“If you cry while you are writing the lyric, that’s catharsis. If other people cry after hearing it, that’s craft.”
~ Bruce Madole, “Close to the Bone” in Canadian Musician, Nov/Dec 2009, p. 58.
A little over a year ago I sat down at the piano to write a song about some important women in my life: my aunts, my “other mothers.” It was well-intentioned, but inspiration often doesn’t cooperate in the direction we think it should go. I was surprised to find myself “in” my Grandmother Taylor’s living room. I grew up on the same farm where Grandma' lived. She was part of my everyday world. If mom wasn’t home after school, I would usually go to Grandma’s house, where I might find her in baking or napping or playing Scrabble or reading. She was soft and loving. Her little bungalow was clean and cosy.
Grief is a strange thing. Following the memories, playing and singing what I saw, I was surprised by the deep sobs that rose. Grandma died fifteen years ago. I was living in Taiwan at the time, so couldn’t get home for the funeral, but Aunt Evelyn sent a tape recording of the funeral. I carried it around all day until I could get home and play it and cry through it. I hadn’t really cried or even thought extensively about Grandma since that day in 1993. Did I think I was done grieving her? Apparently there was unfinished business.
That writing experience was evocative, but the initial song was not: it needed crafting. My brother Jeffrey gave helpful input on song structure and melody. The metaphorical bridge about hollyhocks and cousins had to go. My mom suggested stronger images and verbs. Dara Hallett suggested a lower key.
My grandmother is one of my “other mothers”: a woman whose of indelible influence in my life and the lives of many.
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A few months later I shared the song during the Minus 40 Tour with Dara and recorded it for our live album. This month “My Grandmother’s House” is on the IndieHeaven Fan Faves chart. Please have a listen and vote for it. You can also buy the digital track (or the entire album) there. Physical CDs are available through www.colleenanddara.com.
LYRICS:
This is my grandmother's house
This is the clock that she wound
This is the chime that would strike
To count the hours
This is the couch where we sat
It’s the place where she napped
And the blue afghan she wrapped
Me with love in.
CHORUS 1
I haven't been here in some years
I haven't walked through these rooms
To visit these memories
I haven’t seen her face or heard her voice
Yet somehow she’s here for me
I hold the books that she read
I see the Scrabble we played
Find my poems she saved
In her silver chest.
I taste her dark chocolate fudge
Smell her bread as it bakes
Savour meals that she served
At her table
CHORUS 2
I haven't been here in some years
Just let me walk through these rooms
To visit these memories
I haven't seen her face or heard her voice
Yet somehow she's here for me
Beside the violets she grew
I view the albums she made
Receive gifts she had stored
In her steamer trunk*
I hear the prayers that she prayed
I smell the wood burning stove
And snuggle up in the quilts
She made to warm us
CHORUS 3
Just let me stay here for awhile
Just let me walk through these rooms
To visit these memories
I can recall her face and hear her voice
Somehow she's here for me
This is the life that I live
And now who I've become
Echoes back who she was
In who I am
* I have changed the lines “receive gifts she had stored in her steamer trunk” to “view the albums she made with photos from our family story.”
2 comments:
Wow, Colleen, this song really touched my heart. My heart is very tender these days, grief is taking its toll. It is hard emotional work to process loss. I'm not sure it will ever be complete this side of Heaven. Thanks for sharing this song. Linda
Hi Colleen,
This is a beautiful and touching song. I love the clarity of the images you evoke, the unembellished simplcity and purity of your presentation,and the love that shines through your song. Your voice is lovely. I have your CD and love it. Aunt M.
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