Tag: singer-songwriter-music

  • Beautiful Son

    Beautiful Son

    When my son was born, he had colic. It was the summer of 1998. I was teaching full time and in Grad School getting my MA in English. If you know anything about colic, you know that he cried. All the time. Nonstop. But you couldn’t get upset at him because you knew the poor guy felt terrible. For some reason though, he bonded with me. If he was crying, I would take him, do my “don’t cry little bubbie” walking bounce, and he would stop. It worked every single time. Even when his mom tried to take him in the middle of the night, he would cry and cry. I would finally come get him and he would stop. There was no sense in both of us losing sleep.

    I don’t know how I made it that Fall semester. I must have looked like walking death with the lack of sleep I had for those first few months of his life, but looking back now, I wouldn’t trade those late nights for anything. The older I get, the more my mind goes back to those kinds of things: the beauty of watching your little girl sing and dance to her favorite Disney Sing Alongs, playing video games in the basement with your son for hours on end, or watching your young wife walk ahead of you on the beach with both kids on either side hand in hand. Those and a thousand other memories live on in my mind and come back now to make me smile, admittedly a little sadly, but not in a bad way. They come back to remind me of the life I’ve lived and that’s how I know I’ve been blessed.

    But that’s what made Mr. DeMarco’s story break my heart. People often ask me which was the hardest story to write or which one was the saddest. It’s a toss up between three of them and Mr. Demarco gets one of the votes. He was a New York transplant who had an amazing New York accent. I met him because he looked my company up on the internet. Sadly, he had recently buried his own son who had passed from cancer and he was looking to donate the hospital bed. When I met him at his son’s apartment a few days later you could tell he was hurting. But for some reason, donating that bed was something he needed to do. We loaded it into my truck and I made a promise to him that it would go to a good cause. 

    When it came time to write that story and pick a song for Mr. Demarco’s chapter, I chose the song “Beautiful Son” by Without Gravity. It’s a gorgeous acoustic guitar driven song that captures a magical sense of ethereal melancholy, perfect for listening to during a low key drive on a lazy afternoon. As I wrote in my book If We Never Meet Again, “When I added it to my favorite song playlist years ago it was because it reminded me of my own son. But now when I listen to it I also think about Mr. Demarco and his son I never knew.  

    Where have you gone? 

    What have you done,

    My beautiful son. 

    Where have you gone? 

    What have I done?

    I used to listen to it and think about my own son growing up, not that it was his fault. It’s just what happened but there was always a tint of sadness to it for me. But now when I listen to it I can only see that sorrowful father wondering what he was going to do.”

    The last time I talked to Mr. Demarco, I asked if he was gonna be alright. He said “Yeah. I’ll get there. Someday.” I concluded the chapter with “At some point, we all have to deal with loss. There’s no right way or wrong way and it’s different for everyone. For some reason, making sure that bed was used again and not just tossed away meant something to him and I’m glad I could help with that. I can only hope in some small way it helped that man begin to cope and that someday he does get there, wherever that may be.”

    Honestly, I can’t imagine the pain of burying your own child. I know people who have had to do it and it breaks my heart for them. I just pray that the good and beautiful memories of those children eventually overtake the long lasting horror of losing them. 

    Someone once said that grief is the price we pay for love. I truly wish it wasn’t. But if we live long enough, we will all face that reality. Do me a favor. If you know someone who has gone through something like Mr. Demarco did, reach out to them and let them know you are thinking about them. You never know what difference it might make for them today. 

  • “Coastline”

    I have always loved classic guitar driven singer/songwriter music. From my father, I was given a love for Jim Croce and from my mother, Simon and Garfunkel. As I grew older, I explored Van Morrison, James Taylor, The Beatles, David Bowie, The Eagles, Jackson Browne, Tom Petty, and of course Bob Dylan. By the 1980’s, I was listening to The Smiths, R.E.M., and The Replacements, and by the 90’s it was Morrissey, Paul Westerberg, and Jeff Buckley. If it was guitar driven with amazing lyrics, I was all about it. It’s still one of my favorite styles of music to this day. 

    I’ve always tried to pass along my love of music to others and as a teacher, it was always fun dropping hints to a much bigger musical world than my students usually knew. I’m sure you remember being young and listening to a “modern” song only to be told by some old geezer that it was actually a remake. I think those kinds of moments are some of the ones that force us all to begin growing up. I never tried to be rude about it and it was always fun watching them realize that there was a much bigger world out there. But the cool thing is that for me, it was also reciprocal. My students introduced me to stuff that I still listen to regularly to this day. I remember in 2003 a student told me to check out Damien Rice and David Gray and both of those guys are still in my regular rotation. 

    But in 2004, a cool student of mine walked in my classroom, handed me a cd, and said “check this out Cornett.” It was the Garden State Soundtrack and it introduced me to the Indie Pop movement of the early 2000’s. Zach Braff’s musical tastes had been influencing the show Scrubs for about 3 years by that point but it was his creative control over the 2004 film Garden State and it’s soundtrack album that really pushed things forward for me. Artists like The Shins, Cary Brothers, Remy Zero, and Iron and Wine spoke to me. It even had Simon and Garfunkel on there and I was completely sold. I started exploring these and many other artists from 2000-2010 who were generically lumped into this category for better or worse. On a side note, if you like Simon and Garfunkel, check out Kings of Convenience, especially their songs “Homesick” and “24-25.” You won’t be disappointed.

    Hollow Coves is an Australian Indie Folk band. It consists of Ryan Henderson and Matt Carins who have been recording music together since 2013. Apparently, they recorded music together before parting ways. The music was uploaded to Spotify and their popularity soared. Sources state that they recorded long distance for a few years but now they are both back in Australia and doing well. Their song “Coastline” was released on their 2017 EP Wanderlust. I have a playlist called Indie Mix that I made a few years back and “Coastline” came up as a recommendation. I first heard it long after we moved to the coast of South Carolina but it was eerie how much it applied.

    The song starts with some ambient sound, a single acoustic guitar, and some straight forward lyrics:

    I’m leaving home for the coastline

    Someplace under the sun 

    I feel my heart for the first time

    Cause now I’m moving on

    And there’s a place that I’ve dreamed of

    Where I can free my mind

    I hear the sounds of the season 

    And lose all sense of time

    I’m moving far away

    To a sunny place

    Where it’s just you and me

    Feels like we’re in a dream

    You know what I mean

    When I first heard it, I was blown away. If you’ve read my book, you know that’s basically our story. In January 2020, we sold our house, packed everything we could into the largest rental truck I could legally drive, and moved 600 miles away to the coast of South Carolina to start over working for a small hospice. I left a 24 year old teaching career, my wife left behind her job as a fitness instructor and trainer, and we completely started over. Where I’m from in Kentucky, everyone seems to say they would love to sell everything and move to the beach but few ever do. It’s really not that difficult. Living here is like anywhere else. Get a job, find a place to stay, and just live life. The biggest difference is that on the weekends, we get to go to the beach, which to be honest, is the best reason to live where we do.

    But as we started to work the job, the beach actually became more than that for us. Going from me teaching and her doing fitness training into the world of hospice with all of its grief and sadness was honestly a shock for the two of us. The beach became our savior. There were days that left us so drained we just stopped, grabbed a burger and a drink, and sat on the beach for 30 minutes decompressing before heading home. The song actually talks about this:

    The summer air by the seaside

    The way it fills our lungs

    The fire burns in the night sky

    This life will keep us young

    And we will sleep by the ocean

    Our hearts will move with the tide

    And we will wake in the morning

    To see the sun paint the sky

    I’m moving far away

    To a sunny place

    Where it’s just you and me

    Feels like we’re in a dream

    You know what I mean

    Seriously. I couldn’t have imagined better and more fitting lyrics to accompany the first chapter of my book. It’s the chapter that tells about how we ended up here on the coastline, but if you listen to the song, you can learn so much more than I ever could have written in that short space. That’s what good music does for us. In the extras of the 2002 film Hero, composer Tan Dun said “Great film music is words the director has no space for.” Exactly. Toward the end of the book, I did try to state it though:

    “In the span of a few weeks we became empty nesters with both kids living out of state. That alone should have put me in a tailspin and maybe it did. Maybe that scared me so much I ran away from everything we had known for the past 26 years. Either way it brought us to the coast of South Carolina to discover who we were going to become.”

    Just like the theme song “If We Never Meet Again” said, we were the guy and a girl “dizzy cause we’re just not spinning with this world.” Moving here was probably the craziest thing we have ever done. Thankfully, we had each other, the beach, and great music to help calm that dizziness which allowed us to go back each week and try again.