Yolanda Sharpe, Pear and Apple, 2007 pen and ink, colored pencil and acrylic painted paper, 15 by 15 by 15 inches |
Seek Giacometti’s “The Palace at 4 a.m.” Go back two hours. See towers and curtain walls of matchsticks, marble, marbles, light, cloud at stasis. Walk in. The beggar queen is dreaming on her throne of words… You have arrived at the web home of Marly Youmans, maker of novels, poems, and stories, as well as the occasional fantasy. D. G. Myers: "A writer who has more resolutely stood her ground against the tide of literary fashion would be difficult to name."
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SAFARI seems to no longer work
Friday, February 03, 2012
CHOIR
19 comments:
Alas, I must once again remind large numbers of Chinese salesmen and other worldwide peddlers that if they fall into the Gulf of Spam, they will be eaten by roaming Balrogs. The rest of you, lovers of grace, poetry, and horses (nod to Yeats--you do not have to be fond of horses), feel free to leave fascinating missives and curious arguments.
Lovely Marly! I guess I'm lucky. Our synagogue choir is such a loose confederation that people often do not show up for weeks at a time. They don't take it very seriously. We don't have lessons and are not required to know how to read music. I have never learned how. I should, I know. Perhaps I will buy a book and try it again.
ReplyDeleteWe don't perform very often, and do not travel or have special conferences to go to. We get off easy, with just a practice a week or so, and maybe a performance a month, if that.
Most of the people in my choir are not eccentrics. There's just one other person, perhaps 2, who fits the bill besides me. They are quite normal, average, very nice folk. There are a couple or three music professionals though, who sing in other, more structured choirs, and and paid for their singing, and a guy who performs in musicals, though he is a lawyer when he is able to find work.
Also, I love Yolanda's drawing! She is so versatile!
ReplyDeleteYou are missing a great deal if you have no lunatics. And you must exaggerate if needed!
ReplyDeleteYes, Yolanda is prolific and has a number of different modes at her fingertips--and is always adding new ones. She has started doing watercolor and did a major piece for a show at Wayne State.
ReplyDeleteMarly - please, please write the CHOIR novel!
ReplyDeleteMarly - please, please write the CHOIR novel!
ReplyDeleteMarly, I too was initially a reluctant member of this Choir, especially since it works better for my voice not to be tethered by the shenanigans of the "eccentrics". I need to sing the music in my repertoire to keep my voice (and myself) sane and resilient. As you may remember (I don't know if I ever told you) I was dragged into the choir because of my late, and dear friend, Larry, who was the choirmaster and organist before our current one came. I loved Larry (still do), and admired his patience and thorough approach to music with the other singers. His approach mirrored mine when I prepare for concerts, recitals, or work with opera productions. Also, Larry was hard to keep saying "No" to.
ReplyDeleteOne Sunday, I was minding my own business, sitting in the pew before Larry played the Prelude. Larry had sent several choir members to me to "show me around", since I was still new to the parish. These sly ones actually grabbed me on both sides at the elbows, took me downstairs where the choir robes up, quickly put a robe on me, and carted me upstairs, out the community building, and back to church! They marched me past Larry, who was casually standing on the steps near the Sacristy. He was smiling, yet, said nothing.
The choir folk said, "You are singing with us. Larry told us that you read sight read very well."
Hmmmph! I told myself!
That's how I was recruited into the choir.
YO
Gail,
ReplyDeleteI am sure that you would be the perfect reader of such a book! As would be the whole Dooley clan...
Miss Yo-Yo,
ReplyDeleteI love that story. If you don't quit, I don't quit!
Of course, you know that you and I are automatically lunatics by virtue of art! I see by my poetic license that I am a registered Lunatic for Art...
Having spent most of my life as a member of church choirs, I can only, um, chorus: "Write the book, Marly!"
ReplyDeleteI would probably be run out of town on a rail, since people have a propensity to think characters to be themselves...
ReplyDeleteAnd it would be tempting to use a few genuine persons!
But I like to make things up.
Wonderful post. Once again, I am envious of those who have a voice to sing with! I'd love to read a book by M.Y. called 'Choir'. In the meantime, I will enjoy the company of my fellow 'lunatics' in my artists' group.
ReplyDeleteYes, all we of the arty brethren and sistern have lunatic cards!
ReplyDeleteI would so like to sing in a choir, but I don't think such an option is really open to me. I felt some of the same sense of adventure taking the life drawing class though, I think.
ReplyDeleteYou are amazing, the things you do.
Lucy,
ReplyDeleteI always think you amazing in turn--like a very few people I know, you are entirely adventurous in the arts and go splashing in many pools. (I'm still waiting for you to take up dance... Maybe you did once, long ago.)
Marly,
ReplyDeleteYou are probably writing the book right now, despite the fact that you are posting that you are thinking about writing it. Hmm. . . No, I won't think that I'm in the book because, I'm not crazy enough, nor interesting enough of a character.
YO
: )
Haha!
ReplyDeleteDream on, Miss Yo-Yo... In addition to having a lunatic Art Card, you have certain very interesting characteristics and tendencies which would make you a wonderful character.
However, I find that poetry has my heart at the moment, so I am safe from being tarred and feathered for a while.
Marly,
ReplyDeleteI will keep dreaming on so that you can keep me out of the cast of characters. HA!
YO
Your only safety is in my obsession with poetry!
ReplyDelete;-)