For many years, I have been a volunteer, playing piano for the choir at a predominantly-Jewish assisted living facility. We do a lot of songs from the Great American Songbook, but also throw in an occasional Beatle tune (which generally mystifies the Group).
A digression: in our current program, we are doing 'With a Little Help From My Friends', but, in the interest of gentility, substituted 'eat some pie with a little help from my friends' for 'get high with a little help from my friends'.
Where was I? Oh yes.
This experience has taught me a great deal about Old Folks, and I often get glimpses into the rich, vibrant, and varied lives that these now stooped, often-frail, mobility-or-speech-impaired singers have had.
There are several whose European accents reveal the reality of their having experienced horrors that, thankfully, I have not.
One guy in particular has made reference to the fact that he was in the Pacific, preparing for the invasion of Japan (and his statistically-likely demise), when the atomic bombs brought an end to the War.
But an entirely-new dimension of the power of memory happened last week, when one of the ladies in the group came up to me while I was warming up before the rehearsal. I was playing a Gershwin tune and, with a quivering voice, she said quietly "I still can't believe he died."
She was genuinely on the verge of tears, having been instantly transported back to July 11, 1937.
Think 'Prince'.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
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