I was trying to decide what to play for some spring songs. Fortunately, I pulled Joel Whitburn’s Album Cuts, 1955-2001 off my shelf. The annoying thing is that, as a strict list, it does not differentiate between songs with the same title but are different, and covers of the same song.
Spring – Little Milton (1969)
Spring – John Denver (1972)
Spring – Meryl Streep · George Winston (1985) from The Velveteen Rabbit, a story I love
Spring – · Ned’s Atomic Dustbin (1992)
These were all different songs, despite the same title.
Spring Again – Lou Rawls (1977)
Spring Fever – Biz Markie (1989)
Now, I come to a song with oodles of covers. “Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most” (1955) is a popular song with lyrics by Fran Landesman, set to music by Tommy Wolf. The title is a jazz rendition of the opening line of T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, “April is the cruelest month.” The song describes how somebody feels sad and depressed despite all the good things associated with spring
Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most – The Pete Jolly Trio (1963)
Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most – Ella Fitzgerald (1960)
Then…
Spring Collection – The Vapors (1980)
Spring Comes To Spiddal – The Waterboys (1990)
Spring Is Here – Peter Nero. When I tried to search for Nero’s Spring Concerto from 1961, this is what came up.
Spring Creek – George Winston (1991) from the album Summer
Spring Fever -· Elvis Presley (1965)
Spring Fever – Orleans (1976)
I was unfamiliar with all of the songs.
Highbrow
There are two pieces of music I play every vernal equinox. The first is The Rite of Spring (1913) by Igor Stravinsky. I always loved the story of the ballet, explained entertainingly by Classics Explained.
There are several recordings. I decided on Stravinsky Conducts Stravinsky (1960) with the Columbia Symphony Orchestra.
The other annual ritual is playing The Four Seasons (1725) by Antonio Vivaldi. I prefer summer and winter; the solstices are in minor keys, whereas the equinoxes are in major keys.
Usually, for the beginning of spring, I ask you to Ask Roger Anything. You still may – I encourage it – but I also want to turn the tables a bit. What, if anything, are you doing to celebrate the sestercentennial of the United States?
On February 17, my wife and I left the Kern Art Center and went to The Yiddish Book Center.
“In 1997, the Center opened a building in Amherst on 10 acres of land purchased from Hampshire College, Lansky’s alma mater; a second building in 2009 accommodated educational programs. Lansky’s announcement in 2024 that he would retire in 2025 (he’ll continue as a part-time advisor) made the front page of the
What did I do on my birthday, March 7th? I spent the better part of the morning sucking up water. I’ve mentioned that when it rains or when the snow melts, we’ll have a pool of water at the juncture of our walkway and our sidewalk, caused by the REPAIRS the city of Albany, NY, made to the sidewalk a decade or more ago. I dubbed it Lake 54 in honor of the NYC club Studio 54.
Two sources of Irish heritage intrigue me. The African American Irish Diaspora Network (AAIDN