Gypsy Rhapsody by BOND

BOND

Gypsy Rhapsody
2002
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

Pic

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child

NaPoMo Classic Poetry Day 2 – The Gateway by A. D. Hope

A. D. Hope 1907-2000

The Gateway

Now the heart sings with all its thousand voices
To hear this city of cells, my body, sing.
The tree through the stiff clay at long last forces
Its thin strong roots and taps the secret spring.

And the sweet waters without intermission
Climb to the tips of its green tenement;
The breasts have borne the grace of their possession,
The lips have felt the pressure of content.

Here I come home: in this expected country
They know my name and speak it with delight.
I am the dream and you my gates of entry,
The means by which I waken into light.

Explosive by BOND

Explosive
2004
Classical Crossover

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child

Metal March Day 23

Hell’s Bells
AC/DC
1980

Lilydog celebrates her 14th (98th in dog years) birthday today. Lots of special treats for my lil lady today – and homemade cheesy doggo biscuits. While I was baking AC/DC were rocking out on my DAB with this classic so it seems fittingly bangin’ in a “Hell’s Bells” kinda way

Fuego by BOND

Fuego
2002
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker who left in 2008 to have a child

Samba by BOND

Samba
2004
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child

Korobushka by BOND

Korobushka
2000
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child

Quixote by BOND

Quixote
2000
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child

Wintersun by BOND

Wintersun
2000
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child.

Kismet by BOND

Kismet
2000
Classical Pop

BOND
Classical Pop
Formed: 2000
Nationality: Australian

BOND

BOND is a string quartet formed by music producer Mike Batt and promoter Mel Bush in 2000. The current line-up consists of Tania Davis (first violinist), Eos Counsell (second violin), Elspeth Hanson (viola), and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello). Hanson replaced original band member Havlie Ecker 2ho left in 2008 to have a child

Joker and the Thief by Wolfmother

Joker and the Thief
Album: Wolfmother
Date: 2005
Genre: Alternative/Indie
Artist: Wolfmother

Wolfmother

Wolfmother is a band from Sydney, Australia, formed in 2004. Centered around the vocalist and guitarist Andrew Stockdale, who is the only constant member of the line-up. The band has had many line-up changes and its current incarnation includes Hamish Rosser on drums, and Brad Heald on bass

Song Lyric Sunday – Down Under

Inspired by and written for Song Lyric Sunday – thank you Jim

With the prompt of Down Under – Oh, it has got to be Olivia Newton-John. I love AC/DC, INXS, and so many more but Livvy was and still is a little bit special. One of the best-selling music artists of all time she was also a powerful activist for many charities. Sadly, Livvy lost her battle with cancer in August 2022 leaving us with a wonderful legacy of music to the point choosing just one or two for this post – INXS would have been easier, but Livvy, for me is more deserving.

Livvy was born in Cambridge, UK in 1948, the daughter of the. Welsh MI5 officer who took Rudolph Hess into custody during World War II. Her mother was a refugee from the Nazis who escaped to the UK. When Livvy was 5 years old the family emigrated to Australia and she became an Australian citizen in 1981. Anyway on to the music

I have to start with a track from the movie “Grease” as this is when a 12-year-old me fell in love with Livvy. So from 1978, it has to be “Hopelessly Devoted to You” written by John Clifford Farrar. I know Jim is covering it too, but hey it means a lot to me so I am doing it anyway

Guess mine is not the first heart broken
My eyes are not the first to cry
I’m not the first to know
There’s just no getting over you

I know I’m just a fool who’s willing
To sit around and wait for you
But baby, can’t you see there’s nothing else for me to do?
I’m hopelessly devoted to you

But now there’s nowhere to hide
Since you pushed my love aside
I’m out of my head
Hopelessly devoted to you

Hopelessly devoted to you
Hopelessly devoted to you

My head is sayin’, “Fool, forget him”
My heart is sayin’, “Don’t let go
Hold on to the end”, that’s what I intend to do
I’m hopelessly devoted to you

But now there’s no way to hide
Since you pushed my love aside
I’m outta my head
Hopelessly devoted to you

Hopelessly devoted to you
Hopelessly devoted to you

One track is never gonna be enough for me so I am going for a song from 1985 which is on most if not all of my playlists. “Soul Kiss”, written by Mark Goldenberg. My reasons it simply touches me

Soul kiss
You left me dreaming
Now I wonder are things just what they seem
Well, I get down on my knees (and beg you, baby)
Get down on my knees

Soul kiss
Some nights you get me wondering
Is this the way
This is a hunger
Well, I get down on my knees (and beg you, baby)
Get down on my knees

Somewhere there is a fire burning
Somewhere inside
Somewhere there is a heart that’s waiting
To take a ride
To take the ride to your soul kiss

So this is what it has to lead to
Take my hand and make me need tp
I get down on my knees (and beg you, baby)
Get down on my knees

Soul kiss
You left me hoping
Now I wonder is the door still open
Well, I get down on my knees (and beg you, baby)
Get down on my knees

Somewhere there is a fire burning
Somewhere inside
Somewhere there is a heart that’s waiting
To take a ride
To take the ride to your soul kiss

And finally, for my last choice, it is back to 1978 but not “Grease”. From the album “Totally Hot” I have chosen another one written by John Clifford Farrar, “A Little More Love” which brings the memories of this song crackling on my old record deck and me struggling away with homework, mainly algebra. I still hate algebra but I love this song

Night is draggin’ her feet
I wait alone in the heat
I know, know that you’ll have your way
‘Til you have to go home
No’s a word I can’t say

‘Cause it gets me nowhere to tell you, “No”
And it gets me nowhere to make you go

Will a little more love make you stop depending?
Will a little more love bring a happy ending?
Will a little more love make it right?
Will a little more love make it right?

Where, where did my innocence go?
How, how was a young girl to know?
I’m trapped, trapped in the spell of your eyes
In the warmth of your arms
In the web of your lies

But it gets me nowhere to tell you, “No”
And it gets me nowhere to make you go

Will a little more love make you stop depending?
Will a little more love bring a happy ending?
Will a little more love make it right?
Will a little more love make it right?

Gets me nowhere to tell you, “No”
And it gets me nowhere to make you go

Will a little more love make you stop depending?
Will a little more love bring a happy ending?
Will a little more love make it right?
Will a little more love make it right?

Gets me nowhere to tell you, “No”
And it gets me nowhere to make you go

Will a little more love make you stop depending?
Will a little more love bring a happy ending?
Will a little more love make it right?
Will a little more love make it right?

Gets me nowhere to tell you, “No”

Carry On Dancing by Savage Garden

Carry On Dancing
Album: Savage Garden
Date: 1997
Genre: Pop
Artist: Savage Garden

Savage Garden

Savage Garden were a pop duo consisting of Darren Hayes on vocals and Daniel Jones on instruments. The duo formed in 1993 in Brisbane, Australia, and achieved global success in the mid-1990s with hit singles including ‘I Want You’, ‘Truly Madly Deeply’, and ‘The Animal Song’. Savage Garden disbanded in 2001 with Hayes continuing as a solo artist

Back Round by Wolfmother

Back Round
Album: Cosmic Egg
Date: 2009
Genre: Alternative/Indie

Wolfmother

Wolfmother

Wolfmother is a band from Sydney, Australia, formed in 2004. Centered around the vocalist and guitarist Andrew Stockdale, who is the only constant member of the line-up. The band has had many line-up changes and its current incarnation includes Hamish Rosser on drums, and Brad Heald on bass.

New Moon Rising by Wolfmother

New Moon Rising
Album: Cosmic Egg
Date: 2009
Genre: Alternative/Indie

Wolfmother

Wolfmother

Wolfmother is a band from Sydney, Australia, formed in 2004. Centered around the vocalist and guitarist Andrew Stockdale, who is the only constant member of the line-up. The band has had many line-up changes and its current incarnation includes Hamish Rosser on drums, and Brad Heald on bass

Vagabond by Wolfmother

Vagabond
Album: Wolfmother
Date: 2006
Genre: Alternative/Indie

Wolfmother

Wolfmother is a band from Sydney, Australia, formed in 2004. Centered around the vocalist and guitarist Andrew Stockdale, who is the only constant member of the line-up. The band has had many line-up changes and its current incarnation includes Hamish Rosser on drums, and Brad Heald on bass

I Don’t Know You Anymore by Savage Garden

I Don’t Know You Anymore
Album: Affirmation
Date: 1999
Genre: Pop

Savage Garden

Savage Garden

Savage Garden were a pop duo consisting of Darren Hayes on vocals and Daniel Jones on instruments. The duo formed in 1993 in Brisbane, Australia, and achieved global success in the mid-1990s with hit singles including ‘I Want You’, ‘Truly Madly Deeply’, and ‘The Animal Song’. Savage Garden disbanded in 2001 with Hayes continuing as a solo artist

You Can Still Be Free by Savage Garden

Savage Garden

Savage Garden

Savage Garden were a pop duo consisting of Darren Hayes on vocals and Daniel Jones on instruments. The duo formed in 1993 in Brisbane, Australia and achieved global success in the mid-1990s with hit singles including ‘I Want You’, ‘Truly Madly Deeply’, and ‘The Animal Song’. Savage Garden disbanded in 2001 with Hayes continuing as a solo artist

You Can Still Be Free
Album: Affirmation
1999
Pop

Lyrics by Daniel Jones and Darren Hayes

Cool breeze and autum leaves
Slow motion daylight
A lone pair of watchful eyes
Oversee the living
Feel the presence all around
A tortured soul
A wound unhealing
No regrets or promises
The past is gone
But you can still be free…
If time will set you free…

Time now to spread your wings
To take to flight
The life endeavor
Aim for the burning sun
You’re trapped inside
But you can still be free…
If time will set you free…
But it’s a long way to go

Keep moving way up high
You see the light
It shines forever
Sail through the crimson skies
The purest light
The light that sets you free…
If time will set you free…

Sail through the wind and rain tonight
You’re free to fly tonight
And you can still be free…
If time will set you free…
And go high like the mountain tops
And go high like the wind don’t stop
And go high
Hooo
Free to fly tonight
Free to fly tonight

In Departing Light by Robert Gray

My mother all of ninety has to be tied up
in her wheelchair, but still she leans far out of it sideways;
she juts there brokenly,
able to cut
with the sight of her someone who is close. She is hung
like her hanging mouth
in the dignity
of her bleariness, and says that she is
perfectly all right. It is impossible to get her to complain
or to register anything
for longer than a moment. She has made Stephen Hawking look healthy.
It’s as though
she is being sucked out of existence sideways through a porthole
and we’ve got hold of her feet.
She’s very calm.
If you live long enough it isn’t death you fear
but what life can still do. And she appears to know this
somewhere,
even if there’s no hope she could formulate it.
Yet she is so calm you think of an immortal – a Tithonus withering
forever on the edge
of life,
though never a moment’s grievance. Taken out to air
my mother seems in a motorcycle race, she
the sidecar passenger
who keeps the machine on the road, trying to lie far over
beyond the wheel.
Seriously, concentrated, she gazes ahead
towards the line,
as we go creeping around and around, through the thick syrups
of a garden, behind the nursing home.
Her mouth is full of chaos.
My mother revolves her loose dentures like marbles ground upon each other,
or idly clatters them,
broken and chipped. Since they won’t stay on her gums
she spits them free
with a sudden blurting cough, which seems to have stamped out of her
an ultimate breath.
Her teeth fly into her lap or onto the grass,
breaking the hawsers of spittle.
What we see in such age is for us the premature dissolution of a body,
as it slips off the bones
and back to protoplasm
before it can be decently hidden away.
And it’s as though the synapses were almost all of them broken
between her brain cells
and now they waver about feebly on the draught of my voice
and connect
at random and wrongly
and she has become a surrealist poet.
‘How is the sun
on your back?’ I ask. ‘The sun
is mechanical,’ she tells me, matter of fact. Wait
a moment, I think, is she
becoming profound? From nowhere she says, ‘The lake gets dusty.’ There is no lake
here, or in her past. ‘You’ll have to dust the lake.’
It could be
She has grown deep, but then she says, ‘The little boy in the star is food,’
or perhaps ‘The little boy is the star in food,’
and you think, ‘More likely
this appeals to my kind of superstition.’ It is all a tangle, and interpretations,
and hearing amiss,
all just the slipperiness
of her descent.

We sit and listen to the bird-song, which is like wandering lines
of wet paint –
it is like an abstract expressionist at work, his flourishes and
then
the touches
barely there,
and is going on all over the stretched sky.
If I read aloud skimmingly from the newspaper, she immediately falls asleep.
I stroke her face and she wakes
and looking at me intently she says something like, ‘That was
a nice stick.’ In our sitting about
she has also said, relevant of nothing, ‘The desert is a tongue.’
‘A red tongue?’
‘That’s right, it’s a
it’s a sort of
you know – it’s a – it’s a long
motor car.’
When I told her I might go to Cambridge for a time, she said to me, ‘Cambridge
is a very old seat of learning. Be sure –’
but it became too much –
‘be sure
of the short Christmas flowers.’ I get dizzy,
nauseous,
when I try to think about what is happening inside her head. I keep her
out there for hours, propping her
straight, as
she dozes, and drifts into waking; away from the stench and
the screams of the ward. The worst
of all this, for me, is that despite such talk, now is the most peace
I’ve known her to have. She reminisces,
momentarily, thinking that I am one of her long-dead
brothers. ‘Didn’t we have some fun
on those horses, when we were kids?’ she’ll say, giving
her thigh a little slap. Alzheimer’s
is nirvana, in her case. She never mentions
anything of what troubled her adult years – God, the evil passages
of the Bible, her own mother’s
long, hard dying, my father. Nothing
at all of my father,
and nothing
of her obsession with the religion that he drove her to. She says the magpie’s song,
which goes on and on, like an Irishman
wheedling to himself,
and which I have turned her chair towards,
reminds her of
a cup. A broken cup. I think that the chaos in her mind
is bearable to her because it is revolving
so slowly – slowly
as dust motes in an empty room.
The soul? The soul bas long been defeated, and is all but gone.
She’s only productive now
of bristles on the chin, of an odour
like old newspapers on a damp concrete floor, of garbled mutterings, of
some crackling memories, and of a warmth
(it was always there,
the marsupial devotion), of a warmth that is just in the eyes now, particularly
when I hold her and rock her for a while, as I lift her
back to bed – a folded
package, such as,
I have seen from photographs, was made of the Ice Man. She says, ‘I like it
when you – when
when
you…’
I say to her, ‘My brown-eyed girl.’ Although she doesn’t remember
the record, or me come home
that time, I sing it
to her: ‘Da
da-dum, de-dum, da-dum … And
it’s you, it’s you,’– she smiles up, into my face –‘it’s you, my brown-eyed girl.’

My mother will get lost on the roads after death.
Too lonely a figure
to bear thinking of. As she did once,
one time at least, in the new department store
in our town; discovered
hesitant among the aisles; turning around and around, becoming
a still place.
Looking too kind
to reject even a wrong direction,
outrightly. And she caught my eye, watching her,
and knew I’d laugh
and grinned. Or else, since many another spirit will be arriving over there, whatever
those are – and all of them clamorous
as seabirds, along the walls of death – she will be pushed aside
easily, again. There are hierarchies in Heaven, we remember; and we know
of its bungled schemes.
Even if the last shall be first’, as we have been told, she
could not be first. It would not be her.
But why become so fearful?
This is all
of your mother, in your arms. She who now, a moment after your game, has gone;
who is confused
and would like to ask
why she is hanging here. No – she will be safe. She will be safe
in the dry mouth
of this red earth, in the place
she has always been. She
who hasn’t survived living, how can we dream that she will survive her death?

Poet: Robert Gray
Born: 23 February 1945, Port Macquarie, Australia
Australian

Robert William Geoffrey Gray is a poet, critic and freelance writer, he is considered one of the masters of contemporary English poetry.

Robert Gray