|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 15 Mar 04 - 04:17 PM This one, I take it - George Fox - to an old Morris tune, Monk's March. (Which links it with tee period, sinc ethe Monk in questioin woudl be General Monk. One of my favourite songs. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Barbara Date: 15 Mar 04 - 04:57 PM Curiously enough, present day Friends(Quakers) have cleaned up the chorus so that it now goes: "Walk in the light, wherever you may be (2x)With his old leather breeches and his shaggy, shaggy locks, 'I am walking in the glory of the light', said Fox". Now I don't mind the text substitution in the first two lines, but I am sorry that Friends are unwilling to claim "I am pulling down the pillars of the world, said Fox". I prefer the original, and sing it that way. Carter has made an amazing contribution to the lexicon, and I would like to see his book reprinted. If we can't have that, we have the theology of his songs, which makes us all that much richer. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST Date: 15 Mar 04 - 05:23 PM At this time I thought, perhaps, you might like to read the notes to Sydney's (and Sheila Hancock's) LP 'Putting out the Dustbin', particularly the last paragraph:- Notes for LP - PUTTING OUT THE DUSTBIN - Transatlantic TRA 106 (1962) An LP on which he was joined by the actress - and singer - Sheila Hancock. SYDNEY CARTER has written songs for a number of West End revues. Some of these continued in orbit after the revue shut down. The Youth of the Heart (from the Globe Revue) is still sung by Irish tenors and by Donald Swann. Down Below (from "The Bells of St. Martin's"), fruit of a descent into the London sewers for the B.B.C, is nobly sung on record by lan Wallace. None of the songs on this record have ever been in a revue (except Waiting for the Film to Come, and that only in America). They belong to a kind of No Man's Land somewhere between Folk Song and Cabaret; a musical equivalent of the Gray's Inn Road, where no one is supposed to live, but where Sydney Carter lives, (Putting Out The Dustbin), and really does put the dustbin out three nights a week. Sydney is presently occupied part-time with the National Book League, trying to think up ways of making people read more books, (Better Take a Book to Bed). Though political, he is allergic to all party propaganda. Socialism In Our Time upsets some Marxists when he sings it. "That's a very unconstructive song" they tell him. But, his frequent uncomplimentary references to all other political groups have the effect of isolating him almost entirely. Nor has his attitude to juvenile delinquents, (Mixed Up Old Man), endeared him to the judiciary. Most of his songs are autobiographical, (My Mum was a Woman). "I have never yet been an old lady" he admits, (Watch 'em Nell), and I can't say "my father was a cupid" (song of the same name) but My Last Cigarette tells the bitter truth and I have marched to Trafalgar Square, (Coming Down From Aldermaston). Though one or two of these songs have been printed in unlikely spots like "Peace News" and "The Tatler" the versions on this record are different. "I never sing the same song twice" says Sidney Carter. "Every time I sing it, its different. So am I. Nothing will be fixed or final till I'm dead; and, I hope, not even then." |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 15 Mar 04 - 05:49 PM Yes, when I sang George Fox, using Sydney's words, in the Friends Meeting House in Hertford a couple of years ago in a concert some of them were quite surprised at them. But they joined in the chorus all right. (Except that, the way I know it and sing it, the chorus ends "You are pulling down the pillars of the world, George Fox", as an accusation by the worldlywise, rather than a boast. Which I think works better. Less arrogant.) I wouldn't take any notice of any amendments some committee somewhere might have tried. I'm afraid I'd be inclined to call that change "messing up" rather than "cleaning up". Though Sydney Carter took some pride in being told he never sang his own songs twice the same way, so I'd not be the least surprised to hear he might have sung it this way on occasion. (He definitely sang "You are pulling down the pillars...") |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Barbara Date: 15 Mar 04 - 08:56 PM You are right, it is "You are...". I haven't looked at my words in a while. Would you, or someone, be willing to post "Putting Out the Dustbin"? I haven't heard that one, and I'm curious about it. Blessings, Barbara |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Margret RoadKnight Date: 15 Mar 04 - 09:04 PM Stainer & Bell Ltd put out a great CD in 1998 - "Sydney Carter's Lord of the Dance", produced by Jeremy Taylor - with 13 poems (two read by Sydney) and 13 songs, sung by the Swingle Singers, Norma Winstone, Martyn Joseph, amongst others. I opened for him in Melbourne in '72 (which led to being signed up for my first album - thanks Sydney) and visited him in London several times (thanks Nadia). My singing group sang "Julian of Norwich" and "Crow on the Cradle" last night in honour of him, special man that he was! |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: IanC Date: 16 Mar 04 - 04:26 AM Barbara Quakers usually sing the version as published in the "Quaker Songbook". Sydney, I believe, produced various versions of the words (as authors oftn do) and these were the ones which found themselves in print. Why are so many people willing to think that people deliberately change things, when it often simply happens by accident? :-) |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Flash Company Date: 16 Mar 04 - 11:14 AM Telegraph Obit today, one day late, but better late than never. FC |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Dave Bryant Date: 16 Mar 04 - 12:07 PM Linda and I went out for a drink at one of our favourite pubs last night and the landlord asked us if we wanted to sing (he quite often does). We sang a set of songs all composed by Sydney: Lord of the Dance Down Below Port Mahon The Telephone Song Crow on the Cradle Eros Silver in the Stubble The audience loved it, but were very sorry to hear about Sydney's death. It seemed like a fitting little tribute. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,Dick Wolff, Oxford Date: 16 Mar 04 - 05:12 PM Could people post up info about obituaries that they see? Telegraph (as has been noted) published one today (Tuesday 16th) which makes specific reference to the 'Rock of Doubt' in its closing para. (The book I'd like Continuum or Stainer & Bell to re-publish as a tribute). Doesn't look like Guardian, Independent or Times has yet. Can't understand the re-write of 'George Fox' chorus — whole point was that this is the rabble having a go at him. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,Peter Flemington Date: 16 Mar 04 - 05:45 PM Thank you, Mudcat, for enabling this outpouring of memories of Sydney and gratitude for his work. I first met Sydney in 1967 when I made films for Canadian television about him, Donald Swann, Nadia Cattouse and others involved in the carol/folk renaissance of the time. I last met Sydney in 1998 when, conscious that he was beginning to succumb to the ravages of Alzheimer's, I filmed him again, along with some of his favorite singers (Maddy Prior, Martin Carthy) performing his work. I am so glad I did, although with all of this material of this gifted and provocative man it's virtually impossible to generate interest among broadcasters. It's similar to the situation faced by Dick Wolff (above) in his attempts to encourage a reprint of Rock of Doubt. Condolences to his life partner, Leela and son, Mike. Sydney will live in his music, his recordings, his poetry, and in the memories of us all. Thanks be to God -- or, in the words of one of his classic pieces for TWTWTW -- "to I really don't know who." |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 16 Mar 04 - 06:47 PM The version I sing is the version in Sydney Carter's book Greenprinbt fior Song, published in 1974 (with "You are pulling down the pillars of the world..."). Since, so far as I can see, the Quaker Song Book wasn't published till 1981, someone might have thought the chorus was preferable. Sydney Carter wasn't into being proud about that kind of thing, so he could well have agreed to it. However it seems pretty evident that he liked the version he put in his own book. (The fact that he preferred it woudln't have meant he insisted on imposing it on the Friends, if those words worried them.) I think it's a good idea to sing it that way - more especially because it seems to me a much better chorus. I remember Sydney from Cecil Sharp House in the eary sixties, and Oxford Heritage after that, and from a concert he did for us in Harlow. All in all, if I was put in a corner and forced to decide, I'd rank him as the songwriter I admire most of all. (But he'd have undoubtedly disagreed with that judgement.) |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 17 Mar 04 - 05:51 AM Today's Guardian has a really lovely obituary for Sydney, by fellow pacifist Canon Paul Oestreicher. It brings out the range of his songs, and of the quality of his other writing. The most moving passage for me came when Oestreicher touched on the last phase of Sydney's life: "When, in 1999 the mists of Alzheimer's disease began to close in, Sydney's second wife, Leela, lovingly cared for him and interpreted him to others. The past gradually receded into the strange land of lost memory. His friend Rabbi Lionel Blue wrote that now "our only contact is a thin thread of memory and his songs. I start singing them, and he joyfully joins in - and I leave him as he continues singing." And he quotes what he describes as Sydney's "own epitaph, written more than 30 years ago: Coming and going by the dance, I see That what I am not is a part of me. Dancing is all that I can ever trust, The dance is all I am, the rest is dust. I will believe my bones and live by what Will go on dancing when my bones are not. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: A Wandering Minstrel Date: 17 Mar 04 - 08:06 AM McGrath, I believe you are right. I know that when QFA started putting The Quaker Songbook together they ran into some copyright issues. One of my own contributions (an awful parody song he said modestly) turned up with a completely different tune because they couldn't get publishing rights for the original. I've always sung George Fox with the "Pulling down the pillars..." chorus. Silver in the Stubble, Knocking on the Window and Crow on the Cradle are all still in my repertoire and I shall sing them often in Sydney's memory |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,elf (guest) Date: 22 Mar 04 - 09:46 PM I'm so sorry I only found out about Sydney's passing yesterday. I discovered the fabulous LP of Lovely in the Dances a long time ago. It was one of those magic things. They just happen and you grab at them as they go flying by. I think I had to purchase the record from England, Sydney was so little known in the US. Of course, we all know that tiresome Lord of the Dance, and The Bells of Norwich has been well known here since Bok, Trickett and Muir brought it out in the '60s on an early LP. And the Quakes know George Fox, what ever version. But my favorite is I Come Like a Beggar, partly because of the tender and tenuous voice that sings it on Lovely in the Dances. Just imagining that frail man singing to himself at the end of the recording makes me certain of his consummate importance. Thank goodness he has finally been released. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: nutty Date: 23 Mar 04 - 06:21 AM His songs are due to be featured in Songs of Praise (BBC1) this coming Sunday. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,family and friends Date: 24 Mar 04 - 06:12 AM thanks for so many good thoughts, Sydney's only son buried his baby son last month and his father today. I know that the fact his father touched so many peoples lives will be a great comfort. Think of him and his mother today, and keep enjoying the legacy of thoughts tha Sydney Carter has left to all of us. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Leon Date: 24 Mar 04 - 08:55 PM Sydney had a splendid send-off today at St Paul's Church, Herne Hill- his 'local'. The hymns chosen were Sydney's favourites 'Be still for the Presence of the Lord' and 'Jeruslem'. Psalm 23 was read. Martin Carthy sang Sydney's 'Glass of Water' and the congregation sang 'When I needed a neighbour were you there. Mike Carter, his son, gave an affectionate and hilarious account of growing up with his wonderfully eccentric and thoughtful father before leading us all in 'One More Step'. Friends from all walks of life attended; representatives from the Flanders & Swann families, Nadia Cattouse, Jeremy Taylor, Cindy Kent and many friends, colleagues and neighbours. The committal was held at West Norwood Crematorium where 'Lord of the Dance'was the final sing-a-long. A generous gathering assembled at Sydney's home afterwards for private celebration and reminiscences. Leon |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: AllisonA(Animaterra) Date: 25 Mar 04 - 05:45 AM What a wonderful celebration! Thank you Leon for telling us about it. And GUEST, family and friends, we're glad we could add to the love that must be pouring in on behalf of this great man Allison |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,"And now it is so early" Date: 27 Mar 04 - 05:59 AM The LP "And now it is so early" recorded with Sydney Carter and Bob & Carole Pegg is one of the rarest (= highest priced) folk records around - 350 US dollars, 18000 yen... does anyone know if a reissue would be possible? |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: Bob Bolton Date: 27 Mar 04 - 08:16 AM G'day "And now it is so early", It's a great record ... I really marvelled at how well Bob & Carole Pegg's treatments worked on Sydney Carter's songs ... I certainly regard this as my favourite Sydney Carter LP. Now - a reissue ... Do we approach the minimalist publisher Stainer & Bell ... who own the rights to all of Galliard's titles ... and tell them what to do with the Swingle Singers ... ? Bob Bolton |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,felicity collins Date: 06 Apr 04 - 08:22 PM I have been given the task (in my Poetry lesson) of commenting on the use of poetic devices such as imagery, rhyme, rhythm etc in Lord of the Dance. Can anybody help - and soon? |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 07 Apr 04 - 05:03 PM Sydney Carter intentionally used a Shaker tune for this,Simple Gifts, or Tis a Gift to be Simple". The Shakers were sometimes knwn as "the Shaking Quakers", and here is a site about them, with links to others. The Shakers believed in dance as part of their relkigion. "I could have written another for the words...but this was so appropriate that it seemed a waste of time to do so. Also I wanted to salute the Shakers." "Lord of the Dance" is also one of the names of Krishna in the Hindu religion, and Sydney Carter had this in mind as well: "I see Christ as the incarnation of that piper who is calling us. He dances that shape and pattern which is at the heart of our reality. By Christ I mean not only Jesus; in other times and places, other planets, there may be other Lords ofvtye Dance. But Jesus is the one I know of first and best. I sing of the dancing pattern in the life and words of Jesus." That (and the other quote) is from Sydney's song book Green Print for Song. Well worth reading the rest of what he has to say about this song, and the others of his collected there. Hunt around on the Mudcat and there's a fair amount more about this song. Good luck. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: GUEST,BobMetcalf@blueyonder.co.uk Date: 14 Apr 04 - 06:13 PM I was a Vicar in Wigan when I heard Sydney Carter sing, accompanied by Donald Swann. He gave me permission to record Lord of the Dance with a microphone in front of the loud speaker. I was struck by the wonderful humility of both - Doanld Swann cleaning the keys of the piano with his handkerchief, and Sydney Carter giving me permission, asking if I felt it was important enough. If not the very first, it was very nearly so, performance of this song and it lives me for all time - in memory and in song which my congregations have sung. Archdeacon Bob Metcalf |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 30 Apr 04 - 08:09 AM Just came across my copy of the book "GUEST,Dick Wolff, Oxford" mentioned as The Rock of Doubt, also known as Light in the Darkness. Except my paperback edition of it is called "Dance in the Dark," and isn't quite the same - "Much of the material in this book was first published as The Rock of Doubt" It struck me as very appropriate for Sydney Carter, having the same book exist in diffeent folk variants... And out of print as well, which is ridiculous. If they can't get a publisher to reprint it, it ought to be online. Here's just a taster, from a section called "The Jesus Ballad", which seems very relevant to the kind of things we keep talking about here on the Mudcat so often (for example in a current thread such as this one Changing the words ): Looking for what Jesus actually said and did is like looking for the orignal version of an ancient ballad. The four gospels are like four variants.By the time they started to be written down the folk process had already got to work. You cannot keep a live tradition down: it will go on sprouting new interpretations. If you do not like them, you can call them heresies. But any singer worth the name will keep on reaching for the song behindthe song. You can call that going back, or reaching forward. To interpret you must create. Though authority may tell you otherwise, there is nothing fixed or final in a live tradition. Petrify it and you kill it. Bibles, churches, song books too, are the sevants of trdaition, If they try to be its master, they become its undertaker. With songs, a distinction can be drawn between those which have a known composer and are published in a version which can be fairly called correct, and those which are of unknown origin. No one can say whether the latter are correct or not or whether they are the work of a single author and composer or many. Folk songs fall into the second catehory. So does Christianity. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (March, 2004) From: GUEST,Rob Smyth Date: 26 Mar 05 - 08:31 AM Hello to all who posted their thoughts on hearing of Sydney Carter's death 12 months ago. You might be interested in a new CD by Franciscus Henri (who toured Australia with Sydney in 1972) devoted to Sydney's songs and poems. Beautiful digipack format, 18 songs and 8 poems, and in my opinion the best recording of Sydney Carter's work yet. I'd better declare my interest in the project, as I wrote the notes for it. The entire CD was performed live (twice) at Victoria's prestigious Port Fairy Folk Festival in March. For more information, go to Franciscus' website - www.franciscushenri.com |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (March, 2004) From: The Borchester Echo Date: 26 Mar 05 - 08:41 AM Thanks very much for this, Rob Smyth. Here's a link to take your straight there. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (March, 2004) From: GUEST Date: 01 Jul 09 - 03:08 AM I am sorry to report the death of Sydney's widow, Leela, at the end of June 2009. |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (March, 2004) From: SylviaN Date: 01 Jul 09 - 06:07 AM Sad news indeed. My condolences to Michael and all her family. Sylvia |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (1915-2004) From: Joe Offer Date: 18 Nov 15 - 02:23 AM I came across a nice obituary article, and I thought I'd post it. Source: http://www.theguardian.com/news/2004/mar/17/guardianobituaries.religion Sydney CarterSydney Bertram Carter, poet, songwriter and folk musician, born May 6 1915; died March 13 2004The composer of Lord Of The Dance, his life was a musical journey in search of an unconventional God The songwriter Sydney Carter, who has died aged 88, achieved the remarkable feat of composing two of the five most popular songs sung in assemblies in British schools. In 1996, a survey of the copyright work most commonly requested for use in collective worship put his One More Step in first place, with his possibly more famous Lord Of The Dance at number five. Sydney wrote Lord Of The Dance in 1963, as an adaptation of the Shaker hymn Simple Gifts, which features in Aaron Copland's ballet Appalachian Spring. Later, he said that he saw Christ as "the incarnation of the piper who is calling us. He dances that shape and pattern which is at the heart of our reality. By Christ, I mean not only Jesus; in other times and places, other planets, there may be other lords of the dance. But Jesus is the one I know of first and best. I sing of the dancing pattern in the life and words of Jesus." Lord Of The Dance will continue to be sung worldwide long after its author is forgotten. To live on through his songs will indeed fulfil Sydney's dreams. Sydney was a folk poet, a holy sceptic and an iconoclastic theologian - that last description would both bemuse and please him - in the amateur tradition of the folk movement, deconstructing the theology of the academic establishment and bringing it to life. He played a leading role in the folk revival of the 1960s and 70s, and it was then that he wrote most of his songs, composed both to please and to shock. Life, as he embraced it, was for dancing. From start to finish, he was a Londoner. He was born in Camden Town, and imbibed old English songs at Montem Street school in Islington. He loved community singing and later, as a bluecoat boy at Christ's Hospital school in Horsham, West Sussex, he enjoyed the hymns in chapel - every day, and twice on Sunday. But he loved visits with his father to the Finsbury Park Empire just as much. In the mid-1930s, Sydney read history at Balliol College, Oxford, where he also started to write poetry and dreamt of becoming a painter or film producer. After graduation, however, he ended up teaching at Frensham Heights school, in Farnham, Surrey - along with the novelist Rex Warner - until 1940. With the second world war, his critical spirit and abhorrence of violence led him into the Friends Ambulance Unit, with which he served in the Middle East, and, in 1944, in Greece, along with a stim ulating group of pacifists, including Donald Swann (obituary, March 25 1994). If any church could come to holding Sydney's allegiance, it was the Society of Friends, with its rejection of dogma, and its reliance on personal experience and social activ-ism, and its affirmation of God's presence in every human being. After the war, folk music, both sacred and secular, took Sydney over. Much influenced by what he had heard in Greece, he studied its many forms; then, in 1952, he started writing lyrics for Swann, who needed revue material. "I found out that I could do that," Sydney said, "and get paid for it." He launched what proved to be a long collaboration by providing lyrics for Swann's composition The Youth Of The Heart, which featured in the Globe Revue in London's West End. In the mid-1950s, he was the lyricist on Swann's children's musical, Lucy And The Hunter. I was a BBC producer when, in 1960, Sydney wrote his most controversial song, Friday Morning. I believe it was also one of the most profound. In it, the robber, crucified with Jesus, cries out: It was on a Friday morning that they took me from my cell And I saw they had a carpenter to crucify as well. You can blame it on to Pilate, you can blame it on the Jews, You can blame it on the Devil, it's God I accuse. It's God they ought to crucify, instead of you and me, I said to the carpenter a-hanging on the tree. Classic theology says that it was God, but Sydney lets the irony stand. In this, as in the following stanzas, he piles on the guilt, piles it on to God. It leads to the deepest of all questions: is God in Auschwitz or the Twin Towers, the killer or the victim? If there is a God? I had to fight the BBC management to get that song on the air. A brave, liberal head of religious broadcasting was my ally. Today, the fear of a backlash would be far greater. In 1962, Carter teamed up with Sheila Hancock for the album Putting Out The Dustbin, one track of which, Last Cigarette, on failing to give up smoking, became a minor hit. The songs on the LP were closer to cabaret than to folk, but the pacifist, political singer was there even then. In 1964, the Donald Swann EP, Songs Of Faith And Doubt, comprised six songs by Carter. In the 1960s too, he worked as a critic for Gramophone magazine. But it was in 1965 that Sydney recorded his greatest success, the six-song EP, Lord Of The Dance, with Martin Carthy on guitar, the Johnny Scott Trio and the Mike Sammes singers. In the sleeve note, he cautions purchasers about the religious content, in case they should be misled by such earlier songs as Down Below and My Last Cigarette. Sydney treasured those who brought his texts to life, the whole folk scene, Carthy perhaps most of all, and singers like Nadia Cattouse. And they loved him. Across the years, many other musicians recorded his work, among them the Swingle Singers, Bob and Carole Pegg, Maddy Prior and Sarah-Jane Morris. His anti-war lullaby, Crow On The Cradle, was recorded in 1962 by Judy Collins, and, 17 years later, performed by Jackson Browne, Graham Nash and David Lindley at a No Nukes concert. It turned out to be an unexpected success; Warner Brothers bought the US rights and, many years later, Sydney was amazed to receive £9,000 in royalties. With irony - though never with bitterness - Sydney satirised every form of self-righteous faith; to be without doubt was, to him, the ultimate in godless pride. In two books, The Rock Of Doubt (1978) and Dance In The Dark (1980), he set out the signposts of his journey in aphorisms, a journey through the holiness of humanity. "Bibles, legends, history are signposts: they are pointing to the future, not the past. Do not embrace the past or it will turn into an idol." Jesus was central to his experience, but not, in his words, "the official Jesus - but the Jesus who is calling you to liberty, to the breaking of all idols including the idol which he himself has become." Your holy hearsay is not evidence Give me the good news in the present tense ... So shut the Bible up and show me how The Christ you talk about is living now. Tall as he was, his head in the clouds and his feet firmly on the ground, there was a lot of dance left in Sydney when he came to my 60th birthday party in 1991 with Donald Swann. They sang their hearts out with The Bird Of Heaven: "Follow where the bird has gone./ If you want to find him, keep on travelling on." When, in 1999 the mists of Alzheimer's disease began to close in, Sydney's second wife, Leela, lovingly cared for him and interpreted him to others. The past gradually receded into the strange land of lost memory. His friend Rabbi Lionel Blue wrote that now "our only contact is a thin thread of memory and his songs. I start singing them, and he joyfully joins in - and I leave him as he continues singing." More than 30 years ago, Sydney had written his own epitaph: Coming and going by the dance, I see That what I am not is a part of me. Dancing is all that I can ever trust, The dance is all I am, the rest is dust. I will believe my bones and live by what Will go on dancing when my bones are not. Leela survives him, as does their son Michael, a neurosurgeon. · Sydney Bertram Carter, poet, songwriter and folk musician, born May 6 1915; died March 13 2004 |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (1915-2004) From: MGM·Lion Date: 18 Nov 15 - 03:58 AM Who was the author of that obit, please Joe? ≈M≈ |
|
Subject: RE: Obit: Sydney Carter (1915-2004) From: MGM·Lion Date: 18 Nov 15 - 04:07 AM Ah, OK, have checked online. It was, for the record, Paul Oestreicher. FWIW -- I remember once receiving a book of his verse to review for English Dance and Song, journal of the EFDSS -- not an easy project for me, as an atheist, and one who had met him several times but we had never much warmed to one another. I did admire his work for its intrinsic integrity, however; and described him in my notice in some such terms as an exemplary promulgator of faith in a largely faithless age. A bit of a copout, probably; but I aimed to treat his work with the respect which was their due, even tho its basic principles were not in accord with my own. ≈M≈ |
| Translate Thread |