Bob Schwartz

Tag: eclipse

Soundtrack for the eclipse (or any time): Donovan

It is obvious to feature Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon for an eclipse soundtrack. The final track is called Eclipse so yeah, duh. And of course it is an awesome record. But listing it is so lazy that it hurts.

Instead I started today with Donovan and his song Sun. Donovan has 1.7 million Spotify monthly listeners so he isn’t quite as forgotten as some others. He is still performing and recording, and he long ago brought spirit and the spirit of the times to popular music in lyrical and listenable ways.

Sun is only one of the many Donovan songs that includes the sun. His most famous hit song (#1 in America) is Sunshine Superman:

Sunshine came softly through my a-window today
Could’ve tripped out easy but I’ve changed my ways

There are other examples of sun-related songs by Donovan. But Sun is the one for today.

Sun, the earth is turning
It’s turning round
And love is the axis
And they chop the tree down
The proud trees are standing
As green as the sky
As green as the greenstone
That makes seabirds fly

Ovens are baking
And rivers run dry
As dry as the ocean
On the wings of a fly
Go if you’re able
And come if you can
Life’s very unstable
It’s built upon sand

Well, Marianne, set the table
An old friend I see
Marianne, fetch the paper
There’s two for tea

Eclipse and the death/life instincts: Why are so many interested in seeing the sun extinguished?

Gustav Klimt, Death and Life

Among Freud’s most controversial and often rejected concepts is what he termed Todestrieb—death drive—also fashioned as Thanatos—death instinct. Death drive or instinct, he proposes that as people we aim to reduce psychic tension to the lowest possible point, that is, death. Supposedly the drive is first directed inward as a self-destructive tendency and later turned outward in the form of the aggressive behavior. It stands opposed to the life instinct, Eros.

A total solar eclipse is a rare and spectacular event that has fascinated and enraptured humankind forever. The rarity of the spectacle is alone enough to explain the interest. Images won’t do. Just like attending a concert by a favorite performer is so much more than remotely listening and watching. Being there in the flesh as a participant is needed. The difference between pornography and sex.

But maybe more is at play. Maybe watching the sun go out, even for minutes, means something, or everything. Maybe, as R.E.M. sings, “It’s the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine.” Maybe we want to see it and, if possible, be there when it happens.

Freud can no longer help us with this because, death drive or not, he succumbed to the death reality eighty-five years ago in 1939. (Note that he missed seeing a total eclipse that happened just a couple of weeks later.)

There is another more uplifting explanation. Maybe we want to experience the sun going out so we can experience the sun coming back to life. People don’t want to watch the eclipse—they want to watch the eclipse ending. They want the victory of eros. They want to be there for that. Who can blame them?

© 2024 by Bob Schwartz

Safely Listening to the Eclipse

 

Safely Listening to the Eclipse

How does the sun sound
Obscured by the moon
Invisible imperceptible waves
That permanently
Blind your mind

Note: Despite mind blindness, don’t be afraid to listen to the eclipse. Put on your earphones and listen to the only eclipse song that matters.

All that you touch
And all that you see
All that you taste
All you feel
And all that you love
And all that you hate
All you distrust
All you save
And all that you give
And all that you deal
And all that you buy
Beg, borrow or steal
And all you create
And all you destroy
And all that you do
And all that you say
And all that you eat
And everyone you meet
And all that you slight
And everyone you fight
And all that is now
And all that is gone
And all that’s to come
And everything under the sun is in tune
But the sun is eclipsed by the moon

Eclipse, Dark Side of the Moon, Pink Floyd