My unspoken Mission Statement for this Blog is to speak what’s on my mind and what’s on my mind is whatever the day brings me. No surprise to any reader that I’ve been heavily focused on trying to make sense of and shed light on the current political situation. Between the No Kings Rally, visits to two Civil Rights Museum, posts I’m seeing on Facebook, it makes perfect sense that the last seven posts or so are heavily weighted to commentary on those issues.
But here I’ll put my traveling music teacher hat back on and close out March with a few personal reflections.
Accenting the traveling, I find myself loving the stimuli of going to new places and seeing new things and meeting new people in a kind of Travels with Charley road trip in blessed solitude. (No dog by my side). The freedom to go where I want when I want and the extra perk of great weather, friendly people, the green trees of Springtime and the rolling Mississippi River.
Accenting the teacher, it is sheer joy to work with 350 children doing an arrangement I created—without me having to teach it to them! Not that I wouldn’t have loved that, but something fun about having them prepared by other teachers and I just get to come in like the Lone Ranger and put on the finishing touches. Equally delightful to sit through rehearsals of the other eight pieces they’re preparing for tomorrow’s concert with an audience of over a thousand people. This is the Memphis Annual All-City Concert where four or so 5th graders from each of the 96 local public schools come together to perform. An impressive undertaking that has been going on every year since 1968!! And to top it off, well over 50% of the kids and many of the teachers are Black Americans. This is simply unheard of in the Orff world within which I travel.
Accenting the music, I went last night with my friend/ Orff colleague Elisabeth to the Blues City Café on Beales Street and heard some rockin’ R & B blues. Of course I did! It’s Memphis! The piano player played like Jerry Lee Lewis and I just found out today that he just bought a house where Jerry Lee Lewis lived! That’s one way to absorb the style! It was a great band and Elisabeth and I even danced a little bit. Later, she told me that she’s been going two or three times a week and she discovered that her unrelenting symptoms of Long Covid mysteriously disappeared. Alongside some other health challenges she had. Talk about direct testimony of the healing power of music! Wish I knew that story before sending my Humanitarian Musician book off to the printer!
Today after rehearsal, we went to the Stax Records Museum, another super-impressive exhibit honoring both the record company and its recording artists— Sam Cooke, Booker T. and the MG’s, Otis Redding, Isaac Hayes, the Staple Singers, Albert King and more. Once again, the supreme and maddening irony that the people who virtually created the American musical landscape through which so many of us have driven and walked and danced and lived and loved are the same people with a forever target on their back tattooed on by the hateful half of our divided nation.
And so ends this glorious month of March that began with my Flowers and Thorns post. Remember that calendar quote? The reminder that I have the power to choose a path of flowers or thorns? Not in a naïve way— the world will and has and will continue to scratch me with its sharp pointed thorns, but I can choose how to either sidestep them or endure the pricks while smelling the flowers. I’m happy to report that in these last 31 days, I more or less have been able to do so.
Happy upcoming April to all!



