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    Arbor Day


    Arbor Day
    "In Douglas Sirk's grand melodrama Written on the Wind" (1956), "the river" represents a sort of lost innocence, a past happiness (however illusory). When in the film the river is finally shown, the actual location associated with this long lost innocence is at the base of a giant old tree (a sycamore?) perched along the bank of the river. The sanctity of the place by the river is like that of a sacred grove. Trees have figured prominently in world mythology, largely figuratively, as in the image of the "tree of life," for instance, or as a metaphor for family relationships, as in "family tree." Forbidden fruit is associated with the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, but in "The Hanging Tree" (1959), the titular tree is a multivalent symbol, an emblem of death (crucifixion) as well as life. The lyrics to Marty Robbins' song, "The Hanging Tree" makes this linkage explicit: the tree of death becomes the tree of life, associated with the moment in the story when the hero is saved by the power of love. Cast in structuralist terms, the hanging tree is an "excessive signifier". In "The Melodramatic Imagination", Peter Brooks argues the melodramatic form creates an asymmetrical relationship between the signifier and the signified, specifically, a signified in "excess" of the signifier. This asymmetry "in turn produces an excessive signifier, making large and insubstantial claims on meaning." Songwriters love trees because their conventional symbolism allows the songwriter to invoke a certain emotion or value-the oak with steadfast endurance, the (weeping) willow with melancholy, the palm tree with the erotic pleasures of paradise, and so on. The yew tree represents the mourning for a lost loved one, and is associated with death. Hence the yew tree is often found near churches and cemeteries as a reminder to the bereaved of the spirit's ultimate victory over death. Likewise, in the sublime "Bristlecone Pine," the tree (several thousand years old) is an image of eternal life. The reference to the sycamore tree in "Mama" Cass Elliott's "Dream A Little Dream Of Me" (first recorded by Ozzie Nelson and His Orchestra in 1931) is not entirely capricious given that the song is a love song. Given their longevity, there is a long tradition of sycamore trees being planted by the door of the homes of newlyweds. My remarks are intended only to suggest the richness of the subject of the mythology of trees, and are therefore hardly definitive. What follows is a short playlist of songs with arboreal references.

    "SONGS FROM THE WOOD":

    The Ames Brothers - "Tammy"


    The Andrews Sisters - "Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree (With Anyone Else But Me)"

    Joan Armatrading - "Willow"


    The Band - "Whispering Pines"

    The Beach Boys - "California Girls"


    The Beatles - "Matchbox"

    The Brothers Four -" Yellow Bird"


    Mama Cass Elliott - "Dream A Little Dream Of Me"

    James Darren - "Under the Yum Yum Tree"


    Dawn with Tony Orlando - "Tie A Yellow Ribbon Round The Ole Oak Tree"

    Dino Fitzgerald - "Apple on a Cherry Tree"


    Ella Fitzgerald - "St. Louis Blues" (Fitzgerald's version only)

    Fleetwood Mac - "Bare Trees"


    Dick Gaughan - "The Yew Tree"

    Johnny Horton - "Whispering Pines"


    Alan Jackson - "Tall, Tall Trees"

    Jethro Tull - "Songs From the Wood"


    Tom Jones - "Green, Green Grass of Home"

    Lynyrd Skynyrd - "That Smell"


    Peter, Paul and Mary - "Lemon Tree"

    The Platters - "Trees"


    Radiohead - "Fake Plastic Trees"

    Marty Robbins - "The Hanging Tree"


    Rush - "The Trees"

    Jim Salestrom - "Bristlecone Pine"


    Frank Sinatra - "Willow Weep For Me"

    The Steve Miller Band - "The Joker"


    U2 - "One Tree Hill"

    Stevie Wonder - "Tree"Copyright 2010 by Sam Umland



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