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Pretty Fine Day
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For mothers and children, and Patty, who wanted a song (An Acoustic #2)
bob dylan singersongwriter paul simon neilyoung john lennon eagles simon and garfunkel loudon wainwright solo singersongwriter tom petty melodic
Artist picture
Scottish singer songwriter doing his thang
Michael J. Anthony has been developing as a songwriter since the early 1990s. His quest has taken him from Glasgow, Scotland to the Golden State of California. Michael has had five Soundclick #1 hits. He tests his unique brand of folkie introspection and wry humour on local open mic crowds and measures his success on how many people get up and order coffee during his sets; the answer is not many. On the art of songwriting, Michael is upbeat and expansive. "It's the most liberating form of expression I know. Everyone has important songs in their lives. Ever since I was a kid I wanted stake my claim in this wonderful cultural lexicon." Michael got his first musical instrument, a toy keyboard, when he was four. When he was fifteen, Paul Simon songs like "Slip Slidin' Away" and "American Tune" were washing through his head, "And it seemed like the perfect way to reach people, the way these songs reached me." "All my songs have an emotional anchor point, even the absurd ones. People connect with them. Songwriting is my first love. I enjoy the craft, ruminating over word choice and toying with audience expectation. I think songwriting can learn a lot from moviemaking both in terms of its systematic approach and also time expended: you get ten writers working on a screenplay which makes a polished product. If a solitary songwriter wants to compete with that quality, he usually has to do the work of more than one person. Some call me a perfectionist but to me a piece of work is finished when I can't improve it any more. If you look at the songs the world loves the most whether 'Hey Jude' or 'My Heart Will Go On', a fan might play them a thousand times in his life, and there are millions of fans. I think to produce something as significant as 'Hotel California' is worth fifty drafts. It's worth a year of work. Simply put, thank God that Paul Simon wrote 'The Boxer'. The world is a better place because of that song. That's why I write songs.
Song Info
Charts
#5,177 in subgenre Peak #2
Charts
Peak #22
Author
Michael J. Anthony
Rights
Michael J. Anthony
Uploaded
March 21, 2005
Track Files
MP3
MP3 3.3 MB 128 kbps 3:36
Story behind the song
My friend Patty asked me to write her a song. I asked her to describe her life, and this is basically what she said, set to music.
Lyrics
When your feet are complaining from the long working days And the weekend seems a lifetime ago When you’re wishing on the stars at a half past midnight Do you smile a little softer than before? You know your mind has been made ever since you fell in love With the ones that you’re cherishing still You’re just a mother by birthright and a teacher by day A warm-hearted, loyal hometown girl Take the sky for what it is It’s just a place for all the weather Whether it’s blue or gray And if the rain goes pitter pat It’s a reason to grab on to your children Wouldn’t you say that’s a pretty fine day? Do your dreams shine as bright as the stars in Tennessee Are they always a paycheck from sight It seems a lifetime ago since the air was free And your only chore was coming home for the night But when you hear your children sing would you really change a thing? It’s the world that you’re cherishing still You gotta sing when it rains for the love that it brings To a warm-hearted, loyal hometown girl Take the sky for what it is Just a place for all this weather Nomatter blue or gray, Patty, wouldn’t you say? And if the rain’s falling down It’s a reason to hold on to your children Wouldn’t you say that’s a pretty fine day? It’s a reason to hold on to your children Wouldn’t you say that’s a pretty fine day? Wouldn’t you say that’s a pretty fine day?
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