Amsterdam is a 1998 novel by British writer Ian McEwan, for which he was awarded the 1998 Booker Prize.
Amsterdam is the story of a euthanasia pact between two friends, a composer and a newspaper editor, whose relationship spins into disaster.
The book begins with the funeral of artist Molly Lane. Guests at the funeral include British Foreign Secretary Julian Garmony, newspaper editor Vernon Halliday, and composer Clive Linley. The three share certain attributes: each has a very high opinion of himself, each was at some time Molly's lover, and each regards the dead woman's husband, George, with a mixture of amusement and contempt.
Clive and Vernon muse upon Molly's death. It seems she had some kind of rapid-onset brain disease (not specified) that left her helpless and mad. Neither man can understand her attraction to Julian Garmony, the right-wing Foreign Secretary who is about to challenge his party's leadership.
Clive returns home to continue work on a symphony he has been commissioned to write for the forthcoming millennium. Much of the work is complete, save the crucial signature melody. He resolves to go walking in the Lake District, as this tends to inspire him.
"Amsterdam" is a song by Jacques Brel. It combines a powerful melancholic crescendo with a rich poetic account of the exploits of sailors on shore leave in Amsterdam.
Brel never recorded this for a studio album, and his only version was released on the live album Enregistrement Public à l'Olympia 1964. Despite this, it has been one of his most enduringly popular works. It was one of the songs Mort Shuman translated into English for the Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris musical.
Brel worked on the song at his house overlooking the Mediterranean at Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, the house he shared with Sylvie Rivet, a publicist for Philips; a place she had introduced him to in 1960. "It was the ideal place for him to create, and to indulge his passion for boats and planes. One morning at six o'clock he read the words of Amsterdam to Fernand, a restaurateur who was about to set off fishing for scorpion fish and conger eels for the bouillabaisse. Overcome, Fernand broke out in sobs and cut open some sea urchins to help control his emotion."
Amsterdam is the capital and largest city of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
Amsterdam may also refer to:
i'm wandering these city streets
there's nothing here for me
all i see is people running round
buying shit they don't need
there's a man begging down on king street
and he grabs me by the wrist
he says 'son, you know what the biggest killer in this
world is?
it's not money, not drugs, not guns.. he said it's
loneliness..
and it's killing me..
oh this loneliness, it's bringing me down
and he'll sleep where the darkness falls
he won't get no curtain calls
and he's only got one pair of shoes
but he's got more serenity
than the rest of humanity
they've been tricked into waiting in queues
and his father is dying
he's got something inside of him
it makes him feel more wrong than right
and his mother'd be lying
if she said she weren't crying
herself to sleep every night..
he sees a woman waiting at the station steps
her conversation fills the air
she's telling the world about the trouble she's seen
but no one can hear
he wanders in to a church with it's doors wide open
he's welcomed in with a half hearted smile
some guy tells him he's found all the answers
to things like money and drugs and guns..
old man says 'what about this loneliness?
cos it's killing me..
oh this loneliness, it's bringing me down..
i'll sleep where the darkness falls
i won't get no curtain calls
and i've only got one pair of shoes
but i've got more serenity
than the rest of humanity
they've been tricked into waiting in queues
and my father is dying
he's got something inside of him
it makes him feel more wrong than right
and my mother'd be lying
if she said she weren't crying