Writing is like being able to put life into a snow globe. It takes the things that are too big and scary and reduces them into a form that I can put away when I want and look at from a distance. It also takes all that’s good in life and captures it into something I can take out when I want and look at close up and keep forever. It makes the bad things into something I can hold…and the good things into something I can hold onto. Both help so much that I need that little souvenir of life.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Rock of Ages


Not too long ago, I was riding in the car with my young adult daughter and mentioned the Rush concert that was coming to town. She giggled and said she thought it was funny that I knew about bands like Rush. She said it without the least bit of irony.

Anyway. A few weeks ago I watched part of a televised Deep Purple concert on TV. Oh, the memories!

My first favorite album ever was Deep Purple’s Mark I & II. It wasn’t even mine. I used to beg, borrow, and steal it from my older sister and then play it over and over and over again.

My mother used to tell me to “turn that banshee music” down. I remember thinking to myself that if I was ever the mother of teenagers, I would let my children play their records nice and loud. Ear buds weren’t the only things I didn’t foresee. There was a time in the pre-ear bud era—a very brief time—when some of their music sounded suspiciously like disco. The horror!

But one day, a miracle happened. As I sat at my computer, I heard, deep within the bowels of my son’s basement lair, the distant rumbling chords of “Smoke on the Water.” Turns out there was a game called Guitar Hero, and guess whose era those heroes were from?

I opened the basement door. “Is that too loud?” my son called up. Silly boy. He was born in an age when ear buds were the norm, after all. He couldn’t help it.

“No! Turn that music up!” I hollered. I was so proud.

Oh, the memories.

What was your first favorite song/album?

I fit into me now. I have an organic life, finally, not necessarily the one people imagined for me, or tried to get me to have. I have the life I longed for. I have become the woman I hardly dared imagine I could be. There are parts I don’t love—until a few year ago, I had no idea that you could have cellulite on your stomach—but not only do I get along with me most of the time now, I am militantly and maternally on my own side. ~Anne Lamott, Plan B Further Thoughts on Faith

13 comments:

  1. Too many albums to narrow it down. Carol King's "Tapestry." James Taylor's "Sweet Baby James." Cat Stevens' "Tea for the Tillerman." The Beatles' "Seargent Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band." Simon and Garfunkle (just about any of their albums). CSN & Y. Joni Mitchell's "Blue." Elton John's "Yellow Brick Road." "Aqualung." Janis Ian's "Seventeen." I could go on and on.

    Sorry. I hardly ever follow directions. I could not narrow it down to just one...

    Great post, Tammy. This sent me down memory lane at a breakneck speed...

    Sorry. My teenage

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    1. Speaking of memory lane...you have something in there for everyone!

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  2. The first album I ever loved was Steve Miller Band and I played my 45 until my mom said, "If you play that record one more time, I swear, I'll break it." I was five. My mom is the kind of mom who goes to my 40-year-old brother's metal concerts. I really played that record a lot.
    :)

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    1. I like your mom. Steve Miller Band gave one of the best concerts I've ever attended, I think. And I attended a lot in those days.

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  3. I can't remember but when my daughter plays that game, I get into the music zone myself ~ I always associate Purple with Prince - Purple Rain ~

    Happy Sunday ~

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    1. You're apparently not from my era or you would know that's the wrong purple. Wrong, wrong purple. LOL. Happy Sunday to you, too, Grace!

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  4. Well, Tammy, I'm so old, the first record I ever bought was "Oh Boy" by Buddy Holly and the Crickets. It was a 45rpm single, and the flip side was called "Not Fade Away." A 45 cost $1, which was about all I could afford to spend at one time. I would guess the first 33 1/3 rpm "long play" album was probably the soundtrack from the movie South Pacific. However, I remember the albums Sioux mentions.
    What a fun topic. Fond memories.
    K

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  5. Now "first record ever bought" is completely different from "first favorite album," but the nice thing about memory lane is there's lots of sliding room! I think everyone remembers "Oh Boy," Kay. You reminded me that my big sister used to scare me a little with certain 45s when I was a kid, like "Little Blue Man" and "Purple People Eater." They gave me nightmares. LOL.

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  6. Elvis Presley's blue album was my ride and joy. Fun post!

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  7. Just ONE? I'll go with Billy Joel, Piano Man, as my first.

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  8. Great post! I'm always tickled when my kids crank up the classic rock & roll that I grew up on and loved. A favorite? Impossible. There were too many. I used to sit and listen to my sister's 45s for hours, everything from Bobby Vinton to Diana Ross. Album . . . favorite . . . hmm . . . I think I have to embarrass myself and admit it was something by the Partridge Family because I had it bad for David Cassidy. LOL I loved "Trilogy" by Emerson, Lake & Palmer, and "Rubber Soul" by the Beatles.

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  9. The first favorite song I remember is Wild World and I'm not sure who sang it. But I played that record over and over and over. Oh baby, baby, it's a wild world... it's hard to get by with just a smile...

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  10. My taste in music has always been, to put it mildly, eclectic. Blues, rock, folk, show tunes. I've owned them all!

    Pat
    Critter Alley

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