very rich
So that you might be kept in the style to which
You had all of your life been accustomed to
But that the socialists had taxed away from you

 

Thursday 9 May 2013

Day 63: Diamonds and Rust

Joan Baez



I'm not a big Baez fan but this song is too memorable to let go of.


"Now you're telling me You're not nostalgic
Then give me another word for it
You who are so good with words
And at keeping things vague
Because I need some of that vagueness now
It's all come back too clearly
Yes I loved you dearly
And if you're offering me diamonds and rust
I've already paid"

Wednesday 8 May 2013

Tuesday 7 May 2013

Day 61: Lover lover lover

Leonard Cohen


My man...
Just love this performance; very similar to the one I saw in Budapest on the same tour. The lute solo, oooof

I asked my father,
I said, "Father change my name."
The one I'm using now it's covered up
With fear and filth and cowardice and shame.


Monday 6 May 2013

Day 60: Splitting the Atom

Massive Attack




Our blood is gold nothing to fear
We killed the time and I love you dear
A kiss of wine we'll disappear
The last of the last particles
Divisible invisible

Sunday 5 May 2013

Day 59: Cliquot

Beirut





What melody will lead my lover from his bed?
What melody will see him in my arms again?


Saturday 4 May 2013

Day 58: One of Us Cannot Be Wrong

Leonard Cohen



I'm not claiming that I'm sharing Cohen's best song, (Famous Blue Raincoat which melts my heart.) There is not the best song, but the best songs from some artists. This opened my Saturday morning. Cohen is more a poet than a singer. Each line of his songs is reflective or comes from the heart. I once had a chance to see him from the second row in a concert. How modest and how gentleman!

This song is from his album "Songs of Leonard Cohen", 1967.


I showed my heart to the doctor. He said I'd just have to quit

Then he wrote himself a prescription, your name was mentioned in it

Then he locked himself in a library shelf with the details of our honeymoon

And I hear from the nurse that he's gotten much worse and his practice is all in a ruin



I heard of a saint who had loved you, I studied all night in his school

He taught that the duty of lovers is to tarnish the golden rule

And just when I was sure that his teachings were pure he drowned himself in the pool


Friday 3 May 2013

Day 57: Green Grass

Cibelle





This song has been covered by many and although I love the original one by Tom Waits, I think this cover has done it justice. You can still hear my man's voice in the background.

Now there's a bubble of me
And it's floating in thee

Stand in the shade of me
Things are now made of me

Thursday 2 May 2013

Day 56: Curtain Fall

Sophie Zelmani




Do I have to start to dream about a stranger?
...
This curtain fall is the last one you will see



Wednesday 1 May 2013

Day 55: Monkey

Robert Plant & The Band of Joy




He used to be one hell of a performer. Led Zeppelin wouldn't be what it was without him.


"Tonight, you will be mine
Tonight, the monkey dies"