| December 3, 2008 at 18:38:44 Promoted to column top on 12/3/08: by muservin Page 1 of 1 page(s) |
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Odetta Holmes. Odetta, "Little Ode." What a sly introduction to a voice that rocked my world in earlier days, and always. I don't mean "rocked" or "rolled," but literally rocked its foundations, when I first heard her sing.
Odetta in 2006, from Wiki
She sang of migrant workers, "I come with the dust.....and I'm gone with the wind..." I still can feel, only remembering, the intensity of soul in her delivery of those lines, and the shudder that ran through me. One, I somehow knew I didn't entirely have the right to call my own.
Somehow, someday, I must make this my own, if I ever hoped to truly belong up there. Must. Yes, I felt that very thing, at the very first hum of her voice, like a natality, like something new under the sun of my own life, until I realized that it belonged to a different time, and a much harder truth and place than I myself had then known.
Humbling, but lighting a fire in me, and also under me.
She said last year, when asked where her voice came from, "Slavery."
That was It. That was what I had heard, at the bottom of that dark well of a voice.
But that is the power and grace and majesty of music - true music, like hers - to give to others, even the least deserving, a grace, and an "ease" of access to higher places. Like Auden wrote in his great poem, The Composer:
"You alone, alone O imaginary song
Are unable to call an existence wrong.
And pour out your forgiveness like a wine."
Well, I won't say more than that but this: we learn that she had hoped to sing at Obama's Inauguration. She is, after all, the Muse of American Democracy, in many provable ways like her rendition of "We Shall Overcome" at the March on Washington, 1963. And the testament of Rosa Parks when asked what songs meant the most to her, "Every song that Odetta sings."
I remember St. Therese of Lisieux's famous promise, as she died at 24: "I will spend my Heaven doing good on Earth."
I do believe Odetta will spend her Heaven still singing all the slaves on their road home to Freedom.
And also I do believe that's all of us, for all those who can hear her still.
And she will be there, she will show at the Inauguration, as her first song heard from that great Ways away. We'll be listening.
That is the deeper meaning I derive, from her ever blazing Song.
www.nativeintelligenceagency.blogspot.com
John Ervin is a freelance writer who has written extensively about voting fraud and corporate crimes and he has been the radio guest of Jim Hogue at www.wgdr.org, where he also made his solo debut, a year ago Bastille Day, singing all 7 verses of La Marseillaise. As a member of the American Federation of Musicians (local 4) he has performed as a concert pianist for the French; and he has also recorded for EMI and in broadcasts for the BBC and with the Cleveland Orchestra as a member of its choruses. Currently he lives "at large" in Southern California, happily admitting a great debt in many of these things to his most special Patron, Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, "The Lily of the Mohawks."










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