22 June 2011

Passings

Although I only met Zoie once, I keep feeling that she's not really dead - that it's just impossible.  I think I felt that way about Jerry's death, too, right?  I mean, I'm not sure I really accept it even now, but I haven't seen him in so long that it must have sunk in to some extent.  But with Zoie, I keep looking at the photo I've been using as my Facebook profile photo since Friday, cropped from the photo I posted in the last entry, and thinking, this vibrant, lovely little girl, the light of her family, she was alive and well a week ago at this time - and now her family has organized her visitation and her funeral.


It's a totally different order of things when someone dies whom you did not know personally,  or with whom you have no personal connection - celebrities, figures in the news, those sorts of people.  It's almost obscene, possibly is obscene, to mention those sorts of passings in the same post with this photo of little Zoie, whose death is causing such unbearable pain and anguish to a dear friend and his family, but I feel moved to mention two deaths this week of people whose music was part of the soundtrack of my high school years and all the time since.  The first was Clarence Clemons, the Big Man, saxophonist in Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band - I was lucky enough to see them play live four times (back in the late 70s and early 80s) and loved the clear and obvious love between those men as it washed out from the stage along with the music.

The other death was of a less well-known musician but one even more important in my musical life, and my life, period, than Clarence: Mike Waterson, a Yorkshire singer whose singing with his sisters and cousin, and later with his sisters and brother-in-law, and later still with his children, nieces and nephews, was a revelation to me in the 1970s when I came across it, and, without my knowing it, provided a taste of the Sacred Harp singing that would later change my life: the Watersons' 1977 record Sound, Sound Your Instruments of Joy contains renditions of several songs from the Sacred Harp, although if I read the liner notes closely enough to register the mention of it back then, it didn't stick.  When I heard Sacred Harp singing for the first time, in 1983 when the Word of Mouth Chorus sang from the book on a broadcast of A Prairie Home Companion transmitted live from the chapel of Middlebury College as I sat in the balcony being electrified by the sounds from the stage, something in my brain knew they were going to sing "Idumea" before they did, even though I had only heard that song on the Watersons LP and, as I say, I didn't remember the liner notes' mention of the Sacred Harp.  And when they did indeed sing that song, my heart was already hooked on the sound of the singing, the power of it, and the spark of needing to have it in my life was lit.

And as we know, sixteen years later I met Jerry Enright at a Sacred Harp singing.

I was lucky enough to attend a concert by the Watersons in 1987 in Minnesota, before the death of  Mike's sister Lal.  They all had colds and complained about them throughout the show, but sounded great, as I remember, nonetheless.  They, as much as anyone, helped put me on the path that has resulted in my being a widow in Illinois, for the good of that and the pain.  Everything in a person's life leads to everything else in it, I suppose - even little Zoie's death, even that, I wouldn't have had as part of my experience if I hadn't heard "Idumea," if I hadn't followed up this esoteric singing form (in pre-Internet days no less), if I hadn't gotten involved in it and gone to Alabama and met Jerry and moved to Illinois and married him, if he hadn't been stolen out of my life, if I hadn't had to look elsewhere for work, if I hadn't found friends at the place I landed up working, if one of them hadn't been Dave, who adored his little grandniece and talked about her and finally invited me to participate in the 5K last month (in his family's team in memory of Zoie's uncle Eddie, who died of a cruel degenerative disease four years ago at the age of 13), where I got to meet Zoie.  Never, ever, ever imagining that she'd be gone the next month.  Never.




A memorial site for Zoie is here.

18 June 2011

Zoie

There's a little girl lying in Loyola Hospital - at least, she was last night when I last heard.  Yesterday this little girl was being watched by someone while her parents were elsewhere - and this someone took her eyes off Zoie long enough for Zoie to wander into a swimming pool.  So as of last night, Zoie was lying in Loyola, breathing on a ventilator, not having the basic physical reactions a person is supposed to have.

What kind of world is this?  Zoie's uncle died four years ago at age 13 of a degenerative disease.

What kind of world is this?

I feel entirely and totally helpless - the way, I'm being told, people felt last year when there was nothing any of us could do to make a difference in what was happening to Jerry.  When Zoie's great-uncle, my buddy Dave, told me last night what had happened, I felt like my entire insides had been hollowed out - and now I'm in this helpless limbo, hoping with every fiber of my being that Zoie pulls through and comes out of this and knowing there is nothing I can do, either to make that happen or to help Dave or his family.

Monday was the first anniversary of Jerry's death.  I did okay, which surprised me.  And then I fell apart in the middle of the work day on Wednesday.  And now I'm feeling pain and fear and wanting so much to hear good news about little Zoie.

What kind of world is this?

Photo above: after the 5K run in Hinsdale last month.  In the front: Zoie and her dad.


Update: someone posted it on Twitter.  Zoie is dead.