MLK, Willie Stargell, and “New Morning for the World”

MLK, Willie Stargell, and “New Morning for the World”

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Back when I was a kid, baseball held enough interest for me that I used to follow the standings. Now I don’t know if I can name a single active ballplayer. What happened to that boy who collected baseball cards? What happened to those baseball cards?

In those days, Willie Stargell would have been part of my world. Funny how 50 years ago, it seemed everyone was. There was no internet, and yet I recognized and maybe even knew a little bit about important figures from the fields of entertainment, sports, politics, science, and the arts, even if I wasn’t particularly interested in all of them. And I was 10! The more “connected” we are, the more clueless we become.

Here’s a photo of me, in happier professional times, in the studio, doing a live air shift and sharing an out-of-print LP of Stargell narrating Joseph Schwantner’s “New Morning for the World: Daybreak of Freedom” – alongside other noteworthy, neglected music, for MLK Day. The text is compiled from speeches and writings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Stargell introduced the piece with the Eastman Philharmonia conducted by David Effron, on January 15, 1983 (King’s birthday), at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC. This was followed by performances in Philadelphia, New York, Pittsburgh, and Rochester (home of the Eastman School of Music). Since then, the work has received hundreds of performances throughout the United States.

At the time of its premiere, Stargell was still first baseman and team captain of the Pittsburgh Pirates. You can read more about him here:

Schwantner was honored with a Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1979 for “Aftertones of Infinity.” Inexplicably, this performance of “New Morning for the World” has never appeared on compact disc. Since I won’t be able to share it with you on the radio today, here it is, posted on YouTube:

This year, my community service was helping some of my neighbors shovel out their cars and cleaning up a few empty parking spaces. Hey, someone shoveled my walk yesterday. Just paying it forward.

I wrote the following in 2021. I’m not sure I have the faith to stand behind it anymore:

“I know I made the observation before, but it bears repeating: that Stargell would have been subjected to such discrimination and harassment in the still-recent past demonstrates how short history is, and how pertinent was King’s life’s work.

“Tolerance, respect, kindness, and basic human decency never go out of fashion. Points can be made without violence, and just because someone disagrees with a certain perspective doesn’t automatically make him a moron, or Satan. That’s not to say there isn’t right and wrong, or that there isn’t evil in the world. Take a stand. Have the courage to speak. But also have the patience to listen. Then pause to consider.

“Mobs and movements tend to do something to people. They can attract attention, they can inspire, and they can even spur change. But they also have a dangerous tendency to create straw men and to dehumanize. In my experience, most people, when encountered one on one, are fundamentally decent and want to do right by one another, regardless of how they vote.

“There are plenty of ‘broken’ people, to be certain. But fear and ignorance (not to be confused with stupidity), along with a propensity to view oneself as better or more worthy than somebody else, are at the root of so many of the world’s problems.

“The most basic attitude adjustment can mean so much. And I offer this as a highly-flawed human being, who doesn’t always practice what he preaches. We can always do more, all of us. And we should always strive to be better.”

Ah… younger, idealistic Classic Ross Amico.

Time for a shower, and then off to the wildlife center.

“Everybody longs for meaning. Everybody needs to love and be loved. Everybody needs to clap hands and be happy. Everybody longs for faith. In music… there is a stepping stone towards all of these.”

– Martin Luther King, Jr.

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PHOTO: One of the advantages of working on a federal holiday is being able to share Willie Stargell narrating “New Morning for the World.” Another is not bothering to shave.


Comments

8 responses to “MLK, Willie Stargell, and “New Morning for the World””

  1. Anonymous

    Keep the faith, Ross.

  2. Anonymous

    Lovely & true. Continue to stand behind it, Ross.

  3. Anonymous

    Wildlife Center? Is that a synonym for Tulane Street, Princeton?

  4. Anonymous

    Nice job Ross. I was at Pirates game the night they unveiled the awesome Willie Stargell statue

  5. Anonymous

    Gotta love Pops! Although, I’m a die hard Yankees fan…since birth…😁

  6. Anonymous

    Xclnt Timely Cherish this day for MLK

  7. Anonymous

    All so true. I join in your beliefs.

  8. Anonymous

    Connected & Clueless. The relief this brings!

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