By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 11.27.02 @ 12:02AM
How can one write about Washington when Bobby Short is playing at the Carlyle?
Washington -- Are you aware that the hard-charging editor and
founder of the red-hot New York Sun goads me incessantly
to "write about Washington"? I say the "red-hot" Sun
because its circulation is -- by my calculations -- about a third
higher than it was supposed to be at this point in its infancy. I
say Lipsky "goads me incessantly" because he does. I am glad to
satisfy him, but there are limits. At times our nation's capital is
too sad a setting for my cheery spirits. Now is one of those times.
There is grief and dismay in Washington, especially on Capitol
Hill. The sight of receding Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle's
decline into manic mulligrubs is too painful. Consequently I fled
our nation's capital late last week for our nation's apple.
As New Yorkers know, the city suffered such heavy rains late
last week that born-again Christians were building arks on their
rooftops. I went through two umbrellas. Still, the rain did not
prevent me from having a very good time. Manhattan is swelling with
tourists. Shoppers are beginning their seasonal debauch. And Bobby
Short was playing at the Carlyle. I had never seen Bobby Short. So
late on Saturday night I popped in. There under a cool white light
in the cozy Café Carlyle the crooner was in full song,
accompanied by a small orchestra -- smooth and classy. It was late
by the time I arrived, but Short was a study in energy and a style
that comes from long and thoughtful consideration of his material.
The material is some of the best that American songwriters have
offered: Irving Berlin, the Gershwins, Cole Porter, Johnny Mercer.
Those gents could turn out a tune. The tunes may not be up to
Schubert and Brahms, but then there is the matter of the Americans'
lyrics. Schubert and Brahms could not match the Americans' lyrics.
They had to resort to eighteenth century poets; I prefer the
American songwriters and their urbane wit.
In the 1920s and on into the 1950s the best American songwriters
created popular music that was elegant, witty, sophisticated, and
almost always free of the weird hang-ups that haunt pop music today
and, come to think of it, Tom Daschle. As Short sang from his
gravelly voice (is it an upscale version of Louis Armstrong's famed
instrument?) songs of the Gershwins and Berlin I heard no
proclamations of anger or angst, no infantile complaints, nothing
about "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" or the fate of rain forests and
whooping cranes.
Short sings from behind a piano. His moods swing from cheerful
to pensive -- remember I was only there an hour. He talks and jokes
to the audience and the orchestra. His bearing is dignified and he
uses what appear to be very large hands to sculpt images in the air
that somehow are inspired from the music and lyrics.
Even while watching Short perform, however, I could not
completely free myself of Lipsky's importunities. Politics -- he
wants politics from me. Well, let me return to the urbanity of the
songs Short sings from decades past and to the amazing Daschle's
diatribes down in Washington. As all the world must know by now,
last week Daschle somehow implicated Rush Limbaugh in the
Democrats' midterm defeat. Grislier still, Daschle seemed to be
saying that Limbaugh's raillery about "liberals" was inciting
violence against liberal politicians from Limbaugh's audience. How
does one account for such bizarre charges?
My answer is that Daschle, long ago, became a captive to the
grievances, complaints, and hysterical false prophecies of his
political base, liberalism. Long ago the coherent body of ideas
about labor unions, welfare, and social engineering that made up
the New Deal and liberalism in general cracked up into all the
present special interests, for instance, environmentalism,
feminism, and identity politics. Having spent so much of his life
with these cranks, Daschle is particularly susceptible to their
shrieks. Thus the other day he might have sounded absurd to the
majority of American voters just as he sounded absurd to them
during the midterm elections. But in the company he keeps he is not
absurd. He is a male version of Barbra Streisand. He is Bob Dylan
with a bath. These unhappy people have created an artificial world
for themselves and it is not the kind of thing Irving Berlin wrote
songs about. It is more like the world of the recently deceased
Kurt Cobain. I do not know if you noticed it, but a Wall Street
Journal reviewer of Cobain's memoirs pointed out that in
Cobain's astonishingly profane and angry ranting the only
politician he had a good word for was Jimmy Carter. It figures.
topics:
Environment, Energy, Unions