Pages

Monday, January 16, 2012

Thank you, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

At the center of non-violence stands the principle of love.
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Today, many Americans will put our busy lives on pause, to remember and honor the courageous life and leadership of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.  As I pondered songs that remind me of his abiding faith in our ability to live together in peace and harmony, the first song that came to mind (perhaps because I took 9 years of piano lessons!) was Ebony and Ivory by Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney.  Watching the 1980s-something music video below really "took me back."  And I LOVED how, at around 2:30, they're both actually sitting walking on a huge piano keyboard, and then they end up sitting on 2 black keys, next to each other!


While watching that video, I thought about and appreciated how much progress we've made since then.  Yes, there's still much room for improvement.  But I sometimes envy my grandchildren, who may take for granted their many opportunities to befriend so early in life this multi-color, multi-lingual, and multi-cultural world.  That's about 180 degrees different  from what I  experienced during the first oh-so-homogenous 40 years of MY life!

I'm REALLY looking forward to seeing Red Tails, the new movie about the African-American World War II aviators known as the Tuskegee  Airmen.  I'm embarassed to admit that 'til now, my exposure to those valiant men and the effect they had on U.S. race relations has been limited to learning enough to pass a high school history test.  I'm now eager to learn about these men and their commitment to prove that, as the movie's sub-title tells us, Courage Has No Color.  This is also what Stevie Wonder's song Black Man reminds us of, as you'll hear in the great video below.  It's long, but nowhere near as long as the history timespan it chronicles!  Lyrics are below.

What a coincidence that the player image for this YouTube video is Rev. King!

enJOY!










Biz Burnett


Lyrics to  Black Man  by Stevie Wonder

First man to die
For the flag we now hold high
Was a black man (Crispus Attucks)

The ground were we stand
With the flag held in our hand
Was first the red man's

Guide of a ship
On the first Columbus trip
Was a brown man (Pedro Alonzo Nino)

The railroads for trains
Came on tracking that was laid
By the yellow man

We pledge allegiance
All our lives
To the magic colors
Red, blue and white
But we all must be given
The liberty that we defend
For with justice not for all men
History will repeat again
It's time we learned
This World Was Made For All Men

Heart surgery
Was first done successfully
By a black man (Dr Daniel Hale Williams)

Friendly man who died
But helped the pilgrims to survive
Was a red man (Squanto)

Farm workers rights
Were lifted to new heights
By a brown man (Caesar Chavez)

Incandescent light
Was invented to give sight
By the white man (Thomas Edison)

We pledge allegiance
All our lives
To the magic colors
Red, blue and white
But we all must be given
The liberty that we defend
For with justice not for all men
History will repeat again
It's time we learned
This World Was Made For All Men

Hear me out...

Now I know the birthday of a nation
Is a time when a country celebrates
But as your hand touches your heart
Remember we all played a part in America
To help that banner wave

First clock to be made
In America was created
By a black man (Benjamin Banneker)

Scout who used no chart
Helped lead Lewis and Clark
Was a red man (Sacagawea, a woman!)

Use of martial arts
In our country got its start
By a yellow man

And the leader with a pen
Signed his name to free all men
Was a white man (Abraham Lincoln)

We pledge allegiance
All our lives
To the magic colors
Red, blue and white
But we all must be given
The liberty that we defend
For with justice not for all men
History will repeat again
It's time we learned
This World Was Made For All Men

This world was made for all men
This world was made for all men
This world was made for all men
God saved His world for all men
All people
All babies
All children
All colors
All races
This world's for you
and me
This world
My world
Your world
Everybody's world
This world
Their world
Our world
This world was made for all men

Hear me out...

Who was the first man to set foot on the North Pole?
Matthew Henson - a black man

Who was the first american to show the Pilgrims at Plymouth the secrets
of survival in the new world?
Squanto - a red man

Who was the soldier of Company G who won high honors for his courage
and heroism in World War 1?
Sing Lee - a yellow man

Who was the leader of united farm workers and helped farm workers
maintain dignity and respect?
Caesar Chavez - a brown man

Who was the founder of blood plasma and the director of the Red Cross
blood bank?
Dr. Charles Drew - a black man

Who was the first American heroine who aided the Lewis and Clark
expedition?
Sacagawea - a red woman

Who was the famous educator and semanticist who made outstanding
contributions to education in America?
Hayakawa - a yellow man

Who invented the world's first stop light and the gas mask?
- a black man

Who was the American surgeon who was one of the founders of
neurosurgery?
Harvey William Cushing - a white man

Who was the man who helped design the nation's capitol, made the first
clock to give time in America, and wrote the first almanac?
Benjamin Banneker - a black man

Who was the legendary hero who helped establish the League of Iroquois?
Hiawatha - a red man

Who was the leader of the first microbiotic center in America?
- a yellow man

Who was the founder of the city of Chicago in 1772?
Jean Baptiste - a black man

Who was one of the organizers of the American Indian Movement?
Denis Banks - a red man

Who was the Jewish financier who raised funds to sponsor Christopher
Columbus' voyage to America?
Lewis D. Santangol - a white man

Who was the woman who led countless slaves to freedom on the
underground rairoad?
Harriet Tubman - a black woman


Sunday, January 15, 2012

Beth Nielsen Chapman is Right!
"Life Holds On"

It was a bittersweet experience the past three days, as I listened to  The Story  on WUNC 91.5FM (my local [Raleigh/Durham] NPR affiliate).  Dick Gordon's 3-day "Re-Inventing Haiti" series moved me to tears, some of which were joyful...almost as joyful as the spirit of many amazing Haitians who have literally "lived to tell about" the horrific 2010 Haiti Earthquake and its aftermath.  Their steadfast conviction that this event occurred to provide the opportunity to rebuild EVERYTHING in Haiti literally from the ground up reminded me of one of my favorite songs, Life Holds On by the awesome Beth Nielsen Chapman.  (The video is embedded below.)

Today is an "Hallelujah Amen!" day in my professional and spiritual life!  I and some virtual co-workers have finally completed an intense piece of a project that will literally create a new "financial aquaduct system" for every U.S. nonprofit, the millions of people and other good causes they serve, and hopefully millions of small- and mid-size U.S. businesses who would love to financially support those nonprofits more than their current cashflow allow.  I will soon post more here about this revolutionary new no-cost noprofit fundraising system, but in the meantime, the image below says it all about where we've ALL been economically for over 3 years.  And it PROVES to me that life does INDEED "..hold on...given the slightest chance."  It proves to me that if we just "Keep the faith, Baby!" and work cooperatively together, we CAN accomplish ANYTHING and EVERYTHING!


Here's proof!




enJOY!
Biz Burnett




Lyrics to Life Holds On by Beth Nielsen Chapman

I was swinging on the swings when I was a little girl
Trying to get a handle on the big, wide world
When I noticed all the grass in the cracks in the concrete
I said, where there's a will, there's a way around anything

Life holds on
Given the slightest chance
For the weak and the strong
Life holds on

There was a third-grade boy that we knew in school
He was found face down in a swimming pool
And as they worked on that kid every minute was an hour
And when his eyes fluttered open we could feel that power

Life holds on
Given the slightest chance
For the weak and the strong
Life holds on
Life holds on
Life holds on

Sirens screaming down my street
Fading as they go
Whining somewhere far away
To someone I don't know
Still, I say a little prayer
There's always hope
Life holds on

Through the window in the kitchen I can see outside
My kids taking turns coming down the slide
And I try not to worry as they grow a little every day
No, I've just gotta believe they're gonna find their way

And that Life holds on
Given the slightest chance
For the weak and the strong
Life holds on
Life holds on
Life holds on
Life holds on



Thursday, July 29, 2010

My Best Days Are Ahead of Me

Thanks, Jenn Elkin, for brightening up my day--and my next decade--by sharing with me today this great song/music video by Danny Gokey.  I consider it an early birthday present.  So Thank You Very Much!

Enjoy!

Biz


Sunday, February 14, 2010

We're All Swimming to the Other Side

Today, I'd like to share Swimming to the Other Side, a simple but profoundly inspirational song written by Pat Humphries.


Below, you can hear this song performed by David Grover and The Big Bear Band.  On this group's website, they describe their music as follows:


Original and Traditional music for kids of all ages. We call it folk music, but the influences behind the music are the performers and writers we love. It's Pete Seeger and the Beach Boys … it's the Beatles … and Harry Belafonte. Paul Simon and Kermit the Frog. It's Broadway and the Carpenters, Peter Paul and Mary and the Grateful Dead. And it's Woody Guthrie and Martin Luther King. It's folk music of the 21st century. It's real people playing real instruments playing songs we love, to people we love.


Through the wonders of the I-net and other global communication technologies, we can now see first-hand that millions of people riding this rock understand and live by the words in this beautiful song (complete lyrics below).


EnJoy!


Biz Burnett



To listen, click on the >(PLAY) symbol.

Swimming to the Other Side   written by Pat Humphries
performed by David Grover and The Big Bear Band

Make your own playlists at DivShare.com

Swimming to the Other Side  Lyrics
Refrain
We are living ‘neath the great Big Dipper
We are washed by the very same rain
We are swimming in the stream together
Some in power and some in pain
We can worship this ground we walk on
Cherishing the beings that we live beside
Loving spirits will live forever
We’re all swimming to the other side

I am alone and I am searching
Hungering for answers in my time
I am balanced at the brink of wisdom
I’m impatient to receive a sign
I move forward with my senses open
Imperfection, it be my crime
In humility I will listen
We’re all swimming to the other side

On this journey through thoughts and feelings
Binding intuition, my head, my heart
I am gathering the tools together
I’m preparing to do my part
All of those who have come before me
Band together and be my guide
Loving lessons that I will follow
We’re all swimming to the other side

When we get there we will discover
All the gifts we’ve been given to share
Have been with us since life’s beginning
And we never noticed they were there
We can balance at the brink of wisdom
Never recognizing that we’ve arrived
Loving spirits will live together
We’re all swimming to the other side.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

What A Wonderful World

It's a challenge to keep in mind how beautiful and safe we are on this planet when news reports show us mostly scenes of natural disasters and hateful local and international acts. This is where we get to exercise our gift of free will.  In every second of every day, we have the choice to hold in our minds--and anchor with our hearts--the vision of peace and serenity we say we want to experience individually and collectively here.  Yes, many are truly suffering from the lack of what we all want and deserve.  But at least 51% of us are always happy and healthy.  If that were not true, this planet would have self-destructed by now.  When too many of us believe that the cup is half empty and it will certainly never be running over, we unwittingly tip the scales to our individual and global disadvantage.

When I start feeling 50/50 or worse, I listen to some music, and soon "all is right with the world" again (i.e., +51 or more).  My music-refreshed self can again see, hear, and feel what a WONDERful world this is.  Louis Armstrong's classic song What A Wonderful World as the soundtrack for the short and uplifting video below is my kind of medicine!  And offering such a cure was the intention of this video's creator, Geneticc.  Thanks!

EnJoy!



WHAT A WONDERFUL WORLD
sung by Louis Armstrong      (video by Geneticc)


Sunday, January 17, 2010

Do You Believe in Magic?

Yesterday while talking with my brother Tom, he got a little tongue-tied and said, "...he's a magician -- er, I  mean, he's a musician...."  I interrupted him and said, "Yes indeed!  Anyone who's a musician is definitely also a magician!"  We laughed.

This got me remembering one of my favorite songs from the '60s:  Do You Believe in Magic by The Lovin' Spoonful.  Below, I link to a full-color video of that group performing that song live on The Ed Sullivan Show on March 19, 1967.  Lyrics are below the link to that video.

Wikipedia says this song has been enJOYing successive generations, including being recorded by BBMak for the score of Return to Never Land, a sequel to Disney's 1953 classic Peter Pan. (one of my FAVORITE childhood stories).  And it was ranked #216 on Rolling Stone's (November 2004) list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

My brother's linguistic "mix up" is just one more clue in our quest to solve the mystery of life.  It's not a meaningless coincidence that our words for magic and music are so similar.  (I wonder if that's true in other languages.)  It's intentional languaging, like Hansel and Gretel left pebbles for themselves to find their way back home when in the forest.  But the day they didn't have time to collect some pebbles and had to use bread crumbs instead (which the birds happily ate), Hansel and Gretel couldn't find their way home, and ended up caged inside a wicked old woman's house.  (The symbolism in that fable is a topic for another post entirely!)

May the magic of music enJOY you and set you free!  (Complete lyrics below.)



The Lovin' Spoonful performing
Do You Believe In Magic  in 1965 on the Hullabaloo show.


  

Do You Believe in Magic lyrics
Do you believe in magic in a young girl's heart
How the music can free her, whenever it starts
And it's magic, if the music is groovy
It makes you feel happy like an old-time movie
I'll tell you about the magic, and it'll free your soul
But it's like trying to tell a stranger 'bout rock and roll

If you believe in magic don't bother to choose
If it's jug band music or rhythm and blues
Just go and listen it'll start with a smile
It won't wipe off your face no matter how hard you try
Your feet start tapping and you can't seem to find
How you got there, so just blow your mind

If you believe in magic, come along with me
We'll dance until morning 'til there's just you and me
And maybe, if the music is right
I'll meet you tomorrow, sort of late at night
And we'll go dancing, baby, then you'll see
How the magic's in the music and the music's in me

Yeah, do you believe in magic
Yeah, believe in the magic of a young girl's soul
Believe in the magic of rock and roll
Believe in the magic that can set you free
Ohh, talking 'bout magic

Do you believe like I believe Do you believe in magic
Do you believe like I believe Do you believe, believer
Do you believe like I believe Do you believe in magic






Friday, January 15, 2010

The Power of One

May the HAITI earthquake be the what finally ends HATE among the clans on this planet.  May this be the last labor contraction in birthing the "thousand years of peace" on this beautiful planet.  (Don't worry:  If we can all live in total peace for a thousand years, there will be no going back!)  May this indescribable grief and desperation be quickly balanced and then totally transformed by a bizillion acts of kindness and generosity from all who understand that, as President Obama reminded us yesterday, "There but for the grace of God go we."  May this and all crises past and future help us remember The Power of One.

EnJoy watching and hearing Bomshel sing The Power of One below!


To listen, click on the >(PLAY) symbol.

The Power of One by Bomshel

Make your own playlists at DivShare.com