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Rod on Maui, August 2003. Photo by John Scoggins.
©2003 by Stanyan Entertainment.

A Thought for Today

By leaning on someone you love you help to hold them up.

 

A LITTLE TIME WITH BELLINGHAM & ROD

As I finish my new book and my stay in the Southern California desert paradise The Lodge at Ranch Mirage comes to an end, much of my head and heart is still in Maui. That’s pretty understandable since I worked on “Rusting in the Rain” in both locations. What a summer I’ve had, it’s been fun but plenty of hard work (which of course, for me is another form of fun.)

When I got to Maui it turns out I ended up writing a new song for Patricia Watson’s “Soul Mates” and I have been getting requests in the past several weeks to reprint the lyrics. Here’s one of them.

Dear Rod, I am one of the many fans who saw you on Maui in the rock opera "Soulmates." Since then I've been trying to get the words to "September Comes Around (Too Soon)." Alas, no luck. PLEASE send me the words. It is perfect on every level. Much Aloha & Mahalo, Mary Lawrence

Dear Mary, It was generous of Patricia Watson to let me write the song for my character Father Jim to sing in Soul Mates. In fact she and I wrote a song together that didn’t make the final cut so it’s all the more unusual that my solo effort did.

I’ve printed the lyric for you at the bottom of this Flight Plan and your E-mail also gives me an excuse to reprint one of Bellingham’s recent San Francisco Examiner columns about September Songs. Warmly, Rod

September and its Songs By Bruce Bellingham

The Conservatory of Flowers will reopen tomorrow in Golden Gate Park now that its long restoration is complete. "It looks really wonderful," Allen White reports from the famous glass house. "But I was taken aback when I came across the exhibit, 'Victorian Pot Culture.'" Was there a Queen Mary Jane? ... This event makes for a swell day for The City and it comes at the right time of year. ... September is the month that all songwriters love. It provides the right sort of wistfulness, the invitation to the autumn, the farewell to rambunctious summer dalliances and the realization that the months and the years do inevitably slip from our grasp. ... The poets revel in this sort of exquisite pain. That's their job. They take time out to suffer professionally. The rest of us just just go back to work ... or back to school ... and consider the cascade of holidays ahead of us and wonder: Will the Hans Blix costume still be available for Halloween? ...

More songs are written about September than any other month. Why? Because it rhymes well. "Ember," "remember," and all that. Even "distemper," if you want to stretch the hangdog image. "September in the Rain" is a classic (especially by Dinah Washington) and so is Sinatra's "September of My Years." ... My current fave album is by local songstress Wesla Whitfield and her pianist/arranger husband, Mike Greensill: "September Songs." The Kronos Quarter also plays on it. "We never could have done an album this expensive without all that dot com money available three years ago." ... That would make anyone wistful.

There is also "See You in September" ... Earth, Wind & Fire's "September" ... "September When It Comes" by Roseanne Cash and the late, great Johnny Cash ... even Natalie Imbruglia's "Come September." They go on and on. But the supreme September song is "The September Song" by Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson: "And the days dwindle down to a precious few/September November ..." My favorite verse is: "But if you examine the goods they bring/They have little to offer but the songs they sing/And a plentiful waste of time of day/A plentiful waste of time." ... What a great line.

Not so long ago Grace Slick was talking about how an aging rock and roller conducts herself with grace, so to speak. "You have to consider your choices a little more carefully as you get older," Grace told me. "Time is a lot more valuable. .... Part of being age-appropriate is thinking about the consequences of your actions." I can remember when wasting time was a wicked sort of luxury. It wasn't all that long ago. This morning, I think. On my grade school report card, I was invariably marked deficient for "uses time wisely." I wonder what a wise use of time is when you are a child. Making a list of career options instead of throwing apples at trucks? ... That's no fun. ...

There is no reason that fun has to be abandoned on the road to reason. It is likely far more important to have fun as the years roll along. I guess the essential part of all this is who you select to join you in all of this frivolity. And the person you select to make yourself vulnerable and share the pain, as well. Just as long as it isn't a plentiful waste of time. But it usually is. ... I have almost succeeded in giving up on forcing people to go along with me on this and that. You can't hurry love, as the song goes. You can't even hurry apathy, now that I think about it. That involves getting others to cooperate. Or getting people not to cooperate -- which is sometimes a dicier premise. All this is usually a lost cause. Lost causes are attractive only when there is a plentiful amount of time to spend. ... The chronically reckless will not heed these words.

Lately I have rekindled a friendship with Rod McKuen that began long ago. Rod is the poetic king of the wistful and the solitudinous. One of the things I like about Rod, who is now 70 years old, is his childlike, mischievous manner. He still wears sneakers. Like his footsteps, his message is gentle. Rod was shot to fame in the 1960's in San Francisco with his books of poetry, such as "Stanyan Street and Other Sorrows" and "Listen to the Warm." ... He's written hundreds of songs. He was commissioned by Frank Sinatra to write an album, "A Man Alone." Dean Wallace, who owned a book & record store on North Point in the '60s, recalls, "When we had a Rod McKuen book signing, it was a near riot. Life magazine sent a reporter and a photographer." Rod wants to do an album of September songs, too. He is off to a swell start with a new song that he wrote in Maui the other day, "September Comes Around (All Too Soon). Some of the words: "Don’t waste another summer / No August or July / Make every moment magic/ Don’t stop to reason
Why / Loves sweet song lasts just so long/Learn to sing the
tune/Remember, September Comes Around All Too Soon." ...
I think it is an instant McKuen classic. I also like it when McKuen warns not to squander the stars: "You'll need them by and by." ...

In the savings account of the heart, the poets reign as CEOs. But it isn't likely I will ever learn how to use time -- or anything else -- wisely. If this currency of love is all the more valuable as time races by us, then perhaps it's to be savored at a time when it is drawn "from fine old kegs." But I think it is like the nouveau beaujolais that comes in late November. It must be consumed as soon as possible. ... Now, I am off to New York where it's "Hola, Isabel." I will likely walk in a shower of days that the hurricane will certainly provide. But if I have a September to remember in the rain -- that will be quite all right with me. ...

© 2003 by Bruce Bellingham & The San Francisco Examiner. All Rights Reserved. Used by Permission

Don’t forget to join webmaster Ken on Wednesday for his This One Does it For Me feature. I’ll be back on Thursday. Sleep warm.

RM 10/4/2003 10:49 PM PDT, Southern California

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notable birthdays

Monday 6 OCTOBER
Yom Kippur

Shana Alexander o Le Corbusier o Jerome Cowan o Britt Ekland o Bill Gallagher o Janet Gaynor o Charles Hallam o Thor Heyerdahl o Le Corbusier o Amy Jo Johnson o Jenny Lind o Carole Lombard o Elizabeth Shue o Millie Small o Fred Travelena o George Westinghouse o Helen Wills o Stephanie Zimbalist

Tuesday 7 OCTOBER

June Allyson o Shawn Ashmore o Niels Bohr o Toni Braxton o Bobbie Brown o Shura Cherkassky o Sarah Churchill o Andy Devine o Alfred Drake o Robert Drivas o Charles Duitoit o Le Roi Jones o R.D. Laing o Diana Lynn o Yo Yo Ma o Helen MacInnes o Al Martino o John Cougar Mellencamp o Vaughn Monroe o Elijah Muhammad o Oliver North o Vladimir Putin o James Whitcomb Riley o Bishop Desmond Tutu o Henry Wallace o Thom Yorke

Rod's random thoughts Putting it all together beats taking it all apart.

Let none that come to know you say you didn’t try.

Our faults are usually our fault.

SEPTEMBER COMES AROUND
(ALL TO SOON)

Don’t miss another April
Don’t let a spring go by
Take every lilac moment
Before the blossoms fly
There’s plenty of time to start your climb
Toward the Harvest Moon
Remember, September Comes Around All Too soon.

Don’t waste another summer
No August or July
Make every moment magic
Don’t stop to reason why
Loves sweet song lasts just so long
Learn to sing the tune
Remember, September Comes Around All Too Soon

I watch the boys and girls pass down in the town
Each one on their own
I pray they’ll find each other
Cause God meant no one to be alone

Don’t miss another rainbow
Arching across the sky
Count each and every color
And hold them in your eye
Rainbow hues can turn the blues
Into clair de lune
Remember, September Comes Around All Too Soon

I watch the boys and girls pass down in the town
Each one on their own
I know they’ll find each other
Cause God meant no one to be alone

Don’t miss another midnight
As stars sputter out and die
Too many stars to squander
You’ll need them by and by
Loves sweet song lasts just so long
Memorize the tune
Remember, September Comes Around All Too Soon

(tag)
Love while the candle flickers
Live while the stars still shine
Youth is the chance of a lifetime
Love is a dance and a lifeline
Remember, September Comes Around All Too Soon

Words & music by Rod McKuen / Maui 17 August, 2003. Word premiere 23 August. ©2003 by Rod McKuen & Stanyan Music Group

 
© 1977, 1994, 2003 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Birthday research by Wade Alexander o Poetry from the collection of Jay Hagan o Coordinated by Melinda Smith o Sound & Fury Dr. Eric Yeager o Webmaster Ken Blackie
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