"Let Me Call You Sweetheart" was in my head one
morning as my eyes carelessly landed on a photo of two beautiful 1940s-era
women: my mom and Aunt Wally, photographed with their step-mom. It suddenly
struck me like a thunderclap: these women, at the time the photograph was
taken, were certainly familiar with the song playing in my head.
"Sweetheart" was published in 1910, it's true, years before the beauties
in the photo had been born, but its popularity had lasted for decades,
certainly well past the 1940s. And for one mystical, magical moment, the
somewhat knowing smiles of the women in the photo seemed to connect with me
over that song, as if they knew what was playing in my head and were ready to
sing along. I know my mom would have sung it with me at the drop of hat; I
recall her often breaking into random songs, lovely songs like Irving Berlin's "Blue
Skies," a beautiful tune that had apparently been stuck in her head for a
few decades before she put it into mine. 
Anyway, the reason "Sweetheart" was on my mind
that morning was because John and I were prepping
for a program to be performed later that day, an eclectic mix of songs for the
annual luncheon of a large suburban historical society composed of members aged
somewhere between the WWII and Boomer generations. We opened the program with "Sweetheart",
continued with "Star Dust," "Night and Day", "I Could
Have Danced All Night", "Moon 
 River 
You hear the song later, the memories flood in, and you
are transported back in time. And there, in that room with the polite
sing-a-longers, John and I were like masters of time travel, humbled and
honored to be the vehicle bringing back memories for people who had personally
connected, at some point, to these stunning songs. 
I had one last musical encounter that evening, the day's most powerful.
Rewarding myself for the efforts of the day with a viewing of "To Kill a
Mockingbird", I was suddenly almost brought to tears by the film's familiar
musical motif. That melody not only embodied the bittersweet fictionalized
memoir of Harper Lee's Jim Crow South but, perhaps because my day was already
in nostalgia overdrive, it touched me with a longing for my own lost world, a
world in which the music of multiple generations stirred powerful yearnings in
my young soul. 
"Sweetheart" may have filled my head that morning,
"Star Dust" that afternoon, but the Mockingbird theme, somehow encompassing both, lingered for days.


 
