
In Review
What other people have said about Phil Klein and his unique
OurMusic programs. |
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Week at Unitarian institute nourishes the mind and spirit
by Tony Stein
The Chesapeake Clipper
Norfolk, Virginia
July, 2001
I am
just back from a week at SUUSI and it was good. No, I did
not linger in a Japanese restaurant eating raw fish. That's
sushi. SUUSI stands for Southeastern Unitarian-Universalist
Summer Institute and I am a member of the Unitarian-Universalist
Church of Norfolk.
The institute, held on the semi-mountainous campus of Virginia
Tech, is a wonderful mix of nourishment for the mind and
spirit. There are workshops on dozens of different subjects.
There are mini-sermons and concerts and a chance to meet maybe
1,000 folks from all over the south-eastern United States of
all imaginable ages, shapes, sizes and colors.
One of the workshops I took was the most fun I have had since
watching a guy get stopped for reckless driving after he
passed me on the right, cut me off and hooted at me on a road
to North Carolina. The workshop was called Our Music and it
was taught by a pistol of a pianist from Syracuse, N.Y., named
Phil Klein.
"Our" meant people of an age to enjoy the popular music of the
days when there were melodies and harmonies and lyrics
performed by singers who could sing and musicians who didn't
sound like clanging garbage can lids. Phil dwelt on a list of
oldies from the turn of the century to the end of the '50s.
That's when rock 'n roll became funeral music for the big
bands and ballad singers.
Phil's class was hog heaven for folks in their music maturity.
He played and sang the oldies while we sang along. Sometimes
he'd jump up and dance a bit while his keyboard went on
automatic pilot. He even ran off a version of "Stars and
Stripes Forever," enthusiastically playing air piccolo and air
trombone.
While I was revisiting the old, I learned something new:
there
are lyrics to "Stars and Stripes Forever." Phil's father
taught them to him when he was a kid and, at 74, he can still
recite them. A sample: "Hurrah for the flag of the free. May
it wave as our standard forever. The gem of the land and the
sea, the banner of the Right.
He told stories to go along with the songs. One was about "Old
Man River," music by Jerome Kern, words by Oscar Hammerstein.
One day, Mrs. Kern and Mrs. Hammerstein were together when
Mrs. Kern told someone "My husband wrote 'Old Man River.'"
That's when Mrs. Hammerstein snapped "He did not. Your husband
wrote 'dum dum dum dum.' My husband wrote 'Old Man River.'"
But my favorite story involved the song "I Wanna Be Around
To Pick Up the Pieces When Somebody Breaks Your Heart." A lady
in Ohio named Sadie Zimmerstedt sent an angry letter to famous
songwriter Johnny Mercer. She was mad at Frank Sinatra for
divorcing his first wife, Nancy, and wrote a note on lined
calendar paper asking Mercer to write a song
which should be entitled: "I Wanna Be Around to Pick Up the
Pieces When Somebody Breaks Your Heart."
The rest is,
of course, pop music history. Mercer wrote the song and put
her name on it along with his, Tony Bennett made it famous and
Sadie got a $50,000 royalty check. Whether or not it bothered
Sinatra, surely Sadie was smiling all the way to the bank.
For booking
information, please
Click here.
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