This morning I was in the mood for some music when I
arrived at the office. No one had arrived yet, so I could play it as loud as I
wanted. I have an iPod with several hundred songs on it attached to a Bose
sound dock thing sitting on the top of a filing cabinet. I pressed “shuffle”
and sat down to start on some paperwork.
I have a rather eclectic musical collection since
there are very few styles of music that have no appeal for me. The first tune
that popped up was “Can’t Buy Me Love” by the Beatles, then came a Lenny Kravitz
tune, followed by a Felix Mendelssohn piece capped off by “When the House is
a-Rockin’, Don’t Bother Knockin’” by Stevie Ray Vaughn.
Then a song played that stopped me in my tracks.
Considering everything I’ve been through recently, the lyrics of this song
seemed meant for me and me alone. Frank Sinatra teamed up with the Count Basie
Orchestra in 1962 to record an album of American standards. Among them was the
Johnny Burke classic, “Pennies from Heaven”. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7z6vVv9MbMg&feature=player_detailpage&list=PLB6849D6754C22732
I didn’t have to “google” the lyrics for this blog,
because Frank’s diction is perfect. It’s a song about looking on the bright
side of life, turning lemons into lemonade, the sort of lyric that no one
writes anymore because it’s considered too corny. We would rather hear tales of
woe from which the writer is a hopeless victim. Frank sings,
“Every time it rains, it rains pennies from heaven.
Don’t you know each cloud contains
pennies from heaven?
You’ll find your fortune falling all
over the town.
Be sure that your umbrella is upside
down.
Trade them for a package of sunshine
and flowers
If you want the things you love you’ve
got to have showers.
So, if you hear it thunder don’t
run under a tree,
There’ll be pennies from
heaven for you and me.”
Then the Count’s amazing band rips
through a tight riff, with Basie’s slick, understated piano keeping rhythm. This
51 year old virtuoso performance was just for me this morning. Thanks guys.
No comments:
Post a Comment