| Songs
and stories by: (except Shenandoah, Wendy's Tune and poems
on tracks 2, 8, & 19) |
|
Produced by: Tom Wisner
and Jim Fox |
|
|
| Performed
by:
|
|
| Tom Wisner with
John Cronin, Al Petteway, Frank Schwartz and Teresa Whitaker, a host of children's voices, Mary Sue Ross, and Dram Tree-o |
|
Songs:
- Equal Each Before All Kind [4:29]
- Growing Orbits by Rainer Maria Rilke [0:48]
- Wendy's Tune by John Cronin [3:14]
- Made of Water (words) [0:37]
SAMPLE (470KB)
- Made of Water (song) [3:49]
SAMPLE (533KB)
- This Guitar [2:38]
- Wind sings in the rigging [0:20]
- River Medley: incl. Trad. Frost & Wisner [7:32]
- Goose 'Moosic' [0:43]
- Esta Tierra de las Aguas [5:06]
- Chesapeake Born [4:42]
- Cap'ms Gone! [3:26]
- Sunshine [4:08]
- Two-Legged Musings on Four-Legged Moosic [6:56]
- Singing River [3:29]
- Song of the Word [3:49]
- The Left Side of Nowhere [4:23]
- Carry Me! [3:33]
- The Negro Speaks of Rivers by Langston Hughes [1:15]
- Wild River [4:17]
- Made of Water (reprise) [2:14]
Distributed by CHESTORY ©2001
Songs and arrangements by Tom Wisner ©2001
Wendy's Tune © John Cronin
Liner notes have © data for Rilke, Frost and Hughes poems |
| This work has been made possible by a grant from The Sumner T.
McKnight Foundation |
ADDITIONAL MATERIALS
The following are available in addition to this CD: a Karaoke, additional lyrics
and music notation on all of the songs, with commentary and occasional sketches.
If you are interested in additional copies of this CD or any of the above
complements, I hope you will choose to buy rather than copy them. Your purchase
will help the Chestory programs to continue. If you choose to copy the CD, you
are breaking copyright and under-cutting support for our non-profit work. Please
take the added step: send a tax-exempt contribution to CHESTORY, Box 1462,
Solomons Maryland, 20688. Also let us hear from you about your use of this CD
and its value to you. Thanks!
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
These works are the modest product of, and creation for, all my relations:
mitakuye oyasin! Many of these relations have been acknowledged in dedications
and tributes throughout the text. I am grateful for my relationship with Kathy
Glaser and the ethos of the Hollywood School where for many years I had the
privilege to work with Betty Brady and her remarkable teaching practices
affirming the creativity in the whole community of life. Additionally, it is
important to note that this album would not exist without the, encouragement,
brought to all of its contours by my colleague and friend Sara Ebenreck. To the
list of good folks who have given financial support and safe harbor through the
years, my gratitude! I hope the gift of this work begins to balance the books.
DEDICATION
These songs are presented here in tribute to my relation to the regional waters,
the ancient Muddy Katie river and interactions with the journeys of my elder
mentors: Gene Cronin, Gilbert Byron, Art Sherwood, Captain Watt Herbert, Captain
Alex Kellam, Captain Sussanna Brinsfield, Lois Stewart, Pete Seeger, Dick Price,
Rachel Carson, Aldo Leopold, Matthew Fox and Thomas Berry, great tributaries who
have integrated their lives into the landscape and moved deeply into the tidal
vacillations of this awakening creative spirit.
I think of this recording as part of the Great Work referenced in the vast
imaginings of Tom Berry. In keeping with the dedication in his book of that
title, The Great Work , these songs are for all the children of the Atlantic
Coastal river lands. The children who swim beneath the marshlands, adjoining
seas, embayments, estuaries and fresh running waters. Those who live in the
soils of forest and field. The children of the Shadblow, among our first
blossoms of Spring, and all the flowers that follow. For all those children who
are bound into and made of the soils as well as those who thread their lives
into the winds riding the great continental airs. To the human children too in
the hope that the singing of these and other songs like them may encourage
joining with all the other children in living consciously within the evolving
story of the Universe.
INTRODUCTION
Most of the native peoples of the world, like the Kayapo’ of the Brazilian
Amazon know when they are dancing that they will “preserve and sustain the
structure and integrity of the entire natural world...... they believe that
without the performance of the prescribed rituals the world would collapse:
crops would not grow, children would not be born, the sun and moon would cease
to travel across the sky.” * For some of the people of Malaysia “the very act of
singing breathes life into the network of subtle interconnections between human
beings and the entire natural world. Song somehow links all things in nature
together, in the process of honoring and participating in nature’s sacred,
mysterious whole.” * *
Here in Southern Maryland, in modern day North America, a free Cherokee rises
early each morning before the sun. She goes to a chosen spot in the forest
surrounding her home and sings a song to invite the sun to lift itself above the
horizon. She tells me that there are people all around the world who do this.
They sing the sun up for us, each and every day. These actions help to maintain
continuity with the forces that compel the sun and the earth in their
relationship to one another and to us.
For the past thirty five years I have been singing daily, the songs of
Chesapeake. I started in the mouth of the Patuxent river at Solomons Island
while I was working at the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory as an educator. Dr.
Gene Cronin was my mentor who encouraged me to make river education the work of
my life. I am the son of Katie Anderson Jones Baber, descended from the
elemental folk of Virginia. They farmed, fished and logged the Piedmont and
Coastal Plain of the James River basin. The songs about her family’s life have
always been a part of my life. As the issues of the life of the river became a
part of my professional life, the songs of the river entered into my process. I
didn’t find many songs about the river so I began writing them to fill the
longing. It didn’t occur to me at first that this was an unusual process or that
it was breaking any modern paradigms. It certainly didn’t occur to me that this
process of expressing the “inexpressable” longing for a deeper connection to the
river would have anything at all to do with maintaining its integrity or saving
its life. In those days I believed, as I was taught, that only science, and
technical know-how applied through the ‘politically-active’ stance could bring
healing to a river. I was taught that artists, poets and singers had little or
nothing to do with compelling changes in the workings of the natural world.
My views have altered dramatically. A natural tendency to make story and song
a part of my experience of regional life has brought new perspectives. I’ve
learned from my Cherokee friend that singing these songs has helped to maintain
my relationship with the life-giving forces that compel the sun, the moon and
the earth. I have learned from the science of ecology that the quality of the
relationship is fundamental to the quality of life. In short, I have learned
that “you’d better watch the songs you sing, they’re gonna make you who you are
!”*** I am confused and saddened by the relation of our modern world to the
workings of the natural world. We live in a culture that is singing a different
tune. It is a culture that lives in a story that is not connected to the life of
the river. I sing these songs with the motives derived from a deep longing to
learn more how to live in the story that is in harmony with the river. I hope
you will choose to join in this singing. *Suzuki and Knudtson ,Wisdom of the
Elders, Bantam Books1992 p208.
**ibid p146
***from a song for Jess by T. Wisner
MADE OF WATER : DISCOGRAPHY, NOTES AND LYRICS
The singers and sounders on this CD, listed generally in their order of
appearance, are......John Cronin on guitar, Tom Wisner-vocals and rhythms,
Teresa Whitaker-vocals, the Carolina Wren (Gilbert), Frank Schwartz on vocals
and bass guitar, Varied Waters in motion, a Thunder Storm, The Wind in the
rigging of the Stanley Norman, The Huntingtown Elementary Chorus, Thousands of
geese rising over the upper Patuxent, Al Petteway on guitar, a drum called
Kirsten, The Dram Tree-O, Mary Sue Ross, The Hollywood Elementary Chorus, The
Arthur Middleton Elementary Chorus, Jevan Whitaker and finally, several Angus
cattle bellowing in response to a Harford County cattleman’s call introduce a
story from Maryland’s Eastern Shore.
(1)EQUAL EACH BEFORE ALL KIND [4:29](© Tom Wisner 2001) Vocals-Tom,
Teresa, Frank, a Carolina Wren (Gilbert) recorded at Woodburn Hill Farm Summer
2000; Guitars-John; Rhythm Guitar- Tom; Bass-Frank.
This song is for Teresa who sings life into life, my Cherokee friend who
keeps the sun alive, and my daughter Karen who is the lifetime companion of
Nekonah, featured in this song, who rides the flower-sided horse Tremchamblin
into the dreams of her people.
(The ending chorus in each verse varies as follows: )
Verse (1) They had a song for each life of the land
to honor all in nature’s plan,
woven in a tapestry divine.....equal each before all kind !
Verse (2) She had a song for each life of the land
to honor all in nature’s plan,
woven in a tapestry divine....equal each to her own kind !
Verse (3) Each life to have a song to sing
about the value that they bring
to the tapestry divine.....equal each before all kind !
(2) I LIVE MY LIFE IN GROWING ORBITS [0:48] Rainer Maria Rilke (from
Selected Poems of Rainer Maria Rilke , tr. by Robert Bly. © 1981 Robert Bly.
Recorded by arrangement of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.)
Spoken by Tom and the Carolina Wren along a stream off Tom’s Mountain at the
headwaters of the Susquehanna. To the memory of Gilbert Byron, the renowned
Chesapeake Poet of San Domingo creek.
I live my life in growing orbits
which move out over the things of the world.
Perhaps I can never achieve the last,
but that will be my attempt.
I am circling around God, the ancient tower,
and I have been circling for a thousand years,
and still I don’t know if I am a falcon, or a storm,
or a great song.
(3) WENDYS TUNE...[3:14] (©1999, 2001 John Cronin) Guitars-John. John
writes.... “in memory of my father, Gene Cronin, a true man of the Chesapeake,
written for his favorite niece.” Added note by Tom: I first heard this music by
John at a memorial service for his dad and I was deeply moved by its velocity
reaching to the heart. Its elegant carriage, dignity and depth of feeling bring
to life the memory of the special qualities of Gene and the generosity he shared
with the great soul of our regional waters.
(4) MADE OF WATER [0:37](words ©1979, 1997 Tom Wisner) Tom speaking
into a thunderstorm from beneath a tin roof at Woodburn Hill Farm--Summer 2000.
To that solid and simple old Amish-built main house and the good souls at
Woodburn Hill who provided the haven from storms beneath that metal roof where a
few of these songs and all of the arrangements of this album were nourished into
existence.
(5) MADE OF WATER [3:49] (song ©1979, 1997 Tom Wisner)
First version published on the Folkways (now Smithsonian-Folkways) Album 32410,
Chesapeake Born, 1979. The version for this CD includes: Vocal-Tom and the
Thunderstorm from track 4; Guitars-John; Bass- Frank. ( see the comments on
track 21 for its dedication)
CHORUS
I’M MADE OF WATER / FLOWING WATER
SUN AND SALT / AND WINDS THAT BLOW.
THOUGH MY BONES / WERE FORMED IN MOUNTAINS,
IT’S THROUGH MY BLOOD /THIS RIVER FLOWS.
(6) THIS GUITAR [2:38] (©1982, 1997 Tom Wisner) Vocal-Tom;
Guitars-John; Bass-Frank.
For the gang at Sifel’s Luthier shop and Pearl Works where they continue at “
building weapons for the peace movement.” For all guitars and especially for
that ‘Bay Built’ Sifel guitar hanging out on some of these album tracks with Al
Petteway. Written at Church Point on the Saint Mary’s River in memory of my late
good friend Kenny Stewart who helped me to value my impulses. John Cronin helped
me to realize the runs I could hear but could not produce. I hope future guitars
may choose to continue to develop it!
CHORUS.... Destined to Ramble, Destined to roam!
This guitar is a home away from home!
(7) WIND IN THE RIGGING [0:20] taped on the Stanley Norman,
during a night run before the wind from Annapolis to Betterton with Cap’m Ed
Farley. Part of a cruise for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation enacting the return
of Captain John Smith to ports from Hampton Roads to Havre de Grace, speaking of
his shock in seeing the modern world of Chesapeake.
Placed here in tribute to Will Baker and the gang at CBF and Fran Flanigan and
the Bay Alliance folk -- great sails trimmed to capture the winds that propel us
into the work to insure continuity between the rich quality of our heritage and
the character of our future.
(8) FREEDOM IS A RIVER: a medley of river song and poem [7:32]
SHENANDOAH Chantey and Song (traditional); THE GIFT OUTRIGHT by Robert Frost (
From The Poetry of Robert Frost. edited by Edward Connery Latham. ©1942, ©1970
by Lesley Frost Ballantine, ©1969 by Henry Holt & Co. Used by permission of
Henry Holt & Company, LLC) FREEDOM chorus of the rivers and verses ( Published
in many sources © 1979, 1982, 2001 Tom Wisner), THIS DARK FERTILE LAND (© 1987,
2001Tom Wisner; Lyric rewritten from THE LAND MARY-LAND Published in A Cooke
Book : A Seasoning of Poets. Michael S. Glaser, Ed. Scop Publications College
Park Md. 1987) (Medley arrangement ©2001 Tom Wisner); Vocals-Tom, Frank, Teresa
and the Huntingtown School Chorus, Donna Boylan directing; Guitar-John; Rhythm
Guitar-Tom; Bass-Frank.
The inspiration that drives this work evolves from my experience of Robert
Frost reading at the Kennedy inaugural. The piece is included here in the memory
of comrades who returned from Korea in flag-draped coffins carried before us
down the gangway of the Daniel Sultan in San Francisco in 1954. Frost reminds us
that “The deed of gift was many deeds of war” The medley is a ritual to honor
the mysterious river that is the symbol of the sacred flow of life and the
myriad numbers of dear men, women and living rivers who have given full measure
before the relentless forces of our technical ethos.
I still struggle with that part of myself that insists on the transition from
4/4 rhythm in the versing to the 3/4 time in the chorus of the rivers. I leave
it in the tracks, as is, aware of its challenge to the singer and knowing that
it is a symbolic reminder of the disjointed connection between the driving 4/4
forces at work in our culture and the 3/4 rhythms of the ongoing life of the
river. It is a story about coming into deep relation with the life of our
continent – a story of a longing to come to America with the integrity with
which she came to us.
Lift the anchor, and haul away
Haul away.... hardy lads now
We’re bound away, we’re bound away
Across the wide blue ocean.
THE GIFT OUTRIGHT by Robert Frost
The land was ours before we were the land’s.
She was our land more than one hundred years
Before we were her people. She was ours
In Massachusetts, in Virginia,
But we were England’s, still colonials,
Possessing what we still were unpossessed by,
Possessed by what we now no more possessed.
Something we were withholding made us weak
Until we found out that it was ourselves
We were withholding from our land of living,
And forthwith found salvation in surrender.
Such as we were we gave ourselves outright
( The deed of gift was many deeds of war )
To the land vaguely realizing westward,
But still unstoried, artless, unenhanced,
Such as she was, such as she would become.
(Note: the reading on the CD was concluded at line eleven with permission of the
publisher)
Oh Shenandoah, I long to see you /Far away you rolling river Oh Shenandoah I
long to see you, / Away, We’re bound away Across the wide Missour-ah.
Long flow the rivers that carry the names /of the people
from England who sailed up the James, /and the red men who lived here before
singing songs that are heard here no more. /Those we denied who unjustly died
for our Freedom.
Oh Freedom is a weaving and winding. It’s a river!
And a river will ramble from the East or the West /nourished by rain on its
undying quest. /It’s a journey in search of the sea/like a people here would seek to be free./ In the land where the rivers flow
down to the mother of waters. Oh Freedom.....
THE FREEDOM RIVER CHORUS
In our song there is a power, giving life to every word
and high above the Chesapeake the wind is often heard.....singing:
Susquehanna, Wicomico, South, Severn, Nanticoke, Choptank and Elk; we are
born of Potomac out of old Shenandoah, and the York, Rappahannock and James!
(Note: There are over 40 rivers entering into the tidal reaches of the
Chesapeake; 12 are included in this chant. Names of other rivers near your
locale....as ‘Patuxent’or ‘Patapsco’ or ‘Chester’ etc. can be sung in place of
the lyrics “we are born of” to bring the total number of rivers to 13.)
And we chained the black people for two hundred years, building castles called
Freedom in their pain and their tears slowly learning that our rivers run dry,
/when a people here are chained to a lie. /And the great river James ran down
red like the color of mo(u)rning. Oh Freedom........
Freedom is a river, long and she’s wide. /The marrow and blood that flows
deep down inside /of my body, my heart and my mind /giving courage to my kin and
my kind. /And those who were crying for those who were dying for Freedom.
Oh Freedom.........
And the rivers are dying it is time for the test, /we have marched o’er this
land from the east to the West /and it’s time we were making amends, /giving
freedom and life to our friends. /It is time we were giving the freedom of
living to the river. /And the creatures there-in. It is time! It is time! It is
time! In our song there is a........
(To 3/4 chorus, with added lyric “this dark fertile land” and out!)
(9) GOOSE MOOSIC [0:43] From a taping in November 2000 of
over 3000 geese on the evening rise out of the fields of the Merkle Wildlife
Refuge to resettle for the night in the upper fresh, tidal reaches of the
Patuxent River. Placed here in memory of Dick Price, co-founder of Esalen
Institute, being mindful of the gift of Edgar Merkle and the work of Rich Dolesh
and his kind who maintain such sanctuary for all of us.
(10) ESTA TIERRA DE LOS AGUAS [5:06] (© 1997 Tom Wisner)
Set into Spanish by Julian Jasso. Vocals-A large honker leading the goose gang
up out of the Merkle fields, Tom and the Huntingtown Elementary Chorus, directed
by Donna Boylan; Guitar-Al Petteway; Rhythm Guitar-Tom; Bass-Frank;
Percussion-Tom.
Dedicated to the authors of the many tongues spoken in unison with these
waters through time in tribute to each and every God and Goddess held in the
esteem of each of those peoples. The voice of thousands of geese rising is for
me, the voice of all gods ...all goddesses. A perfect symbol of the rise of the
greater hopes and aspirations of all people through....all time.
CHORUS...ESPAÑOL / ENGLISH Esta Tierra de los aguas /
For this is the land of the waters
de la Madre, de la Madre de Diossa /
of the mother, of the mother, of the goddess.
Guardo un poquito cario en tu Corazon para Rio Madre, /
Save a little love in your heart for the mother river,
Y poquito de verde para Dios ! /
And a little green for god!
(11) CHESAPEAKE BORN [4:42] (©1979, 80, 97 Tom Wisner) First version
published on the Folkways (now Smithsonian-Folkways) Album 32410 Chesapeake Born
1979. A new version (preliminary to this one) was released on the State of
Maryland Bay Folk album (1990) now out of print. Words to this song have been
printed and sung in more than 50 publications and media releases over the past
21 years. A version was used as the title song for the 1986, National Geographic
Special, Chesapeake Borne and it has been featured in other versions on Charles
Kuralt’s CBS show: Sunday Morning documenting the Tri-State Governors’
conference on the Initiatives for the Improved Quality of the Bay Waters and
NBC’s 1976 “Bicentennial
Series” on The Today Show . Vocals-Tom, Mary Sue Ross, Dram Tree-o, and the
Combined Hollywood (St. Marys County) and Arthur Middleton (Charles County)
Elementary School Chorus, directed by Betty Brady and Mary Sue Ross; Guitar-Tom.
I enjoy a fascination with what-it-is-about-this-song that always works. It
clearly works! A good singer! In the 1979 release it was dedicated to the
integrity of the life of the Chesapeake. Think of this song and hear the rich
voices of the thousands of folks who have sung its responses over the past 30
years. I am reminded of the geese rising and of the potential power of the
spirit that is manifest in our united voice. It is offered in this updated
version with the hope that it may serve as one effective symbol of the VOICE for
the life of the waters that, ultimately, will accumulate and prevail.
CHORUS
I’m Chesapeake born, Chesapeake Free
Chesapeake bound, and flowing with ease.
I’m Chesapeake born and bound to thee,
Deed I am, Chesapeake free.
(12) CAP’M GONE [3:26] ( ©Tom Wisner 1997) Vocals Tom, Teresa, and
Frank; Banjo-Tom; Guitar-John; Bass-Frank.
A celebration of those unique men and a few women who have intimate knowledge
of the Bay waters, many of whom, it is said, could navigate by the taste of her
bottom muds. Written for Captain Martin O’Berry and mindful of all the creatures
of the muds (the Benthos) of Chesapeake. Many other fine Captains come to mind.
The memory of Cap’m Watt Herbert of Coles Point Va.; Cap’m Sussanna Brinsfield
and Cap’m Winbon Joy, of Solomons Md. “To find men (or women) like them today?
It’d take a long long time !”*
*(This line is from“Soft Crab Time in Crisfield” by Steven Ward of Crisfield
Maryland.) How this boat gonna go down this old river? How she gonna find her
way back home?
How she gonna know when the cold wind gonna blow?
Cap’m gone, that old Cap’m, Cap’m gone!
(13) SUNSHINE [4:08] (©1997 Tom Wisner) Vocals-Tom, Teresa, Frank, and
Jevan Whitaker with the Huntingtown Elementary School Chorus, directed by Donna
Boylan; Guitar-Al Petteway; Rhythm Guitar-Tom; Bass-Frank.
A celebration of the elemental fire : the primal source of life on this
planet. This song is one of the best singer-friends I have. She, like her
tribute-- the Sun, graces every room she enters with an immediate presence of
community.
(CHORUS ) Sunshine! Over a deep blue sea.
Sunshine! Shine on me! Would you shine on me!
Put your life into this dark green land!
Sunshine! Take my hand! Would you take my hand?
(14) TWO-LEGGED MUSINGS ON FOUR-LEG MOOSIC: “THEM EARS” [6:56] Every
cattleman has a unique voice and connection with their cattle. These opening
singers are Angus answers to the call of a Harford County cattleman. Fine
singers! The original story is a concoction of the late Jim
McLane of Crisfield Maryland. He told it to me in a restaurant in Crisfield
in 1986 shortly after the passing of our mutual friend Cap’m Alec. I chose to
adapt this version in the first person as I had many similar experiences in my
travels with Cap’m Alec. Alec Kellam was a great story man! This story by Jim is
a model of the subtle tracing of humor and insight in Bay country story styles.
It also celebrates the incredible sense of connection that Cap’m Alec shared
with all living details around him as well as his wonderful, outrageous sense of
good fun and friendship with kin and kind:......all kind !
(15) THE SINGING RIVER [3:29] (©1997 Tom Wisner) Vocals-Tom, Frank,
and Teresa; Guitars-Al Petteway; Rhythm Guitar-Tom; Bass-Frank.
This song is for the Potomac River in memory of my dad, William Frank Wisner,
and many steam boat journeys with him down Potomac from Washington D.C. It is
also fashioned in the memory of my stepfather, Louis Hartley Bradshaw who was
from Tylerton, Smith Island recalling many boyhood journeys on Potomac with him
in his Smith Island, sailing crab-skiff
CHORUS
I am the old Westmoreland haulin’ down,
left wheel turnin’ right goin’ ‘round,
Eastward ramblin’, lord I’m homeward bound,
Mighty river quiet my storm, oh my home is water born(e). I’m Eastward ramblin’,
Southern Maryland bound!
Come bring your voice down to my waters
Let your song turn ‘round in me
From sunny fields, into my laughter
I’m the singing river let my singing be.
(16) SONG OF THE WORD [3:49] (©1999, 2001 Tom Wisner) words published
in Weavings 2000: The Maryland Millennial Anthology, Michael Glaser Ed.(Forest
Woods Media Productions, 2000). Vocals-Tom, Frank and Teresa; Guitars-John;
Rhythm Guitar and lead instrumental-Tom; Bass-Frank. I’ll long remember its
first performance at the Orion Foundation Conference when we gathered 600 strong
to light 1,500 luminaries to rededicate the sacred Antietam ground in keeping
with the spirit of the
deep-ecology movement.
This song was written from and for the waters of the Antietam Creek, running
clear as crystal on the hot day in summer 1998 when I bathed there. It is said
in my family that this creek ran red with the blood of 23,000 casualties
following the Battle of Antietam on September 18, 1862. These lyrics are mindful
of our great grandfathers North and South who were consumed in the fires of
Antietam and Gettysburg, my Father’s comrades from Normandy to Nuremburg, my own
dear comrades in Korea, my sons Mark & Michael--warriors who have discovered
alternative choices, and finally the many sons of our Nation who served in Nam
and Desert Storm. This song is offered with the prayer that our grandsons may
find their full potential in the means to become the fire rather than its
tinder.
(first) CHORUS
Kin and kind, left their dreams and loves behind.
On a dusty road to glory,
In close-ordered ranks conspired,
To descend in contradiction, falling ever, reaching higher.
Consumed by word, by water, and by fire.
(Second) CHORUS
Word will turn, turning will conspire
To reach into the darkness
Awakening desire
Ascend from contradiction, reaching high, reaching higher. Become the word, the
water, you’re the fire !
(17) LEFT SIDE OF NOWHERE [4:23](© 1997 Tom Wisner)
Vocals- Tom, Teresa; Guitar-John; Bass-Frank.
This song is for Suzy who lives in the streets near my boyhood home by the
Library of Congress in Washington D.C. She is a living symbol of its dedication
to the native mother beings of this land who have been deprived of their
franchise by the unrelenting forces that compel our “progress” and its
dissociation from the natural, native cycles.
CHORUS
Old mother earth walks alone in this land,
Head down and a bag in her hand.
There ain’t no one out there
Seems to know or to care if she’s crying,
No one out there seems to know or care if she’s dying.
(18 ) CARRY ME [3:33] (© 1997 Tom Wisner) Vocals-Tom and Teresa;
Guitars-John; Rhythm Guitar-Tom; Bass-Frank.
My life-long journey alongside of the living river is at the heart of my
mythic view in both reality and in symbol. This version is for my friend Roberta
and the Ancestral Moon over the Muddy Katie River that flows through my
imagination to the sea.
(All lyrics are presented here as there is no chorus as such)
I was born of water, sired by stone.
I’ve traveled with the moon alone.
Brother of the wind and Autumn fire.
And I’ve gone down where the river goes,
to learn all the songs that water knows,
in the silence of the woodland, from where it flows.
Down from mountain field and hill,
I’ve been captive of the water’s will
On this journey homeward to the sea...oh carry me!
Winding river water carry me!
And when we’d travel home from school,
We’d linger by the streams and pools,
To sing a rosy minnow melody.
Talk to crawdads, dance with frogs,
We’d all walk across on wobbly logs
To celebrate the soul in every woodland thing!
One day round a shady bend
I became the water’s friend
We promised we would carry to the end...oh carry me now!
Winding river water carry me!
When I’m old and older still,
And all that’s left is water’s will
And winter comes to fill this sunny field
Earth in Autumn: fire is burning,
I’ll still sing of water turning,
Turning from the silence deep within my soul.
Ah it is a mystery,
How this water turns in me,
And in the morning stillness we are one....oh carry me!
Winding river water carry me!
(19) THE NEGRO SPEAKS OF RIVERS [1:15] by Langston Hughes
(©1994 by the Estate of Langston Hughes, used by permission of Harold Ober
Associates, Inc.)
A tribute to the river folk: many lifelong colleagues who, like Langston,
have most surely known these rivers. Spoken by Tom near the washing waters of
the Bay on the beach at Calvert Cliffs. Gulls are scatting about and calling in
the distance. It is a great place of healing: a sustained silence near the
ancient deposits of the great whales and other forms of Miocene life that remind
us of the continuity of our community in the fabric of time. We are linked to
the legions of living cultures and communities whose lives have depended upon an
intimate relationship with water.
I’ve known rivers:
I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the
flow of human blood in human veins.
My soul has grown deep like the rivers.
I bathed in the Euphrates when the dawns were young.
I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep.
I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it.
I heard the singing of the Mississippi when Abe Lincoln
went down to New Orleans, and I’ve seen its muddy
bosom turn all golden in the sunset.
I’ve known rivers:
Ancient, dusky rivers.
My soul has grown deep like the rivers.
(20) WILD RIVER [4:17] (©1979, 1997 Tom Wisner) First version
of this song was published on the Folkways (now Smithsonian-Folkways) Album
32410 Chesapeake Born 1979, The version for this CD includes: Vocals-Tom and
Teresa; Guitar-Al Petteway with instrumental break by John Cronin; Rhythm
Guitar-Tom; Bass-Frank.
This song is at play in the waters of gods and goddesses. A devoted friend !
I often feel a sense of remorse when I finish with it and move on to the
next....as though I were meant to live in its rhythms and intervals. Teresa’s
beautiful harmonies awakened me to its beauty in the 70's. This recording with
Teresa coupled with the artistry of the guitars of Al, John and Frank is a best
rendition of it. I place it here in tribute to the power of song to guide our
lives in good cause and make home in that calling.
Hey there, wild river, teach me to flow!
Tell me your poems and all the songs that you know.
Touch me and wash me, and let me lie down
By the peace of your waters at night on the ground.
(Chorus)Deep flowing river, where are you bound? Tell me a story teach me
your sound!
Hey there wild river, wont you teach me to flow?
Wont you stop a lazy moment while you’re rolling along,
And sing me your song?
You’re reborn each moment, yet old as the land, and No longer flowing when
you’re cupped in my hand.
Join with my body as I drink life’s fill, and
Blend with these waters and flow as you will. (Return to chorus)
(21) MADE OF WATER [2:14] (song reprise) See discography on
track 5; Vocal-the Carolina Wren, Waters at the source, Frank, Teresa,& Tom all
rising from the source.
Thinking of many years in this journey with the river, alongside of good
companions, Joe Mihursky, Walt Boynton, Mebley, Tom Horton and Jupiter over
Chesapeake. This song has been “blowed and tore and put up wet”.* It has
traveled well. First written as a hard driven banjo piece and later adapted to
an acapella styling with accompanying hand signs. John’s guitar helped settle it
into its original drive on track 5. Here the call and threaded responses
highlight the acapella quality of the piece. These words are true. We are made
of the waters of this planet. The measure of their quality is the measure of our
commitment to the quality of the community of life.
*( Line is from“Blowed and Torn” Folkways-Smithsonian, Chesapeake Born 1979.)
CHORUS
I’M MADE OF WATER / FLOWING WATER
SUN AND SALT / AND WINDS THAT BLOW.
THOUGH MY BONES / WERE FORMED IN MOUNTAINS,
IT’S THROUGH MY BLOOD /THIS RIVER FLOWS.
Total time [71:41]
Catalogue order No. C-001
70 minutes (approx.)
Copyright 2001, Tom Wisner
All profits from the sale of
this album will benefit the non-profit programs of
CHESTORY: The Center for the Chesapeake Story
Box 1462 Solomons Island, MD 20688
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