July 3, 2005 Article by Dave Read
The sixth annual visit of A Prairie Home Companion, with Garrison Keillor to the Koussevitsky Music Shed at Tanglewood on July 2, 2005 may be remembered by the 11,000+ in attendance as the “Palms of Victory” show because of the little “non-sectarian” hymn they were taught by Mr. Keillor, who told them they could use it as a call-sign if they should ever encounter him in the airport, but it also will be remembered particularly for Gillian Welch & David Rawlings and Inga Swearingen, who gave strikingly evocative performances that left the audience eager for more.
The humor was as good as it gets, too; the Royal Academy of Radio Acting nailed the Guy Noir episode about the Sprocket tycoon’s $200 million gift to Tanglewood being hijacked for the establishment of the Tanglewood Center for Songwriters, Inc; a wickedly funny Cafe Boeuf with Peter Schickele, and then Schickele’s P.D.Q. Bach duet with David Dusing on the loopy “If Love is Real.”
With the virtual town of Lake Wobegon and it’s fabulous citizenry at its heart, Mr. Keillor’s show is all about community and when the show is on the road, an effort is made to embrace the actual locale, and not only with the funny business. To make that point most emphatically, this show, recognizing that “this is Mohican land,” included a song composed by a Wisconsin-Stockbridge Mohican, Brent Michael Davids.
Inga Swearingen, Prudence Johnsonm, Guys All Star Shoe Band, Edith Wharton String Quartet perform Mohican song
It was sung by Ms. Swearingen and Prudence Johnson, accompanied by the crackerjack Guys All Star Shoe Band, and the Edith Wharton String Quartet, culled from the Tanglewood Music Center just for this show. The latter group acquitted themselves splendidly and no doubt will have fond tales to tell of this day decades down the road when they are wiley veterans of orchestras in places such as Cleveland, Chicago, and Boston.
This was no Tanglewood debut for Mr. Davids; his “Mohican Soup” was sung by Chanticleer to open Tanglewood’s 1999 Festival of Contemporary Music in Seiji Ozawa Hall. In his remarks to the audience that day, he attributed the creative energy in the Berkshires to a foundation established by the Mohicans during their 6,000 year stewardship of the region.
We contacted Mr. Davids at his studio in St. Paul to learn more about him and his song. Several weeks ago he met Mr. Keillor at a local literary gathering and once their conversation got around to their mutual Tanglewood connections, Keillor said “We’re doing a show there next month, will you write something for it?”
So he wrote Stockbridge Mohican Song and sent Keillor the music, lyrics, and demo mp3 file and, as of yesterday (July 5), hasn’t heard from him again. He did listen to the broadcast and liked what he heard, though. In response to our surprise that the whole operation was accomplished so quickly, Mr. Davids said simply, “That’s what I do, I’m a composer.”
Stockbridge Mohican Song
We are coming together (k’MUH yuh WE h’now)
We say Thanks (o NEE oh we KSEE now)
We see the old ones (NAH wuh hah kah CHIGH sock)
We say Thanks (o NEE oh we KSEE now)
Today is a beautiful day (o NAHH kuh MAOW NO no)
We say Thanks (o NEE oh we KSEE now)
Mohican Land (muh HEE kun NEEw AHH kee)
We say Thanks (o NEE oh we KSEE now)