Climbing Up That Mountain

Below, a simple Video rendering of my song “Climbing Up That Mountain.”  In church they’d call it a “choral anthem.”

RedeemedI worked on my doctorate at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville from 1973 to 1977, attending the adjacent University Baptist Church while I did.  There I was fortunate to come into a wonderful music program directed by Carl Beard, a program that grew even more in prominence when, in conjunction with the university, he started a student choral group, naming it Jubilate, for decades now one of the finest choirs on the East Coast.

In April 2018 Jubilate celebrates its 45th anniversary, and I’ve been told “Climbing Up That Mountain” will be on the program.  How fortunate I was to have an instrument like Jubilate—and indeed the church’s own Chancel Choir—to write for.  They were so good I could write practically anything I wanted, though that probably resulted in music a bit too “fancy.”  “Think of a normal church choir doing these,” advised Harold Best, then chair of music at Wheaton College when we discussed revising some of my pieces.  “They’re so good, but you could think more in terms of a choir that’s lucky if they can scrape together two tenors.”  Gary Walton, a Jubilate member and also studying English at UVa said,  “Lucky your music’s so good…because it’s hard.”  Revisions coming soon, I’ve told others and myself for a few years now!  A recent email from Gary reads:

“What a treat it was that Robby Gough has kept up with you all these years and knew your web address.  So for the last hour I have been touring the site and learning a bit of your life since you left C-ville in the 70’s.  My father’s favorite choral anthem of all time was “Love of thy Children” [live link coming soon]. My sister had four of us—Tom and Diane Mundell, my wife Sally and I— sing “Emmaus” at her wedding. Sally transcribed the first version of “Psalm 103” while she was still in high school in C-ville and taking voice lessons with Carl.  So I have been singing along with the music on the web site tonight.”

Gary Walton is now Dean of the School of Arts and Humanities and Professor of English at Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina.   In the song/video below, Jubilate, directed by Carl Beard (with Gary Walton probably in it), features soloist Evan Young.  Robby Gough, whose dedication to Jubilate has been of inestimable value from the very beginning, served as recording engineer.

 Go to GuzMusic on this site for music, mainly by Dan Guzman and a few others—like me.

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Mike Royko: Controversy…and the Cubs

When Mike Royko died in 1997, Chicago mourned.  Granted, a few of the many people he confronted in his no-nonsense manner may have secretly celebrated, but his death was seen by many as the end of an era, when newspaper columnists spoke their minds and weren’t afraid to offend the sensibilities of their readers.  As we bemoan our current era of fake news and incredible reporting biases, right and left, as we plead for fact-based journalism and a return to some greater measure of civility and sanity, it’s important to remember that this doesn’t mean there’s no place in journalism for strong opinion—often fiercely strong opinion.  “He wrote with a piercing wit and rugged honesty that reflected Chicago in all its two-fisted charm,” wrote Rick Kogan in “20 Years without the legendary Mike Royko.”  I know Royko would have come at this era of fake news with both fists swinging.  “His daily column,” writes Kogan, “was a fixture in the city’s storied journalistic history, and his blunt observations about crooked politicians, mobsters, exasperating bureaucracy and the odd twists of contemporary life reverberated across the nation.”

Royko1

Kogan’s recent tribute starts by recalling the short, staccato conversations he had with another storied columnist, New York’s Jimmy Breslin, whom we lost on March 19th this year.  When Royko lay dying from a brain aneurism, Breslin would call Kogan every day for an update. On April 29th, 1997, when Kogan told Breslin that Royko had died at 3:30 p.m., Breslin said, “Goddam it.  Well, Goddam it,” and hung up.

It would be impossible to write about Royko without mentioning controversies and his detractors, like in 1996 when a thousand protesters “gathered outside Tribune Tower demanding that Royko be fired for what they felt were insulting portrayals of Mexicans in his column,” or when the famed Chicago priest and writer Andrew Greely characterized Royko’s writing as “crudity mixed with resentment.”

Nearly all of Royko’s books were collections of his newspaper columns, yet his 1971 Boss: Richard J. Daley of Chicago, which won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary, shows that Royko’s sometimes careless prose could truly shine when he was freed from the constraints of his daily assignments.  Writing in the New Republic, Roy Fisher wrote that in Boss, “Daley emerges as a complex mixture of integrity and debasement, of wisdom and stupidity, of vision and blindness, of compassion and brutality.”  Daley’s wife, Eleanor “Sis” Daley, thought the book was “trash and hogwash,” and, Rick Kogan writes, “When asked about his wife’s review…Richard J. replied with that characteristic grin, ‘She’s entitled to her opinion.'”  David Starkey and I included an excerpt from Boss in our book Smokestacks and Skyscrapers: An Anthology of Chicago Writing.

Royko2dRoyko, the son of saloon keepers, was born in a Polish neighborhood on the Northwest Side of Chicago in 1932.  He grew up among drinkers and fighters and, not surprisingly, some of his best writing is set in the city’s bars.  After a stint in the Air Force, Royko became columnist for the Chicago Daily News from 1959 until the paper closed in 1978.  He wrote for the Sun Times from 1978 to 1984, and finally, in a move that coincided with national syndication, for the Tribune from 1984 to his death.  Royko, whose higher education consisted of two years at Wright Community College, was always skeptical of intellectuals, seeing himself as a champion of the common man and a debunker of frauds.  His most famous alter ego was the tough-talking, cynical Slats Grobnik.

Still, he was a life-long Cubs fan.  He often ridiculed the “curse of the Billy Goat” excuse for the team’s failures and blamed owner P.K. Wrigley himself.  In fact, the Cubs were the subject of his very last column (read it Here), March 21, 1997, where he writes of Wrigley running, “…the worst franchise in baseball. And a big part of that can be blamed on racism.  If not Wrigley’s, then that of the stiffs he himself hired to run his baseball operations.”

Rick Kogan ends his tribute to Royko recalling his wife Judy’s reflections on Royko and the Cubs.

“‘The Cubs winning the World Series? There really are no words to describe what Mike would have thought, would have felt,’ says Judy. ‘He would have … I don’t have the words.’

“She can remember vividly the night when the Cubs clinched the 1984 division title. She and Mike watched the game at the Billy Goat Tavern. It was jammed, and after the victory, people, strangers mostly, approached Mike to exchange high-fives. Quietly, gently, he grabbed Judy by the hand and led her from the bar, up the stairs and out onto Hubbard Street. She thought they were headed home. Instead he took her in his arms and they started to dance.

“‘We were there, alone in the middle of the street, just twirling in that strange, otherworldly light,’ she says. ‘We were so happy.'”

“The following morning,” Kogan concludes, “he was back at the paper writing his column because that’s what he did.”

 Go to a list of Chicago Writers, and to the Smokestacks and Skyscrapers page, where you can also BUY the book.

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Reflections on a Political Loss

It has taken me a while for me to write anything at all, but on the afternoon of April 10th I wrote this to a few colleagues who had been supporting Rick Guzman’s run for Aurora mayor:

“By now you know that Rick Guzman lost his race for Aurora mayor by a narrow, narrow margin. We were away this weekend visiting family when we got a text Friday saying that he, not wanting to appear obstructionist or to stand in the way of the transition, was going to concede. The numbers are not all in yet (!), but it appears he lost by about 170 votes on the high end, and as few as 101 votes on the low. He wanted to get within 76 votes before going through the expensive and uncertain process of a recount, but figures he will fall about 25 votes shy of that.

NegatvCampgns“Of course we are devastated. This is an age where actual accomplishments don’t often mean much—he has had far more than his opponent—and where fake news holds terrible sway. We were the victim of such news when a super pac in Evergreen Park just made up a story, totally lies, and released it on a fake news website. My wife is friends with a member of a prominent Aurora political family and watched as this story was circulated by them on social media the weekend before the election. We had also heard others repeat this fabrication for about a week.

“In an election this close many of us who volunteered can’t help but have thoughts like, if I had only Contributed 100 more dollars, or Made 100 more calls, or Knocked on 100 more doors, maybe that would have made the difference. The only one who I hope does not harbor such thoughts is Rick himself, who sacrificed many times more than anyone else. It’s possible he knocked on more doors himself than all of the rest of us combined.

“I will write more fully on the loss in the near future and post it to my website after we’ve had time to digest it all and to try to recover. For now we’re just discouraged—at least I am, who has never been much a fan of politics in the first place.

“During the campaign people often said to me, You must be very proud. I always took this as a strange statement because I was already as proud of Rick as I could be and winning or losing wasn’t going to have much of an impact on that one way or the other. His accomplishments were already impressive, but my pride has always emanated from something greater: my knowledge of how very deep his desire was to be a good man and to make a difference. I told him this soon after election night, and he replied, ‘Thanks, Dad. I am who I am because of you.’ May we all be as lucky to get those kinds of replies from our children. At Bryan’s memorial service, where so many spoke, especially all his brothers, Hal Wilde came up afterwards, tears in his eyes, and said to me, ‘I hope you know you’re the luckiest man in the room.’ I speak of my own feelings at this moment—knowing that Rick’s and the family’s feelings are more important now—only to say I am constantly aware of my immense luck in having the family I do. Maybe in a while, the story will turn from deep disappointment in the loss and in politics in general to more of a story where a political unknown, dead last in the beginning and given no chance at all, ran a race against three political veterans with decades of name recognition behind them, plus five write-in candidates, to come this close to winning. I hope so. Thanks for your interest and support.”

It’s hard to sort out the many regrets you have at times like these, but in my note I pointed to two, big political ones: the negativity and the fake news.  And I was sorry that our own campaign felt it also had to mention negative things.  As someone said to me, “But what we mentioned was ALL true!”  I suppose.  But I met several supporters of Rick’s opponent, Richard Irvin, whose resolve to vote for their man was stiffened by that negativity.  The links below will take you to a Tribune article by Steve Lord on both campaigns’ negative turns, as well as a long note from Rick himself commenting on it.  Of course, the negativity of this campaign pales when put in the context of the history of negative campaigns in American politics.  Why do we put up with it?  That’s a subject for a later post.  My aversion to it marks me, I suppose, as politically naive, but still….

 Read Steve Lord’s news story, which begins: “The mayoral race in Aurora that has been lauded for its positivity took a negative turn this week.”

 Read Rick Guzman’s comment on the last days of the campaign.  His comments seem supported by what Lord reports in his story above.

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