B1 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 2022 CONTACT US Lissa Brewer lbrewer@dailyastorian.com FOLLOW US facebook.com/ DailyAstorian AP Photo From left, Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison of The Beatles appear at a press conference in New York in 1966. A shared love of music Remembering a bond on Father’s Day I came home and put it on a little portable record player that just a year before was playing musical nursery rhyme records. It was an evolution for me and my d ad. But I was y father wasn’t a musician, but he was musical. off . Off on a journey that would be uniquely my own, but Other than a year of violin lessons when he which was paved by my father’s footsteps before me. was 10 , he never formally studied music. As I grew, my record collection grew, fi lled with some But for some reason he could play the piano by ear, of the best the ‘60s and ‘70s had to off er. Yet I never for- knocking out many of his favorite jazz standards from the got what was in my d ad’s collection and the way certain ‘40s and ‘50s . songs made me feel. However, it was his record collection that layered my I remember coming home from college one time. But childhood — and, indeed, my life — with a musicality instead of putting on an Eagles or Doobie Brothers album, that to this day often resonates as strongly as my sense of I searched out one of my d ad’s obscure quiet jazz piano smell. records. I just needed to hear that song to remind me how His collection was fi lled with many of fortunate I was to grow up in the home that the usual suspects of his era — Sinatra, I did. ... THE Bennett, Como, Crosby. But there also were One of music’s great powers is to dis- obscure jazz artists, soundtracks from musi- cover emotion and connect it to a time PHYSICAL cals, folk music and the New York Philhar- and place. There are songs that connect to PRESENCE OF monic playing the classical repertoire. It old girlfriends, songs that connect to high was an early and foundational introduction dances, songs from my childhood THOSE ALBUMS school of the power of music to lift you up, calm that bring my father to life in a way a sim- you down, make you think and transport ple story cannot. Music can remove the TIES ME — you to another world. haze from old memories and can awaken GRATEFULLY — the best moments of life’s journey. And When d ad would come home from his offi ce job, he wouldn’t sit down and watch music’s ability to create emotional connec- TO MY PAST IN Walter Cronkite like a lot of parents did tion ensures I won’t forget even seemingly then. He would go to his stereo in the living small episodes from my past — because the A WAY A SONG room, put on a record and relax. Today we soundtrack was there. MAGICALLY might call it “decompressing.” But he was When my dad passed away in 2015, my just relaxing and enjoying his music. mother and my siblings began the unavoid- PULLED OUT On winter Sunday nights, he would build able task of going through his possessions OF THE AIR a fi re in the fi replace, put on some Sinatra and deciding who wanted what. There was and play games with us. Like any family, only one thing I wanted: his record collec- NEVER WILL. we had ups and downs, but to this day, Sina- tion. I needed that connection to my past tra’s “September of My Years” takes me to and to him. While my two brothers and my that living room and wraps me in a security blanket of all sister had record collections of their own, they knew my that was right in my childhood. connection to that music ran deep, and they acceded to my When T he Beatles landed in America in February of only request. 1964, I was 5 years old. Their music was diff erent from Today, the collection sits in boxes in my basement. I anything I’d heard coming out of my d ad’s stereo. Even at don’t often play them. Though I almost hate to admit it, that young age, it captured me — in no small part, I know, if I want to hear one of those songs, I can usually search because I had already been exposed to so much variety in it out on Apple Music. But the physical presence of those his music. albums ties me — gratefully — to my past in a way a song Like many young boys, I wanted to be like my dad. magically pulled out of the air never will. So at age 6 , I asked him if he would buy me a Beatles The other night I decided was not a night when an record. Though he was not yet a Beatles fan — the hair, Apple Music version of one of my d ad’s albums would the screaming girls — he got it. He could see that glimmer suffi ce. I headed to the basement and searched through of a future record collection inside me. And he knew the the boxes until I found it — Sinatra’s “September of My importance of that. Years” album. I poured a glass of wine and placed the We went to J.C. Penney, and he let me go to the “45” vinyl on my turntable. Cut number one is the title track. section to pick one out. I selected “I Feel Fine” — not I sat back, closed my eyes, and thought — “I feel fi ne.” one of T he Beatles’ biggest hits, but notable for the This essay was produced through a class taught by initial fuzzy feedback that leads into a rocking riff by Tom Hallman Jr., a Pulitzer Prize winning reporter at The George Harrison. Oregonian. By RICH BROWN For The Astorian M