As I explained shortly after starting this blog a few years ago, I took its name from a line in Homer and Langley, the latest novel by E.L. Doctorow. I sometimes think about other things in that book, themes and ideas, short passages, and some longer excerpts. Here is a dialog between the novel's two title characters, eccentric but very intelligent brothers. They are discussing popular music:
There is art to the lyrics too, Langley said. The lyrics are almost more interesting than the music. They boil down human emotions to their essence. And they touch on profound things.
Like what?
Well take that song where he says sometimes he's happy sometimes he's blue.
"...my disposition depends on you."
Yes, well what if she's saying the same thing at the same time?
Who?
The girl, I mean if her disposition depends on him at the same time his disposition depends on her? In that case one of two circumstances would prevail: either they would lock together in an unchanging state of sadness or happiness, in which case life would be unendurable--
That's not good. And what's the other circumstance?
The other circumstance is that if they began disynchronously, and each was dependent on the other's disposition, there would be this constantly alternating mood current running between them, from misery to happiness and back again, so that they would each be driven mad by the emotional instability of the other.
I see.
For your entertainment, here is the song to which he refers:
I find this idea of Langley's interesting and have often pondered the concept of intertwined emotions in a close human relationship. It's like the couple that can't decide how to proceed because one says, "I want to do whatever you want to do," and the other says, "Well I want to do whatever you want to do!" and so they get nowhere; they're stuck.
Mrs. Christensen and I experience emotional ebb and flow. Maybe we're both overly sensitive (I'm pretty sure I am). It seems we can trigger some pretty dramatic mood swings in one another with just a few ill-chosen words. Is this unhealthy? I don't think so. Difficult to deal with, yes. But I think it is evidence of how much we love and care for each other. That, and proof that we're both very human.
I sometimes wish I could settle into a stable, independent emotional state, unalterable by others' words and actions. But I think that would cause me to become cold, uncaring. It is right for us to influence and be influenced by others, especially those we're closest to. And it doesn't necessarily drive us mad, provided we work at being happy and helping others to do the same. I'm unintimidated by many things, but the mood of my woman is not one of them. My disposition depends on her.
Leave a comment if you liked this post. If you did not like it, definitely leave a comment. If you are indifferent toward it, but you have a good chowder recipe to share, go ahead and... okay, you know where I'm going with this. I heart comments.
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Friday, April 5, 2013
Saturday, November 26, 2011
I'm Not Sure How I Feel About This Song
My good buddy El Guapo chose
Arlo Guthrie’s “Alice’s Restaurant” for his music of the day yesterday, and I
enjoyed watching/listening to it on YouTube. It’s an old favorite that I
haven’t heard in a long time. It got me thinking about something I started
writing recently, intending to post it here. So I went back and finished…
I have some John Denver on my iPod, and
earlier this week his song “Rhymes and Reasons” came up in the shuffle as I
listened while walking to class. Musically, it’s a pretty typical song for him,
with a nice, simple melody, straightforward arrangement, and his pure, unique
vocal style.
I like John Denver, and his music always brings memories of my youth, because my parents had several of his
albums on vinyl. (We didn’t own any CDs at the time, mainly because they
weren’t invented yet.) I also like Cat Stevens, Gordon Lightfoot, James Taylor,
and (probably most of all) Willie Nelson.
As I’ve said before, I DO NOT like
flower power, make-love-not-war, we’re-all-children-of-mother-earth, pot
smoking hippie music. (Let me interject here that I get a kick out of “Alice’s
Restaurant” in spite of its overt anti-war theme. I find it original, thought
provoking, and very funny.) Anyway, when I listened closely to the lyrics of “Rhymes
and Reasons” for the first time the other day, I was a little troubled.
Here is its chorus (after the first
verse):
For the children and the flowers are my
sisters and my brothers,
Their laughter and their loveliness
could clear a cloudy day.
Like the music of the mountains and the
colors of the rainbow,
They’re a promise of the future and a
blessing for today.
Following the next verse, the first two
lines are unchanged, but the third and fourth lines go as follows:
And the song that I am singing is a
prayer to nonbelievers:
'Come and stand beside us; we can find
a better way.'
Some things I am absolutely certain of.
For example, I never doubt the following:
- Raspberries are delicious. Tomatoes, not so much. Mushrooms are not meant for human consumption—think about it, they’re FUNGUS!
- B-52s have always been awesome and always will be. I'm talking about both the USAF bomber and the band from Georgia, but not the "beehive" hairdo favored by the women in the band, which is sometimes called the B-52, apparently because of its resemblance to the bomber's bulbous form. Pretty straightforward, huh?
- Spring is best. Winter is miserable. Summer is fun but often intolerable. Fall is okay but kind of depressing.
- Ewan McGregor is cool incarnate. If he and Catherine Zeta Jones were to mate, their child would be so perfect, mortals could not stand in its presence. (It’s too bad Ewan took his friend Charlie along instead of me to ride motorcycles around the world. I would have been a perfect candidate for that.)
- Anyone who gets deeply, emotionally involved with any professional sports team is a moron, maybe even a bozo.
- The Jaguar XKE is the most beautiful car ever conceived by man.
- Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons, is a genius.
On some other stuff, I’m ambivalent. “Rhymes and Reasons” falls into that category. I want to like
it, but I can’t fully. I kind of like it when I listen passively and ignore the
lyrics.
Don’t ask me to explain. "Rhymes and Reasons" is musically superior to “Alice’s Restaurant” by any technical measure.
Denver’s vocal talent exceeded Guthrie’s. Lyrically, “Rhymes and Reasons” is by
far the less revolutionary of the two songs. Applying objective standards, I
should despise “Alice’s Restaurant.” But artistic tastes are subjective. We
cannot reduce aesthetics to a collection of absolute, black-or-white judgments or
empirical quantification. In the words of Ulysses Everett McGill (played by
George Clooney) in O Brother, Where Art Thou, “It’s a fool that looks for logic
in the chambers of the human heart.” Amen to that.
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