For once, Mother decided to take the day off and just be Susan. We spent time with our kids and grandkids on Saturday (Aimee had to work on Sunday), because we had an ulterior motive......time alone...outdoors...on a beautiful day!
David, after many years of thinking and planning and thinking some more, has decided to pursue his dream hobby....fly-fishing. He has been studying the local streams known to have abundant trout populations. How nice that one of them is in our most favorite area in Ohio--the Hocking Hills region.
We started early and packed a picnic lunch, including treats for Lucy. Then we filled the SUV with fishing equipment, a folding chair and a book for me, sunglasses and hats, and the dog, and headed for the hills. I'll let the pictures tell the rest of the story.
After David fished again in the afternoon, we were both tired and hungry and it was time to head home to our own little patch of woods. It was a good day.
By the time I discovered Eva Cassidy, she had already succumbed to cancer at the age of 33. She left behind a "heartbreaking work of staggering genius" in her diverse musical recordings, but few people know that she was an accomplished artist as well. You can see some of her work here. But music was her true love.
Eva's voice could be soft and tender when she was singing a ballad, or rough and throaty when she sang the blues. And lordy, could she sing the blues! Her version of Billie Holliday's "You've Changed" grabs you and won't let you go. And jazz...when she sings "Fever", you'll forget you ever heard it by Peggy Lee. She recorded signature songs of other artists and made them her own. "Imagine" never sounded more hopeful, and although I love Sting's "Fields of Gold", when Eva sings the words, she transcends the original. Eva covered every music genre...jazz, blues, country, folk, gospel, pop standards...and did them all in a way that was uniquely hers.
What is truly tragic about Eva's story is the fact that all of her success came posthumously. She had a fairly large following in her native Washington, D.C. and surrounding areas where she played the blues clubs and small venues, but she never enjoyed worldwide fame and fortune. She would have been so happy to know that some of the great singers and songwriters whose music she loved and performed would come to love and respect her work in return.
It was said that Eva was never able to get a major recording contract because her music couldn't be categorized and pigeonholed. Her choices in music were too varied. To me that just shows that she had a love and understanding of all music, not just one genre.
Many people who know Eva's music choose "Over the Rainbow" as their favorite Eva Cassidy song. It is a hauntingly beautiful rendition, there's no doubt, but this is my favorite, for a personal reason:
This song was sung for Joshua on May 6, 2006, by his dad's cousin Mark, in his beautiful tenor voice.
"The river is within us, the sea is all about us . . ."
— T S Eliot (Four Quartets)
How does the river run within the sea?
Like the coyote, bounding deer-like
in the soy bean field last evening,
and behind him the honeyed sun
a young girl’s hair, cascading among
the trees. He distanced gradually
from the road we cycled, his body
now disappearing beneath
the shrubby, wavy green, now
reappearing in the bob and bounce
of a cork retreating from shore. Like
a dream. Like a secret stone that leaps
as the sun sets, an opal, a tiger’s eye,
to the horizon, until he and the sun are one.
~ruth mowry~
Our Lauren's Life
Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.
~President Dwight David Eisenhower
Websites of Mass Distraction--what keeps me from the cleaning