Making the song new again
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Young Chang
The first two lines of a little-known Peter, Paul and Mary song titled
“The Kid” make Noel “Paul” Stookey, the Paul in the trio, thoughtful and
even a little bit sad.
They go: “I’m the kid who ran away with the circus, and now I’m
watering elephants.”
It’s about a dream had and then a dream turned into reality, about how
life is so much more instructional than people hope it to be. The words
will likely form a tear in listener’s eyes, Stookey says.
The 63-year-old singer/songwriter, whose solo work has paid tribute to
political and religious movements in Central America, takes pride in how
the lyrics the group sings contain more than just a series of “ooh-babys”
and then a “yeah.”
“We’re talking about a story that has a beginning and middle and an
end,” he said.
Peter, Paul and Mary -- also known as Peter Yarrow, Paul Stookey and
Mary Travers -- will perform stories from their four-decades of
performing accompanied this time by the Pacific Symphony Pops today and
Saturday at the Orange County Performing Arts Center. They’ll sing some
of their classic hits, including “Leavin’ on a Jet Plane,” “Puff the
Magic Dragon” and, of course, “The Kid” as part of the Pops’ season
finale.
Conductor Richard Kaufman will lead the orchestra in the first half of
the show with pieces by American film composer Elmer Bernstein, whose
scores include “Ghostbusters” and “A River Runs Through It.” Bernstein
celebrates his 50th anniversary this year of writing scores for films.
“I would say Elmer’s music is a great representative of American
musical culture in the same way that the music of Peter, Paul and Mary
captures the spirit and character of American music,” Kaufman said.
Stookey is grateful for this -- how their music has survived for
generations without scraping away the thrill of performing the songs,
even today.
“If you can see the people singing along with you, the song becomes
new again,” he said. “You have four generations of people singing it, and
the kids are absolutely transfixed by their parents singing out loud.”
But Stookey clarifies one concern people may have about folk music
combining with a symphony.
“One sometimes wonders if the simplicity of folk music is not
overburdened by a symphony orchestra, but in fact I like to compare it to
movies,” he said. “It’s like a very intimate story told on a wide screen
with a beautiful soundtrack . . . in many instances it helps bring the
melodic part of the music alive.”
But there is some folk music that should be left alone, in Stookey’s
opinion. The trio’s 1962 hit “If I Had a Hammer” is one that has “kind of
a raw energy” and doesn’t have scoring. The 1963 hit “Don’t Think Twice,
It’s All Right” also doesn’t have symphony accompaniment, but for a
different reason.
“It has intimacy, and the trick is to preserve intimacy,” Stookey
said.
He cares about each song, as do his two co-members. When asked which
is his favorite, he answers with what is often offered by his co-star
Travers.
“Songs are like children,” Stookey said. “And some of them behave
better some nights than others.”
FYI
WHAT: Peter, Paul and Mary perform with the Pacific Symphony Pops
WHEN: 8 p.m. today and Saturday
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $25-$79
CALL: (714) 755-5799
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