song
“Ammæli” by The Sugarcubes (1987)
“Long afloat on shipless oceans” – Song to the Siren x2
“Some Velvet Morning” by Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood (1967)
“These two weirdly complementary sides of Hazlewood’s persona unite on ‘Some Velvet Morning,’ a standout track from Nancy & Lee. On that track, Hazlewood and Sinatra sound like they don’t inhabit the same universe, let alone the same song. Over loping spaghetti-Western guitar, Hazlewood sings of Greek mythology and “some velvet morning when I’m straight,” while Sinatra coos about flowers and daffodils in a stoned haze against a backdrop of bubblegum psychedelia. “Some Velvet Morning” sounds like two songs spliced together by a madman, or an avant-garde short film in song form.”
“Let England Shake” by PJ Harvey (2010)
…being watched by somebody who is about to lose his job.
“O Death” – Ralph Stanley
“In 2009, the Grammy for Best Male Country Vocal Performance was given to international pop star Brad Paisley. In 2008 and 2006, it went to Nicole Kidman’s boyfriend Keith Urban. In 2002, it was awarded to Ralph Stanley, the 75 year old bluegrass singer, for this a cappella performance of an Appalachian funeral dirge. He deserved it.
Partially speaking in the voice of a man on death’s door, partially as death itself, the song takes its power from its unflinchingly physical depiction of the end of life. In so many country songs, death is a welcome respite from pain; here, it’s a horrifying prospect, the transformation of a person from something alive and vibrant into a collection of cold, moist flesh and bone.”
— from ilovecountry
I’ll fix your feet til you can’t walk
I’ll lock your jaw til you can’t talk
I’ll close your eyes so you can’t see
This very air, come and go with meI’m Death, I come to take the soul
Leave the body and leave it cold.
To draw up the flesh off of the frame
Dirt and worm both have a claim.
“P-Funk (Wants To Get Funked Up)” by Parliament (1975)
“Just Call Me Joe” by Sinead O’Connor (1987)
“All the big trees” by Jónsi & Alex (2010)
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