Life comes at you
from all directions. It’s like doing the laundry: it just never stops. Even as
you’re filling the washer with the last load of the week, you’re (probably)
wearing clothes that are going to have to be washed. Unless you’re a frat boy.
So it’s just never
done.
And the Voices find
ways of coping with it.
I believe I first
heard Kathy Mattea while I was in the UK. My sister used to send me home-made mix
tapes of all kinds of different singers. Some were pretty good, some not so
much. But the adventure was she never labeled them or included a play list. So I’d
have to try to figure out what the song title might be and see if I could find
out something about it on Google (pre-YouTube, you’ll note), or else write her
via snailmail to ask.
“The 8th
song on the B side; maybe called “Close Your Eyes”? Who’s the guy singing it?
And what’s it really called?”
I wasn’t going to
know the artists, because she’s more country than I am. Reba? Martina? Who?
(But it turns out I am educable.)
Mattea’s “Come from
the Heart” arrived that way. I loved her voice—there’s a warmth to it that permeates
even the coldest day.
Since then I’ve seen
the first three lines of the refrain passing around the Internet in the guise
of some old saying. They were actually written by Richard Leigh and Susanna
Clark. But they certainly resonate.
It’s hard to remember
it when you realize that you’re smack in the midst of doing something
remarkably stupid…in front of an audience. But it’s good advice anyhow, and
Mattea obviously knows of what she sings.
My other slice of
life for today comes from Joni Mitchell.
Dunno about you, but
sometimes I have to plumb haul my drifting ass into cold, unwilling consciousness
with the karmic equivalent of a Glock to my head. I just get so wrapped up in
where I have to be and when and what I’m going to say when I get there and blah
and blah and more unending unremitting blah.
But when you get that
wrapped up in crap like that, you miss the treasures all around you.
That’s what Mitchell was
pointing out in “For Free”—the guy playing clarinet beautifully, with no one on
the street paying a lick of attention.
Thing is—I know for
certain that where I’m going and when I have to be there and what I’m going to
say when I get there don’t hold a candle to what’s going on right this moment
right in front of me, or beside me, or just behind me. When you start walking
down that brain-dead path, you miss the Palo
Alto Chamber Orchestra at the arts and wine festival.
You don’t want to do
that. At least, I don’t.
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