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Walking in late September, we gaze south towards Kearsarge from the dawn window under the great maple that torches the hillside. Each morning is more outrageous than the one before, days outdoing their predecessors as sons outdo their fathers. We walk out over the chill dew to audit glorious wreckage from the night's cold passage - new branches sud
I LOVE autumn - my favorite season of the year - although it is often melancholy given the brutal winters that follow. Still, it is a time for rejoicing - and tonight we're going to enter the celebration by visiting with the Paul Winter Consort.
I first saw Paul Winter in 1968 at the Fillmore East when they filled in for the Kinks at the last minute. It seems that the Kinks drummer had come down with hepatitis and could not travel across the pond at the last minute. So, in addition to the Voices of East Harlem - another last minute surprise -
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I was in heaven - this adoration of genre bending as been a long time love affair it seems - and continues to inform my spirituality. It also informs my sense of liturgy and worship where improvisation and tradition meet like parts of a tapestry and the whole becomes far more beautiful than the individual parts.
One of my all-time favorite liturgical experiences took place with Paul Winter in 2002 when he joined the spiritual leadership of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in NYC for their annual feast of St.
And all the while Winter and the church organist were improvising on ancient melodies and filling the spectacle with sounds of faith, hope and love. Not every Sunday can (or should) be such a festival, but the unity of old with new - old friends and new guests - stays a lively part of how I understand and experience Sundays.
What makes this evening even more special is that Winter is coming to town in support of the work of Strolling the Heifers - a regional consortium dedicated to the cause of local small farmers - who provide micro-loans to farmers as well as their educational efforts concerning sustainable agriculture. (check them out @ www.strollingoftheheifers.com/v2/) They put it like this:
Whenever New England loses one of its family farms, it loses some i
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Vacation has truly come to an end now - and while I cherish the long, lazy days of summer - I am opening to the not quite hazy shades of autumn.
(A local congregation sharing the Missa Gaia by Paul Winter - totally GREAT version, too! Photo credits: Dianne De Mott)
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