By Dave Shiflett on 7.19.02 @ 12:04AM
Music fills the gap between life and death.
It is good news that Mozart's "Requiem" will be played around
the world on Sept. 11 as a memorial to the victims of the infamous
sneak attacks. As one news account tells us, a "Rolling Requiem of
individual worldwide performances will begin at the international
date line and will move from time zone to time zone, with each
Mozart Requiem performance starting at 8:46 a.m. local time (the
moment of the first attack on the World Trade Center)." All told
the show will go on 24 hours.
This is good not only because the "Requiem" is a magnificent
piece of music -- one that can truly be called life-enhancing. The
fact is, Mozart rarely gets his due these days. He must constantly
do battle with lightly talented rock, folk, pop, rap and country
stars, and rarely comes out on top. That the organizers of this
event could have gotten Michael Jackson for a song but nonetheless
chose a true Maestro is encouraging. Let's hope it boosts his
record sales and inspires a couple thousand people to begin piano
lessons. If this keeps up he may one day make it to MTV.
Organizers are also correct in pointing out that music has a
unique ability to provide solace to us poor humans -- even music
composed by those who operate at the sub-genius level. This past
Sunday, for example, a group of local musicians gathered to
remember one of our former pals, Al Reynolds, whom I wrote about
last
year. Al was a mandolin player whose instrument outlasted his
liver, and unfortunately the liver that replaced the original, and
whose final days in the hospital ruined his family's finances. So
we put on a benefit to raise funds for his widow and daughter, and
perhaps to comfort ourselves in his loss.
We were greatly comforted. This should come as no surprise.
Musicians, as is well known, often have advanced talents in areas
besides music. Many have struggled in the early years and as a
result can smell a pack of nabs locked in a car parked half a block
away. And when it comes to comfort they rarely turn it down,
whether comfort comes in one-ounce shots, 12-ounce longnecks, or
imperial pints. This may explain why Al's benefit was conducted at
a brew pub -- a very large brew pub -- which was jammed to the
rafters.
We played some of the songs Al loved, and more than a few of us
noted, as the afternoon wore on (this was a 10-hour event), that if
one's death plunges his family into insolvency, and this in turn
brings hundreds of people together for an afternoon of conviviality
and celebration, then perhaps life is not in vain. We often toasted
Al's life, and while the uncharitable might suggest that too much
toasting reflects a character flaw, the opposite is true. Musicians
love life and reverentially offer toasts to its many blessings: a
new song, pleasant weather, the conquest of polio. Indeed the list
is endless.
We offered not only toasts, but toasted offerings. One of the
most toastworthy of those came when a local star stopped his set
and held up two Hanover tomatoes (the filet mignon of Tomatodom).
Suddenly, he began to auction the vegetables. After fierce bidding
they were taken by a heavily tattooed gentleman at the bar, for $40
-- a nice addition to the Al fund which has raised several thousand
for the family. So enthusiastic were the resulting toasts that some
celebrants approached the brink of imbecility.
Playing songs associated with a lost friend is a type of
conversation with the dead, and more than one player suggested the
presence of Al's spirit, even though these particular players are
not known to entertain much belief in the great hereafter. Others
of us found ourselves wondering how Al might have reacted to
various current events here on Earth. He wouldn't be surprised that
crazed Muslims had flown planes into the Towers and Pentagon. "What
do you expect?" one could hear him say. "I wouldn't be surprised if
a few of them showed up here, had a few beers, then blew us all
up."
Being a good blue collar guy (a union electrician) he would have
similar scorn for the participants in corporate scandals. He would
surely assume Martha Stewart is guilty as charged, and Dubya, too.
The demise of Kmart might have pleased him, for he was a great
friend of the small town merchant. Yet as a determined foe of
Wal-Mart (he opposed the building of one near his home), he would
have been dismayed over any boost received from by a competitor's
collapse.
So Al, I could hear myself asking, "where do you stand on that
Augusta golf club's no-women members policy?" After a brief moment:
"Those guys just want a place to escape from their wives for the
afternoon. Something wrong with that? But I don't give a damn
because they're just a bunch of rich bastards. Strafe them and
their ugly critics, too."
We'll no doubt hold another benefit next year, though as has
been pointed out there's always a chance that another of our circle
will join Al in that great picking parlor in the sky. Indeed, life
being what it is, we'll all end up there one day or another (this
is the optimistic view). Until then, we'll listen to Mozart and
wait for Michael Jackson to start doing promos for Clorox. Here's
to you, Al, and leave the porch light on.
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