"BRIGHT HORSES" NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS (2019)

This week an unexpectedly deep conversation about grief broke out on an ordinary work call with one of my coworkers—one of those moments where suddenly the room feels quieter, more fragile. As he spoke, I found myself thinking about my mom, who passed from cancer in 2016, and how quickly the holidays can turn into a magnifying glass for all the absences we carry. Later that night I stumbled onto Anderson Cooper’s All There Is podcast and saw the episode with Nick Cave. Nick talking about grief always hits differently. Ever since losing his son, his work has taken on this painful clarity, and Ghosteen remains one of the most beautiful, devastating albums I’ve ever heard.

The song I keep returning to is “Bright Horses.” It opens like a soft hallucination: fiery horses galloping home, the world bending toward a hope you desperately want to believe is true. Nick’s voice wavers between dream and confession, and the backing vocals feel like ghostly conversations with him—echoes, reassurances, counter-arguments, all orbiting the same sorrow. It’s as if he’s singing both sides of the dialogue you have with yourself when you’re trying to accept something you can’t change.

There’s that line—“Everything is wrong.” It lands like a floorboard giving way. But the music and melody lift upward. The song never promises a miracle; it just offers space for the impossible wish that someone dear might return, even if only in our imaginations. Maybe that’s the power of “Bright Horses.” It’s deeply personal to Nick, but like all the best songs, it becomes a place for our own stories to settle. A reminder that in a cynical world, holding onto a small, shimmering dream isn’t escape—it’s a way of moving forward.

“OH, THE TRAIN IS COMING AND I’M STANDING HERE TO SEE. AND IT’S BRINGING MY BABY RIGHT BACK TO ME.”

"THERE SHE GOES, MY BEAUTIFUL WORLD" NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS (2004)

This month, I’m jumping into the #APlaceInTheSong challenge from @JukeboxJohnny2. Great songs have that special ability to describe places in a way that makes us feel like we’re right there. Each day, I’ll pick a track that I think accomplishes that feat.

Nick Cave is one of those artists that I somehow missed out on for far too long. If I could turn back the clock, I would’ve devoured his catalog a good twenty years before I finally discovered him for myself. And I would’ve caught him on tour. I can imagine his vocal expressiveness translating beautifully and energetically on the live stage. I do prefer his slower ballads, but I appreciate the occasional Nick Cave banger, like the blues rock masterpiece, “There She Goes, My Beautiful World”.

In the middle of the first verse, the track gets rolling quickly like a freight train right into the rockin’ chorus. In this case, the guitar and piano parts are the engine for the song. But the vocals are everything here. The gospel chorus brings the house down. Soaring. Powerful. Absolutely on fire. Even still, Nick is still the man here. His voice is just perfect for this moment and this song. It ain’t the same if you put another singer behind the mic.

“And Gaugin, he buggered off, man And went all tropical While Philip Larkin stuck it out
In a library in Hull.”

"BRIGHT HORSES" NICK CAVE & THE BAD SEEDS (2019)

I generally gravitate to the music first before the lyrics. But as a writer, I still marvel at well-spun verses and choruses. This month, I’m joining the music Twitter community in #SeptSongLyricChallenge

Day 12

Nick Cave is one of a handful of artists who I deeply regret not discovering sooner. The recordings are so powerful and moving, and I can only imagine how extraordinary it is to see him perform live. Each element in “Bright Horses” is filled with anticipation and a deep sense of yearning. The ethereal piano chords. The delicate string arrangements. The angelic backing vocals. And, of course, Nick’s baritone voice so full of life and vigor. The lyrics, so full of despair and disappointment, yet love still triumphs in the end.

“Oh the train is coming, and I'm standing here to see. And it's bringing my baby right back to me. Well there are some things too hard to explain. But my baby's coming home now, on the 5:30 train.”