MUSIC MONDAYS


Dear friend
 
National anthems are intended to serve as rallying points and unifiers. But often, they become earworms, with most of the words lost to the emotional moment of breaking into song. We respond to the thrill of joining our voices in unison with others and overlook the words. 
As to today’s selection of music  - There are multitudes of contained within one nation. The outsiders. The outlaws. The weavers.  Strength comes from braiding together strands that can withstand stress.   

I hope you enjoy spending a little time with each.


Warmly,


Gabriele Fiorentino 
President, 
The Dranoff 2 Piano Foundation
Piano Slam



FANTASY ON PORGY AND BESS



METAMORPHOSIS

Philip Glass


A NEW NATIONAL ANTHEM



The truth is, I’ve never cared for the National
Anthem. If you think about it, it’s not a good
song. Too high for most of us with “the rockets
red glare” and then there are the bombs.
(Always, always, there is war and bombs.)
Once, I sang it at homecoming and threw
even the tenacious high school band off key.
But the song didn’t mean anything, just a call
to the field, something to get through before
the pummeling of youth. And what of the stanzas
we never sing, the third that mentions “no refuge
could save the hireling and the slave”? Perhaps,
the truth is, every song of this country
has an unsung third stanza, something brutal
snaking underneath us as we blindly sing
the high notes with a beer sloshing in the stands
hoping our team wins. Don’t get me wrong, I do
like the flag, how it undulates in the wind
like water, elemental, and best when it’s humbled,
brought to its knees, clung to by someone who
has lost everything, when it’s not a weapon,
when it flickers, when it folds up so perfectly
you can keep it until it’s needed, until you can
love it again, until the song in your mouth feels
like sustenance, a song where the notes are sung
by even the ageless woods, the short-grass plains,
the Red River Gorge, the fistful of land left
unpoisoned, that song that’s our birthright,
that’s sung in silence when it’s too hard to go on,
that sounds like someone’s rough fingers weaving
into another’s, that sounds like a match being lit
in an endless cave, the song that says my bones
are your bones, and your bones are my bones,
and isn’t that enough?

A little extra for you

THE RED RIVER GORGE

An American ballad, performed by Joanna Jones

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