Friday, 26 November 2021

Finding things online

I never get over the astonishment at Google's capacity to find things I've lost.

If there's anything I don't know or I've forgotten, I ask as if Google were an actual person, and almost always find an answer — with a few supplementary questions sometimes, just as would happen in a conversation with a friend.

So last night while everyone else in our house was out at choir, I was listening to music in my room. Very rarely am I the only one home, and I dislike earbuds/earphones, and I don't like to disturb the others by playing music when they're home, especially in the evening when we've all settled down in our cells, so to speak — Thursday, being choir, is a good night. No one home but us chickens.

I was wandering happily from song to song, when I took a fancy to listen to The Soul of Man Never Dies. I looked it up and there were several versions on Youtube, mostly men, mostly American bluegrass — which I like but wasn't what I had in mind. 

I used to have that song in my personal collection of music. Back in 2012 when I downsized everything radically, I gave away my collection of CDs, first having moved the songs onto my computer. 

Time went by. I changed my computer, I changed my phone, and somewhere along the line I inadvertently set up a second iTunes account, when my email address morphed from Googlemail to Gmail. At some point when I got a new phone and went to sync my phone and computer, I could only go with the one account for music (obviously, to be synced) and thus lost the music I'd not bought on iTunes in electronic form but only moved across from CDs. In among it was the version I used to have (and loved) of The Soul of Man Never Dies.

I searched, but couldn't find it. So I thought back to when I first heard it, which was when we were living in Aylesbury. Tony and I moved there when we got married in 2006, and only stayed three years before moving back to Hastings at the end of 2009. It took me a while to get to know Aylesbury, and find where concerts happened and where the Quaker Meeting House was and all that sort of thing. I used to go to the lunchtime concerts in the church; they were free, so I went most weeks, but only went once that I can remember to the paying sort that happened in a little theatre in the evening — to hear the woman who sang The Soul of Man Never Dies. 

I remembered the concert, and the woman. I remember she said she liked Berocca (vitamins) which I'd never heard of and checked out later and didn't especially enjoy. But I couldn't remember her name.

I reckoned this must have been around 2007, to allow enough time for me to have got to know the town, so I did a Google search for "English woman folk singer Aylesbury 2007", and there she was — Kate Rusby.

So I searched again for "Kate Rusby The Soul of Man Never Dies" — which is how I discovered the reason I couldn't find it before is Kate Rusby calls that song Canaan's Land.

And here, for your listening pleasure, it is.




8 comments:

Zillah said...

Eeee, our Kate's local to us here in the north edge of South Yorkshire. We love her Christmas albums, especially the versions she does of traditional Sheffield carols. Looking forward to listening to them soon.

Pen Wilcock said...


❤️

Suzan said...

Just to make you smile.

In three hours my youngest grandchild will be baptised. He mother has worked hard and had everything ready...that is until this morning. The baby's father has decided he wanted hymns and he promptly went out. Bethany rang and asked me about any songs for Mary so I told her about the Magnificat and how it is the song Mary sings when she visits Elizabeth. Beth then remembered we sang it as Tell Out My Soul so that is one hymn found. I think it is very fitting as the baby is Elise Mary and she was born August 15 which is celebrated as the Assumption of Mary in the Catholic church.

This Anglican girl has learning much more about being R.C.

Pen Wilcock said...

That's a really good choice. x

Sandra Ann said...

Beautiful, thanks for sharing Pen, I've just told Dave I'd like that at my funeral - to which he replied, "No time soon I hope!" We love Kate Rusby and her Christmas albums are really good xx

Charleen said...

Good morning from my neck of the woods,
I had asked about posting a link to your Advent series from last year so that myself and two friends could share in that experience. You did give me your youtube or was it Facebook link, but I’m not able to open it or find it on my own. Would you consider somehow providing the videos again this year on a daily basis? I am not good with technology so I don’t know how big of an ask this is. But, thank you in advance. I appreciate, Into the Heart of Advent, very much.
Charleen

Pen Wilcock said...

Okay, Charleen. Will do. x

Pen Wilcock said...

Just to say — I've written to my publisher to check that's okay with them, as they hold the rights.