Caring for the elderly has never been a widespread subject
for songs by singer/songwriters, but the older I get the more I appreciate
them. In fact, John Prine’s ‘Hello In There’ has been
a favourite of mine since I first heard it sung by the man himself at a
club in Greenwich Village in, I think, 1974. Until then I wasn’t familiar with Prine’s
songs but even on first hearing this song – and ‘Sam Stone’ with its immortal
line: ‘There’s a hole in daddy’s arm where all the money goes’ – struck me as
something special, and it’s another of those songs that I never tire of
hearing.
‘Hello In
There’ is a plea for understanding from one generation to another, from the old
to the young, couched in verses that echo the experience of those whose life is
slowly ebbing away. For my money, its first verse contains
one of the saddest triplets ever set down: ‘We lost Davy in the Korean
War/ I still don’t know what for/ Don’t matter anymore’.
Prine sings his
song from the husband’s angle in folksy style with melodic guitar fills between
the verses that balance its sense of wistful melancholy with a more upbeat tone,
but the better known, heart-wrenching version by Bette Midler, which swops
genders to the voice of the wife, is markedly different; softly sung and simply
beautiful, dignified, accompanied solely by a stately, unfussy piano. Regardless
of which version I hear, I love the imagery that evokes the weariness of a
creaking marriage, the emptiness of retirement and of trees and rivers growing
stronger and wilder while we mortals grow weaker and more infirm. In the shortened
final verse Prine makes his life-affirming appeal for tolerance and kindness: ‘Don’t
pass ’em by and stare as if you didn’t care, say hello in there, just say hello’.
I came across
Prine talking about his song in the internet, this from a site called
Performing Songwriter: “I heard the John
Lennon song ‘Across The Universe’, and he had a lot of reverb on his voice. I
was thinking about hollering into a hollow log, trying to get through to
somebody – ‘Hello in there’. That was the beginning thought, then it went to
old people
“I’ve
always had an affinity for old people. I used to help a buddy with his
newspaper route, and I delivered to a Baptist old people’s home where we’d have
to go room-to-room. And some of the patients would kind of pretend that you
were a grandchild or nephew that had come to visit, instead of the guy
delivering papers. That always stuck in my head.
“It
was all that stuff together, along with that pretty melody. I don’t think I’ve
done a show without singing ‘Hello In There’. Nothing in it wears on me.”
Joan Baez has
also recorded ‘Hello In There’ and there may be other cover versions for all I
know but an otherwise rather disappointing
compilation video/DVD by 10,000 Maniacs in my collection closes with a
heart-stopping version of the song performed live by Natalie Merchant and
Michael Stipe, accompanied solely by sturdy electric guitar chords from Billy
Bragg. It’s at some outdoor event in Scotland – and I reach for a tissue just
about every time I watch it. You can find it in YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPIpyB_ZtJ0
You
can also find John Prine singing it over a series of photographs that portray
the song’s imagery, very literal but still very moving.
I just now saw the video of the three in Scotland for the first time in my life and then the next thing I read was this article. What fortuity.
ReplyDeleteThat video left me crying fur a couple minutes.
I had only heard John Prine sing it before just now.
Thank you for this article. You immersed me for a moment in John Prine.