Earlier this year, I got a copy of the album Celtic Treasure, the latest from musician and Gather member Hayley Westenra. My first thought, when I saw the song title “Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme,” was anyone who covers Paul Simon can’t be bad.
It was around St. Patrick’s Day, as I remember it, and I first put the disk in my car while I was taking my daughter to fencing lessons. The rain pelted the windshield. Then Hayley’s voice flooded my ears.
Hayley Westenra has a beautiful voice with a good range. At times she sounds angelic. The first song on the disk sounds a bit like Enya in her early years. Another song sounds like an old Christian hymn. And on songs like “Who’s Your Partner,” she really lets go.
This will be unique to my experience, but when I listen to Hayley’s disk today, it usually conjures up memories of the Gather First Chapters Writing Competition. I was in the throes of that competition when I first listened to the album. I celebrated my victory as a semi-finalist in the contest with Hayley’s music in the background. I dreamed of winning the prize and getting published by Simon & Shcuster with Hayley serenading me.
But it’s not a completely unique experience. For me and for many people, the music that touches us reminds us of the times when we listened to it. Nirvana and Pearl Jam take me back to college. R.E.M. transports me all the way back to high school. The unearthly sounds of Radiohead’s Kid A reminds me of writing WOMB, a novel I’m currently revising. And songs like “Train in the Distance” and “Mystery Train” make me think of TRACKS, my novel in stories.
For me, Hayley Westenra’s Celtic Treasure will always remind me of my experience making it as a semi-finalist in the first Gather First Chapters Writing Competition.
If you haven’t heard her album yet, give it a listen. Just go to her website for more information.
http://www.hayleywestenra.com/
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Eric D. Goodman, Books Correspondent
Eric’s column, Lit Bit, is published every Wednesday to Gather Essentials: Books. Featuring bits on writing, writers, books, and literature, Lit Bit will fulfill your literary longings.
Eric is a full-time, professional, published writer and editor. His work has appeared in local, national, and international publications, including stories in the current issues of The Baltimore Review, Arabesques Review, Coloquio,and To Be Read Aloud. Listen to Eric read an excerpt from his fiction on National Public Radio on the WYPR website.
You can find all of Eric’s Lit Bit articles at www.gather.com/litbit. Keep up with Eric’s other postings and Gather activity by joining his Gather network -- just visit www.edgewriter.gather.comand select the orange “Connect” button on the left-hand side of the page. You’ll find Eric and other Book Correspondents, plus celebrity author content and plenty of other bibliophiles at Books.gather.com.


Comments: 11
Flooded my ears: makes me thirsty.
Dirges in the night. ( Day the music Died.)
Me Too...70's Music blaring.
I have the same feelings conjure when I' am reading Lewis Carrol or C.S Lewis or Clive Barker. I remember the first time i read the Human Condition By Clive Barker. i was never the same as a writer again.
Please read and rate my entry:
A Scandalous Overture
member!
Thanks, Patry -- I'm happy to point out some of the talent that has touched me here at Gather. Head's up -- I'm enjoying your book, The Liar's Diary, very much and plan to write a bit about it soon! A LIT BIT, that is!