Showing posts with label creed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creed. Show all posts
Friday, September 9, 2011
The World Did Not Stop Turning
It never really does, does it?
If I was asked what my most powerful memory of September 11, 2001 is, I would say, it's not a memory. It's that the world changed, while I was just living in it.
I was born long after Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. My parents knew it, though.
I was in the third grade when President Kennedy was assassinated. They used to always ask, where were you when the President was killed? They don't really ask that anymore. Maybe it's because most of the population wasn't even alive back then, so the question would be moot. They'd probably look at you quizzically and ask, "President Kennedy? Was he the one after Lincoln?" (They don't quite teach US history as comprehensively as they used to).
But maybe it's because something much more horrific has overtaken that moment.
You see, when President Kennedy was shot, everybody was horrified, but they didn't think, my life is in danger! I could be next! That would be silly. He was the President; we were just "people".
On September 11, 2001, our blase attitude toward random violence was shattered. "Oh yea, those things happen overseas. Too bad for them, I guess", were things we couldn't utter anymore.
Tom Burnett was just trying to get home to his family. It was an average day; an average business trip.
The traders at Cantor Fitzgerald were just trying to get through their eight hours. Another long slog; just like every one of us endures every day.
Average, everyday stuff. We're preoccupied; thinking about what we have to do when our shift is over; looking forward to spending a few hours with our families. Writing out a shopping list. Sharing a laugh with our co-workers.
Then, in an instant; less than an instant, really, everything changes.
No, the world didn't stop turning that day. It would have been better if it had.
I think about the people who found themselves in unspeakable circumstances. Tom Burnett and his fellow passengers knew that they were going to die. Yet, they fought it to the end. We, as humans, have to do something. We're not going to sit and cry and accept that this is our fate. This thing, that was thrust upon us, as if we didn't have any say in the matter.
Those firemen knew; yes, they knew, that they were trudging up the stairs to face an inevitable conclusion. Yet, they still did it. They were going to fight this thing until the end.
The thing about September 11, 2001 is, we are stronger than you (al qaeda) can even comprehend. We don't go down without a fight.
And the world did not stop turning.
You may, or may not, remember the songs from that year, 2001. Some of them are prescient, in retrospect. Some of them are sad, even if we're not sure why they're sad. Maybe it's just that 2001 was a sad year.
Maybe they speak to us now in a way that they never did before that day. I don't know, but here are some of the top songs of the year 2001. You can make your own judgment. Or you can just relive the year in song. Whatever you choose.
(I apologize for the ads attached to some of these videos, but I have no control over that. I wish I did.)
And let's talk about country. We're more straight-forward in the country world. You don't have to wonder what the song means. It means what it means.
I find that these songs are very fitting:
Thanks, Alan. Somebody had to say it:
As much as I can get on board with Alan's song, THIS ONE is the song that sums up September 11, 2001 for me:
When you get the choice to sit it out or dance, I hope you dance.
Cuz the world never does stop turning.
Friday, August 5, 2011
The Grass Roots
The lead singer of the Grass Roots, Rob Grill, passed away on July 11. We're losing a lot of people, and I'm pretty ticked about it.
The Grass Roots was the first concert I ever attended. I believe it was nineteen seventy somethingorother.
Before I ever saw the Grass Roots in concert, I was hooked on this song:
I wore out this single (Dunhill Records - released in 1967 - black label) on my little portable record player with the one really high quality built-in speaker. And to think I'd only heard it on the radio. I hadn't even gotten the full formal presentation, with the guys wearing their jaunty neckerchiefs.
You will notice, also, that a very young Creed Bratton is in this clip. Yes, that Creed.
But getting back to Rob Grill. He was sexy, with or without the neckerchief, and he was a really good singer.
One thing I'd never noticed (or I guess, hadn't even known, until watching these videos) was that the lead vocals on the group's songs were traded off. I'd always thought it was just Rob. Interesting and really unusual.
The Grass Roots had so many great songs; songs that you've probably forgotten, but you shouldn't.
Let's remember them, shall we?
Sorry for the terrible quality of this next video, but on the plus side, you get to be frightened by the sight of Kenny Rogers, with his tinted aviator glasses:
To me, it's sort of hard to reconcile the Rob Grill of 1967 - 1972 with someone who has now passed away. When you watch him in these clips, you can tell he was a nice person. And I guess that's what really matters.
But, oh, the music.
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