It is difficult to explain exactly how important music is to
my life. My earliest memories have music in them, as though life has always had
a soundtrack. I work in and among writing and books, which are dear to me, but popular
music is my first love.
I have a distinct memory of being 4 or 5 and going to the
zoo with my babysitter. I remember sitting in the back of her green Mustang
Fastback convertible, speeding down Woodward Avenue, with Martha Reeves on the
radio. It is certainly a Detroit memory, and perhaps my Detroit upbringing has
something to do with the intrinsic connection of popular music to my being.
I’ve been thinking about music for a few reasons lately. I
recently spoke to a colleague about working on a music book project this
summer. I’m terribly excited by the prospect. The book has to do with
widowhood, so it feels perfect in many ways. I’ve also been reading Facebook posts by
friends who share the “top 10 albums that have stayed with you over the years.”
I don’t think I could narrow it to ten, but I’m thinking and trying.
Then I had a conversation with another friend about the
music of our childhoods, during which we discovered a mutual love of Neil
Diamond that comes from the fact that our parents loved and played Diamond’s
music when we were young. Like the memory of cruising to the zoo, I can put on
Diamond’s Holly Holy or Cracklin’ Rose and, with the first strums of the guitar, I’m immediately taken back to springtime
Saturday mornings, doing chores while these records played on the turntable
that was built into a stereo cabinet the size of a VW bus that occupied most of
our living room. The windows were cranked open to let fresh air in and the
volume was cranked up as loudly as my mother felt was respectable.
Having now lost my mom just over a year ago, I’m also reminded
of the several times that my sister and I took her to see Neil perform in
concert. Mom worked on an assembly line for GM, cutting and sewing the fabric
that would become car interiors. She worked forty-plus-hour-weeks and then
worked another several hours each night with household duties. We always had a
full meal for dinner (which we always ate together), and the house was pristine. My memories of Mom at those concerts, standing with us, swaying to
the music, her arms raised in the air, are now some of the few times I really
remember her feeling and acting carefree. They are powerful memories that
sustain, and that come back to me readily after the first notes.
Oliver Sacks’ fascinating book Musicophelia, and Daniel Levitan’s equally
interesting Your Brain on Music, both address the idea of music from a
neurological perspective, including how we remember music, from individual
notes to complete symphonies. For me, music is so closely tied to memories that—with
older songs especially—the two seem intertwined in my brain. That has certainly
been the case where music and memories of Kevin are concerned. I can’t consider
our meeting, dating, marriage, or the time of his illness without also thinking
of the music we shared.
We first connected over our mutual interest in the Clash. He
borrowed albums I had purchased from the import bin at Dearborn Music and told
me about going to their concert at a high school gym in Grand Rapids. When we
moved in together a year later, the amount of duplication in our record collection
spoke of two people with very similar tastes. They differed at some points, and
Kevin quickly learned to accommodate my enduring love of the music of Queen and
other 70’s rock bands that he had come to disdain. We also attended concerts
together, some twenty or so over the years: everyone from Echo and the
Bunnymen, to the Rolling Stones, to David Bowie, U2, and Bob Dylan. We made mix
tapes for each other and for our kids—the first one for our son made while he was
still in utero. We hung out at record stores like Schoolkids and Wazoo. We visited
Johnny Cash’s grave and the bronze statue memorial to Freddie Mercury in
Montreaux, Switzerland. We named our first puppy Mustang Sally.
So when Kevin was diagnosed with cancer and had to undergo
treatment, it wasn’t surprising that music was part of that as well. At first,
he made his own mix lists on his iPod, some songs soothing, some closer to
battle cries. The radiology technicians plugged his iPod into their speaker
system while he lay on the table bolted in under plastic mesh, and he put his
headphones on as soon as he walked into the chemotherapy room. For round two,
he solicited music from the many friends who read his carepages blog, agreeing
to add anything that was suggested, even country songs and rap. The suggestions
poured in and the list--over 200 songs which are still on our iTunes program--include Wonderful World by Louis Armstrong, Bill Withers’ Lean on Me, Mama Said
Knock You Out by LL Cool J, a very fast version of Amazing Grace by the
Dropkick Murphys, and Beethoven’s Symphony #3 in E Flat, Op.55, Eroica.
Kevin absolutely loved this list. It connected him to
everyone that was out there supporting him during his worst days. The music
cheered him, strengthened him, calmed him, and gave him nourishment as certainly as any food. He
listened to these songs as the anesthesia took effect before his two spinal cord
surgeries. He spent forty-five days in the hospital before his last two weeks
at home. Every night, the last thing I did before leaving for home, or curling
up on the chair next to him if I could stay overnight, was to put his earphones
on and turn the iPod to “Chemo List #2.” The drugs knocked him out each night,
but the music allowed him to sleep.
He told me that he had two favorites on the list: Dylan’s
Ring Them Bells and Three Dog Night’s Shambalah. It was the closest thing we had
to time spent planning a memorial service—I took that conversation as an
indication that he wanted those songs played in remembrance. They were, along
with several others. It was a music-filled service, as he would have wanted.
Of course I could not listen to this playlist, or even one
or two of the songs on it, for the past three years. It’s still difficult to
listen to Ring Them Bells or Shambala or Wonderful Life or Joe Strummer’s version
of Redemption Song. I wondered sometimes, if those songs were lost to me
forever, their tunes and words just too painful to have in my life. I knew my relationship to music was forever changed. I wasn’t
sure how I felt about that. So much of what we shared is just all around me, waiting for me to deal with on my own without any choice. But songs can be turned off or avoided altogether. It has taken some time, but I'm gradually putting the headphones back on and making music a part of my everyday.
I've managed, I suppose, to come to a different place. Now, when "Kevin songs" pop up on my random playlist, I simply let the tears come and embrace the time as a few minutes that I can spend in the comfort of memories.
I've managed, I suppose, to come to a different place. Now, when "Kevin songs" pop up on my random playlist, I simply let the tears come and embrace the time as a few minutes that I can spend in the comfort of memories.
And I know that the memories will always come along with the
music. Someday I’ll put the music on and dance, but for now it’s ok to just sit
and listen.
share this on » |
{Facebook} |
{Twitter} |
{Pinterest} |
I'm beginning to think everyone's mom loved Neil Diamond....I know mine sure did.
ReplyDelete