Wow! I first heard of Lydia and Laura Rogers, real-life sisters who grew up outside of Muscle Shoals, Alabama, via NPR. The song they wrote with Brandi Carlile, Black and Blue, is indeed reminescent of the Everly Brothers, and after sampling a few songs I bought their new album, produced by the legendary T. Bone Burnett.
The odd title to the second track intrigued me, and I was simply blown away by that song they wrote with Dan Wilson. It is a wonderfully dark tale of love and violence, with pounding drums and wailing guitars and strings which are a perfect contrast to their precise singing and beautiful harmonies. I can’t wait to listen to the rest of the album.
I’d never tell a man to ask my daddy for my hand I’ve got a thousand tales about the temper of that man He’d shoot a man who came within a mile of my young frame But I know that you will take the risk so I can take your name
You’ve got the ring, I’ve got the keys, and sixty miles ahead Iuka, Mississippi where the two of us will wed
Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi ‘fore he knows the two of us have up and gone Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi We can run away and never come home never come home
My Daddy finally knocked a little sense right into me so I asked around until I found the Justice of the Peace The bruises on my body can’t be hidden anymore So park your car up on the hill, I’m headed out the door
Step easy so my daddy doesn’t hear us sneak away Hang around he’ll shoot you down that’s why we just can’t stay
Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi ‘fore he knows the two of us have up and gone Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi We can run away and never come home
Follow close behind me, not much further now Always just a shadow, I didn’t hear a sound Ain’t no way he heard us, Ain’t no way he’ll come I hear someone breathin’, hold my hand and run
Somewhere in the river there’s a gun the devil owned Somehow everybody knew that everything was wrong A noose up in the maple tree; the old man’s gonna pay Two headstones for two lovers who finally got away
Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi ‘fore he knows the two of us have up and gone Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi We can run away and never come home
Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi ‘fore he knows the two of us have up and gone Take me down to Iuka, Mississippi We can run away and never come home never come home
Next weekend Wendy and I hope to work in the yard and will be chaperoning at the prom, so this weekend we were determined to escape the area for a springtime walk. I figured the dogwood trees would be lovely on the trails at the Crystal Bridges Museum in Bentonville, Arkansas, where we could also view the William S. Paley collection of “modern art” which, given that the former head of CBS died in 1990 at the age of 89, meant mostly early 20th century works focused on French “Modernism”.
Koons is known for his kitsch, leading the wonderful critic Robert Hughes to say his work was “so overexposed that it loses nothing in reproduction and gains nothing in the original.” But Hanging Heart seems a suitable adornment for the restaurant; I’ve similarly enjoyed the museum’s Love sculpture by Robert Indiana, which is subject to similar criticism for how he has repeatedly recycled that motif, but which doesn’t diminish its attractive appeal. Winter before last I used Indiana’s sculpture at Crystal Bridges to represent the love of friendship with my dear friend Carrie and last spring Wendy and I celebrated our new love with it. I think of these works as “applied art” which make the museum more welcoming and encourage visitors to engage positively both with art and with each other.
The Paley collection had a work which caught my eye, The Seine at Chatouby André Derain, and the adjacent exhibition of American Modernists who were influenced by the European artists had one work by Marsden Hartley, Mountains No. 22, which is an echo ofCézanne, and a marked contrast to his Madawaska, one of a series of homoerotic paintings he made of a French-Canadian boxer. In one case, Hartley uses golden browns and in the other bright red to draw one’s attention.
Wendy predicted I would like Ashe’s House, Charleston, South Carolina by Edward Hopper when she spied it in the final gallery at the exhibition, and of course she was right. I’m just disappointed that I forgot to locate and enjoy his Blackwell’s Island, which the museum recently added to its permanent collection.
After enjoying views of the grounds in springtime from various vantage points, we retrieved our belongings and exited the museum, finding a skink along our meandering path up to the parking lot, enjoying the dogwoods near and far as well as Roxy Paine‘s Yield. I wanted to hop into a cute Mazda convertible in the parking lot, but instead my trusty old Camry took us north to Bella Vista to visit the Mildred B. Cooper Memorial Chapel.
Cooper Chapel at Bella Vista
Bella Vista is an affluent retirement community focused on eight golf courses and other recreational amenities managed by the homeowners’ association. It was the first of several similar developments by John Cooper, whose wife Mildred is memorialized by a public chapel which I’d discovered in TripAdvisor. A glimpse of the chapel on my iPhone was enough to recognize it as another Fay Jones work, echoing his wooden Thorncrown Chapel which I’ve visited many times near Eureka Springs, as well as his Powell Chapel which I visited two years ago near Kansas City. Thorncrown is particularly striking with its crossed supports, contrasting to the curving metal forming the gothic arches of the Cooper chapel.
This 1.5 mile walk was a nice end to our day, to be followed by a tasty meal at Abuelo’s back in Bentonville. Sadly, I completely forgot to eat at the local Applebee’s to see the mural they created from my photos for its interior…that must await a future trip.
Wendy and I escaped to the Ozarks on Saturday, enjoying a 4.5 mile hike on the Firetower Trail at Roaring River State Park and taking a drive along the nearby Sugar Camp Scenic Byway.
We drove over to the Nature Center to start the hike, noting a large woodpecker hole in a tree at the start of the trail just behind the center. Soon we reached the trailhead near Camp Smokey. I had chosen to have us ascend the steepest section of trail first, climbing to the top of the ridge where we were grateful for the now-level trail. Eventually we reached the old CCC firetower, which has been dwarfed by the surrounding trees for many decades. Wendy posed at the base and was willing to climb this diminutive tower before returning to the ground to shoot me leaning over from atop the tower.
Dogwoods were in bloom all along the trail, and Wendy picked various flowers, happily pressing them into a book as we made our way around the park. We enjoyed the peaceful walk alongside Roaring River to complete our loop back to the Nature Center.
Next we drove up Seligman Hill to enter the forest and turn off on the Sugar Camp Scenic Byway. We made the requisite stop along the old forest road at the Sugar Camp Firetower, a classic Aermotor tower. A bunch of pickups with trailers for 4-wheel all-terrain vehicles were parked at the base. I knew Wendy would not want to climb the big old tower and the last time I ventured to the top its cab was rather decrepit, so we stayed on the ground.
Wendy was very glad we trekked down the cave trail, despite our failure to wear proper footwear, because she found a lovely stone with crystals along the trail. That was a far more impressive find than anything we managed to scrounge up at the crystal mine in Arkansas over Spring Break.
I thoroughly enjoyed the slow drive along the old gravel forest road, admiring the farms down below. We spent the night in Cassville, but the next time we visit Roaring River for hiking, we’ll try staying at the Emory Melton Inn in the park.
The next day we returned to Bartlesville, driving along US 75 to see very impressive clouds above Jarrett Farm. Little did we know that the same storm system was even then sweeping over Caney to the north, with powerful winds stripping off shingles from the roof of the home of our friends, the Hendersons. Nature was displaying both its beauty and its power on this spring afternoon.
I hiked a bit of the eastern end of the Elk River Trail today with the Hendersons; Wendy was under the weather. I’d hoped to hike at Table Mound, but the overlook was closed, so we drove down to the dam to clamber about on the end of the Elk River Trail.
We’d had a heavy lunch at Brothers Railroad Inn in Independence and the forecast said rain was likely in the mid-afternoon. So when we reached the gravel road from the dam, we took it down to the lake shore, where I found a tree that made a nice bench. We then bushwhacked amidst the driftwood for awhile and followed a deer trail back to the road and walked alongside roadways back to the trailhead with its welcoming blossoms.
It was a short but enjoyable early spring walk, and the Hendersons led me back to Caney along old roads through Elk City and Havana, where we passed by John’s mule, which he will be riding at Robbers Cave next month.
The final stop on our Spring Break 2014 vacation was Mount Nebo, a favorite of mine for its vistas on all sides. I have visited it several times and hiked all of its trails, but I had never stayed overnight up on the mountaintop. This time I rented the Overlook Cabin #61 for Wendy’s first trip to this state park, and it did not disappoint. We made two short hikes along the north and west edges of the mountain during our stay.
At the visitor center we found a convenient stand for a timed photo at the overlook above Lake Dardanelle with Arkansas’ Nuclear One in the background. We then walked the Rim Trail over to Sunset Point. Wendy found a heart rock along the way, and we enjoyed watching and listening to a roadrunner which was hopping about the edge of the bluff, eyeing us warily as we struggled to imitate its call.
In the cabin kitchen I noticed that the refrigerator doors opened inconveniently and was commenting to Wendy on how simple it would be to reverse them as I opened the freezer door. An ice pack I had placed in the freezer door slipped and pulled a support right out of the door, and I clutched at the falling items frantically, making a huge racket and sending her into gales of laughter at Mr. Fix-It’s dilemma.
The last day of our Arkansas vacation was overcast as we made a loop on part of the Summit Park and Rim trails, climbing up to the stone bridge to cross it and reach Lovers’ Leap. We enjoyed our brief stay at Mount Nebo so much that we pledged to return.
Arkansas was a great choice for our Spring Break and I’m sure we’ll both be daydreaming about it for awhile.