(Weekend Music—hat tip to Robert W)
Yeah, yeah, I know. Just like me to post a sad song about spring. But it’s great.
Read the absolutely fascinating story of the song here. Did it make you think of “The Waste Land”? Not an accident.
(Weekend Music—hat tip to Robert W)
Yeah, yeah, I know. Just like me to post a sad song about spring. But it’s great.
Read the absolutely fascinating story of the song here. Did it make you think of “The Waste Land”? Not an accident.
Mac, I wrote about the Betty Carter performance of this song about a year ago. You must listen and tell me what you think.
http://pentiment.blogspot.com/2009/03/spring-can-really-hang-you-up-most.html
That’s really impressive, though on the basis of one hearing I like Ella’s better. Carter really takes the song apart and makes her own thing of it. It’s a really good thing but I have more sense of the song in Ella’s version.
And p.s.: the post itself is great. Oddly enough, given my temperament, I don’t generally react to spring in a melancholy way.
Thanks, Mac. Spring has come to Appalachia with a vengeance and already I’m feeling like a horse that never left the post.
I really love the Betty Carter version. It is very abstract, almost dry, but for that very reason I think it’s incredibly moving — the kind of emotional restraint she uses (like Mozart) makes the emotions, for me, more poignant.
I just realized that the link on my site is to a later live version of the song, not the more restrained 1964 performance. I’ll send you an mp3.
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