Tag: Music

  • “Fins” in the Water: A Tribute to Jimmy Buffett and the Legacy of Jaws

    “Fins” in the Water: A Tribute to Jimmy Buffett and the Legacy of Jaws

    By Gregory Harshfield, 2025

    There are sharks in the water, and not all of them have dorsal fins.

    In the sunlit surf of Jimmy Buffett’s 1979 single “Fins,” the threat isn’t a toothy great white circling below, it’s the sleek, suntanned “land sharks” who prowl the sandbars, drinks in hand, eyes on the next easy catch. Released just four years after Jaws terrified theatergoers with the primal fear of deep water, Buffett’s Fins offers a playful, poetic inversion of Spielberg’s sea-bound predator.

    Where Jaws gave us blood in the tide, Fins gives us margaritas, mirages, and men with ulterior motives.


    The Meaning Beneath the Melody

    On the surface, Fins is a crowd-pleasing anthem, a beach bar staple that makes arms rise like dorsal fins in drunken unison. But its lyrics tell the story of a woman who “came down from Cincinnati,” escaping her midwestern life for the salt air of the Florida Keys. Yet instead of serenity, she finds herself surrounded by “sharks that can swim on the land,” circling with practiced charm and beach-bum bravado.

    “Can’t you feel them circling honey / Can’t you feel them swimming around?”

    Buffett isn’t just warning her, he’s warning all of us. In this tale of sunburned escape, the real danger isn’t beneath the waves. It’s the disarming, smiling predators in flip-flops and aviators.


    A Poetic Reading

    Like a seashell echoing the distant roar of the ocean, Fins contains more than its bright beat suggests. It is a story of disillusionment wrapped in conga drums, a playful poem in which:

    • The ocean is freedom, vast and blue, a dream of reinvention.
    • The beach is a borderland, where fantasy meets reality.
    • The land sharks are desire, transient and predatory.

    The chorus, repetitive and chant-like, echoes a kind of tribal ritual, as if warning signals are being sent to the listener in rhythm: Look out, the sharks are closer than you think.


    Buffett, Jaws, and the American Coastal Psyche

    Fins was released on the album Volcano in 1979, during a time when Jimmy Buffett’s persona as the tropical troubadour was reaching full bloom. Just a few years earlier, Jaws (1975) had transformed Martha’s Vineyard into Amity Island and injected a new kind of dread into American summers.

    Where Jaws represented the dangers of nature, Fins hinted at the dangers of culture, how escapism could easily morph into entrapment. The irony is sharp: both stories involve a beach, a shark, and a female protagonist, but the tone diverges. Jaws stalks the edges of horror; Fins sashays through satire.

    And yet, both linger in the imagination because they tap into the same briny well of fear and fantasy: the ocean as a place of transformation and danger.


    Legacy and Laughter

    As we mark 50 years of Jaws, it feels only right to celebrate not only the monsters below but the metaphors above. Jimmy Buffett, who passed away in 2023, left behind a treasure trove of songs that reshaped how Americans view leisure, longing, and life on the coast.

    Fins remains one of his most enduring works, not because it’s his most profound, but because it manages to be fun, funny, and slyly cautionary. It invites us to dance, even while whispering, watch your back.

    So whether you’re drifting on the tide or dancing on a pier, remember: some sharks don’t need a fin to find you.


    Fins to the left, fins to the right, you’re the only bait in town tonight.

  • The Power of Music: A Universal Language of Healing, Connection, and Transformation

    The Power of Music: A Universal Language of Healing, Connection, and Transformation

    Music is more than sound, it is a force that moves the human soul, transcends boundaries, and speaks the language of emotion without the need for words. Across every continent and culture, music has held an irreplaceable role in human experience, accompanying us in celebration and sorrow, love and loss, resistance and revival.

    From the primal rhythms of tribal drums to the soaring arias of opera houses, music connects us to something greater than ourselves. It weaves memory and meaning into the fabric of our lives. A lullaby can soothe a restless infant, while a national anthem can stir collective pride in the hearts of millions. Music is not merely entertainment, it is a conduit for emotional truth.

    Healing Through Harmony

    Science echoes what ancient wisdom has always known: music heals. Studies have shown that listening to music can reduce stress, ease anxiety, and even lower blood pressure. According to research published by Harvard Medical School, music therapy can improve outcomes in patients recovering from surgery or trauma, and aid those with neurological conditions such as Parkinson’s disease and stroke.

    In the realm of mental health, music provides comfort and catharsis. For those suffering from depression or PTSD, songwriting, listening, and musical engagement can serve as therapeutic tools. Music activates the brain’s reward centers and releases dopamine, the “feel-good” neurotransmitter, improving mood and motivation.

    Consider the haunting resilience in Beethoven’s compositions, crafted after he had lost his hearing. His Symphony No. 9, composed in silence, speaks to the triumph of human spirit over adversity. Or think of how Bob Marley’s reggae anthems, born from political turmoil, continue to inspire movements for peace and justice.

    The Soundtrack of Human Connection

    Music has the power to unite. At concerts and festivals, strangers become family, singing the same lyrics, feeling the same rhythm. During times of collective hardship, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, people turned to music to cope. From balcony serenades in Italy to virtual choirs spanning continents, music reminded us that we were not alone.

    Artists like Aretha Franklin gave voice to civil rights through gospel-infused soul, while U2 and Bono used their platform to campaign for global humanitarian causes. Even today, artists like Kendrick Lamar and H.E.R. continue to harness music as a vehicle for truth and advocacy.

    Across history, music has been a silent companion to revolution and reformation. It gave enslaved people spirituals to endure suffering, gave protestors rallying cries, and gave generations a way to pass down stories when the pen was denied.

    A Personal Muse and Mirror

    On a personal level, music often mirrors our emotions more clearly than we can express them ourselves. A single melody can transport us back in time, to a first dance, a road trip, or a heartbreak. It marks our rites of passage: weddings, graduations, funerals.

    Musicians like Joni Mitchell, Prince, and Freddie Mercury have tapped into this deeply personal dimension, creating works that not only defined their artistry but spoke to the intimate truths of their listeners. Their music reminds us that we are not alone in our joys, questions, or grief.

    Final Words: Living in Harmony

    In a world often divided by language, politics, and pain, music remains a rare and sacred common ground. Music does not discriminate by age, race, or creed. It teaches empathy, deepens joy, and provides shelter for sorrow. Interestingly enough, the power of music also fuels revolutions and mends broken spirits.

    And, whether you are moved by a symphony, a love ballad, or the beat of a street drum, music touches something eternal within you. This sound is not merely background noise, it is a lifeline, a guidepost, a gift.

    As Plato once said, “Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and life to everything.”

    Let it play on.

    The Healing Note

    A single note, a whispered tune,
    Can chase away the darkest moon.
    Soft as dawn on wounded skin,
    Music lets the light back in.

    It cradles hearts too torn to speak,
    And strengthens souls once thought too weak.
    Each rhythm mends what time has torn,
    Each melody, a soul reborn.

    No need for words, no need for pain,
    In song, we find ourselves again.
    For when all else has come undone,
    Music stays, our gentle sun.

    Explore More: Online Resources on the Healing Power of Music

    1. American Music Therapy Association (AMTA)
    🔗 www.musictherapy.org
    Learn about the science and practice of music therapy, access research publications, and find certified music therapists in your area.

    2. Harvard Health – How Music Can Be a Health Resource
    🔗 health.harvard.edu
    This article from Harvard Medical School discusses how music supports mental health, pain relief, and recovery.

    3. Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy
    🔗 www.nordoff-robbins.org.uk
    A UK-based nonprofit offering insights into music therapy’s role in supporting people with physical, emotional, and cognitive challenges.

    4. Psychology Today – Music and the Mind
    🔗 www.psychologytoday.com
    Explore expert blogs and articles about how music impacts emotions, brain health, and trauma recovery.

    5. YouTube: Ted Talks on Music and Healing
    🔗 YouTube – TED Music & Healing Playlist
    Watch engaging TED Talks by neuroscientists, musicians, and therapists discussing the powerful bond between sound and well-being.

    6. Journal of Music Therapy
    🔗 academic.oup.com/jmt
    Dive into peer-reviewed academic research focused on the therapeutic effects of music across diverse populations.

  • “Three Little Birds”: A Philosophy of Peace in Feathered Form

    “Three Little Birds”: A Philosophy of Peace in Feathered Form

    A song as light as the morning, and as deep as the soul…

    It begins not with thunder, but with sunlight.
    With a melody so simple it floats, like wings, like breath, like hope not yet spoken aloud.
    Bob Marley didn’t just sing a song with “Three Little Birds”, he offered the world a lullaby for the weary heart, a mantra for the anxious spirit, and a philosophy wrapped in reggae’s warm, swaying embrace.

    “Don’t worry about a thing…”, the words arrive like a whisper through the leaves, not as denial, but as release. It’s not that there’s nothing wrong. It’s that, somehow, in the grand rhythm of life, even the wrongs will find their way to resolution. Marley’s message isn’t ignorance of struggle, it’s triumph over fear. A refusal to let dread take root in the garden of the soul.

    And then come the birds. Three of them. Small, ordinary, divine.
    They do not preach or shout. They sing.
    Each morning, they perch beside his doorstep, a quiet ritual, a sacred simplicity, and remind him of the most radical truth of all: that joy can be gentle. That reassurance can be feathered, that the universe sometimes speaks not in thunder, but in the flutter of wings.

    The birds represent more than animals, they are omens of ease, of divine presence in the mundane. They are faith without dogma, hope without pressure. A reminder that the Earth is still spinning, the sky is still open, and the soul still belongs to something bigger than bills and battles and broken dreams.

    “Every little thing is gonna be all right.”
    Not because we will always win.
    Not because life is perfect.
    But because peace is a choice. A daily, sacred act of listening to the song inside you.

    Marley, prophet of rhythm and rebel of the soul, wove this song not just for a moment, but for lifetimes. He gifted the world a philosophy that needs no scriptures, only sunlight, a bit of music, and the courage to believe that not everything must be understood to be trusted.

    So when the day darkens, when worry coils in the chest like smoke, close your eyes and listen for wings.
    For the quiet chorus just outside your door.
    Three little birds, reminding you:
    You are here. You are alive. And yes…
    Every little thing is gonna be all right.