Ep 9 - Bathwater; Hospice Music Therapy; Cape Fear and The Outfit
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We slow Bathwater into a smoky ballad, break down the E minor to G major lift, and trace how that tension mirrors longing and devotion. Hospice stories from rural Ohio bring music therapy to life, showing how live songs can steady fear, honor memory, and create dignity at the end.
• why a slowed arrangement of Bathwater reveals stronger bones
• E harmonic minor, the raised seventh, and the pivot back to E
• Cape Fear’s menace, big scores, and why dread works
• Earl Klugh, Brad Paisley, and Community as timing lessons
• what music therapy is, and what it is not
• boundaries, safety, and leaving when the room feels wrong
• bedside music for unresponsive patients and why hearing lasts
• legacy songwriting for families and how lyrics emerge
• hoarding, pets, and the realities of home visits
• repertoire shifts: less Hank Sr., more Roy Orbison and oldies
• who should cover Bathwater and where it fits on screen
Check out our Bathwater cover on YouTube: The Audience Won’t Like It. Like, subscribe, download, and only say nice things. Give us good ratings.
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