Losing Music

Losing Music

by John Cotter

Narrated by John Cotter

Unabridged — 7 hours, 5 minutes

Losing Music

Losing Music

by John Cotter

Narrated by John Cotter

Unabridged — 7 hours, 5 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$16.95
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)

Listen on the free Barnes & Noble NOOK app


Get an extra 10% off all audiobooks in June to celebrate Audiobook Month! Some exclusions apply. See details here.

Related collections and offers


Overview

“I was in the car the first time music seemed strange: the instruments less distinct, the vocals less crisp.”

John Cotter was thirty years old when he first began to notice a ringing in his ears. Soon the ringing became a roar inside his head. Next came partial deafness, then dizziness and vertigo that rendered him unable to walk, work, sleep, or even communicate.

At a stage of life when he expected to be emerging fully into adulthood, teaching, and writing books, he found himself “crippled and dependent” and in search of care. When he is first told that his debilitating condition is likely Ménière's Disease but that there is “no reliable test, no reliable treatment, and no consensus on its cause,” Cotter quits teaching, stops writing, and commences upon a series of visits to doctors and treatment centers.

What begins as an expedition across the country navigating and battling the limits of the American health-care system quickly becomes something else entirely: a journey through hopelessness and adaptation to disability. Along the way, hearing aids become inseparable from his sense of self, as does a growing understanding that the possibilities in his life are narrowing rather than expanding. And with this understanding of his own travails comes reflection on age-old questions around fate, coincidence, and making meaning of inexplicable misfortune.

A devastating memoir that sheds urgent, bracingly honest light on both the taboos surrounding disability and the limits of medical science, Losing Music is refreshingly vulnerable and singularly illuminating-a story that will make listeners see their own lives anew.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

11/28/2022

In this bracing memoir, essayist Cotter (Under the Small Lights) recounts his experience with an incurable inner ear disorder. In his early 30s, Cotter began having problems with his hearing, and what started as a ringing in his ears became “a jet-engine roar” accompanied by debilitating bouts of vertigo. Seeking a diagnosis and treatment, he traveled across the country to meet with specialists and underwent a battery of tests; the uncertainty and fear surrounding his mysterious condition led Cotter to contemplate suicide, which, he reasoned, “may be a cruelty to those around me, but I saw it as a kindness.” Eventually, he was diagnosed with Ménière’s disease and struggled to accept that his hearing loss could be permanent. But with his caring spouse and a passion for the arts, Cotter learned how to adapt to his new life. Cotter is frank about the “shock” of being “someone in a position of such social privilege to find himself falling into any amount of marginalization,” and he captures the frustration of trying to communicate with doctors: “Medical personnel are very good at explaining things in either the simplest or the most complex possible terms, but little in between.” The result is a poignant reflection on disability. (Apr.)

From the Publisher

Praise for Losing Music

"An acute and very beautiful book."—Teju Cole, author of Known and Strange Things: Essays

“Understatedly elegant [. . .] In articulating what is now gone, Mr. Cotter vibrantly evokes the sensations of life before the beginning of the end of his hearing [. . .] Notwithstanding the personal catastrophe that deafness represents, it did give Mr. Cotter the ideal subject, transformed through literary grace, for a book. [. . . ] Losing Music comes closer to expressing the transcendent sensation by nearly being music itself. Its author turned adversity into quiet triumph. Evidence that Mr. Cotter's ear is still keen for the melodies of language sings from every page.”Wall Street Journal 

“In his moving memoir, John Cotter anticipates a world without sound. Losing Music offers a compelling portrait of how deafness isolates people from even those closest to them. [. . .] More broadly, he also challenges us to better understand how any disability radically alters a person's sense of self."Washington Post

“In this bracing memoir, essayist Cotter recounts his experience with an incurable inner ear disorder….The result is a poignant reflection on disability.”Publishers Weekly

“Cotter writes about the embodied experience of hearing loss vividly and within a network of contexts: that of caregiving and that of medical science’s many unsolved mysteries.”—Maddie Crum, The Vulture

"Losing Music explodes an individual experience of illness into a cultural and medical reckoning; with a sociologist’s rigor and a poet’s lyricism, Cotter takes readers on an odyssey through the social history of disability, the brutal bureaucracy of the American healthcare system, and the intimate violence of living in a volatile body. But this memoir is just as much a love letter to sound itself as it is a chronicle of loss; your world will sound different after reading it."—Charley Burlock, Oprah Daily 

"More than about Ménière's, Losing Music is a powerful addition to the memoir canon—hard-hitting, beautiful, profound—a story of finding safe ground in a world regularly buffeted by very rough seas."—The Millions

“Cotter makes clear in his remarkable memoir, Losing Music, one of Ménière’s cruelest elements is its imprecision [. . .] It’s unclear to Cotter—and any of us—how much time we have left to consume, love, and share art. Through describing that uncertainty, Cotter reveals its value.”—On the Seawall
“What happens when something you’ve loved your whole life becomes something that causes you pain? That’s a question at the center of John Cotter’s new memoir, which chronicles his diagnosis with a condition that’s likely Ménière’s Disease—and the physical and psychological effects that it had on him. It’s a harrowing and insightful look at a challenging time in its author’s life.”—Inside Hook
“In an affecting debut memoir, novelist and essayist Cotter recounts the health crisis that transformed his sense of self and connection to his world [. . .] A gracefully rendered, candid chronicle of trauma.”—Kirkus Reviews
“Devastating and beautiful. Losing Music is pieced together in a particularly uncanny way, like scraps of conversation that gradually coalesce into an immensely powerful and meaningful whole.”—Sam Sacks, editor, Wall Street Journal
“John Cotter’s memoir examines hearing loss, challenges with the American healthcare system, adaptation to disability, and questions of fate, coincidence, and making meaning from misfortune. This is a moving and vulnerable story.” —Kathy Baum, 5280 Magazine

"[Losing Music] deepens our understanding of sound, human connection, and what it means to be (and remain) alive."—Shelby Smoak, Washington Independent Review of Books
“Lighthouse writing instructor John Cotter’s memoir examines loss, challenges with the American health care system, adaptation to disability, and questions of fate, coincidence, and making meaning from misfortune. This is a moving and vulnerable story.”—Kathy Baum, Tattered Cover, Denver, CO
“Cotter first notices that music sounds off, and then he’s plagued by vertigo. A memoir about dramatically changing one’s life and dealing with a mysterious illness. I highly recommend!”—Caitlin Luce Baker, Island Books, Mercer Island, WA
“This is a memoir about the loss of an important sense—hearing. It’s also about what was gained as Cotter was compelled to contemplate his short personal history, his goals and the meaning of life. The diagnosis came quickly and at a young age—a rare disease, origins not understood and for which there is no known treatment. Quitting his work, he travels cross-country in search of help. Meanwhile, he has to come to grips with the loss of so many strengths he had become accustomed to, and to learn about the language and other taboos related to disability. And to think about the many, many people who have suffered their own similar losses, through war, accidents or just plain happenstance. This short memoir is moving, in some ways frightening, but also hopeful. There is life after loss. It’s a matter of perseverance, bravery and accepting change.”—Linda Bond, Auntie’s Book Shop, Spokane, WA
“I read Losing Music in part to examine my own ailments, which are similar to John Cotter’s: tinnitus, hearing loss, vertigo, and the anxiety that can accompany them. I was relieved that my symptoms pale in comparison, but Cotter’s story tracking the severity of his condition is both enlightening and a bit terrifying. Throughout his memoir, Cotter describes the impacts to his personality, the challenges of communication with others, and the marital stress he and his wife have dealt with. The search for medical treatment led him through the long history of Meniere’s disease. He found that many attempted ‘cures’ were horrific failures, and that in fact, little or no progress has been made over the last one hundred years. His journey laced all the way back to Jonathan Swift and Beethoven, who is also hearing impaired. This story is deeply reflective and moving, full of sorrow, hope and how to cope after being humbled by a crippling disease. I’m grateful that Cotter was able to overcome his obstacles to tell his story.”—Todd Miller, Arcadia Books, Spring Green, WI
“Heart-wrenching . . . When the mysterious symptoms that turn out to be Meniere’s disease encroach upon up-and-coming college professor and writer John Cotter’s soul-satisfying work and domestic life, its degrading effects on his hearing and sense of balance slam down an unwanted wall between his aspirations and the world beyond . . . An ill-understood condition, Meniere’s drives the dispirited Cotter to pursue any number of clinics across the country for help in dealing with this isolating ‘new normal’ of greatly diminished hearing and unpredictable bouts of vertigo. Cotter is a grounded and reflective narrator of these struggles, and he envelopes the reader in grieving for the losses, little and big, as well as rejoicing in his numerous hard-won but successful adaptations, and concurrent optimism for what is to come. An added bonus: his historical anecdotes about changing attitudes and outlooks toward Meniere’s can be as entertaining as they are, at other times, flummoxing. Losing Music is the outstanding work of a straightforward memoirist with a wry sense of humor who feels very much like a good friend.”—Susan Braunstein, New Rochelle Public Library, New Rochelle, NY
“This memoir by John Cotter has made me think more about disabled people, homeless people, suicidal people, and lonely people, and I want to learn more—a lot more about Jonathan Swift—and how to help more people and be more compassionate. How many books can you say that about?”—Mollie Mitchell, HearthFire Books, Evergreen, CO
Losing Music is a stunning, expansively beautiful book. Not just because of John Cotter's precise and vivid language on a sentence level, but also because of how it moves so tenderly through the vanishing of sound, and not just sound, but songs—points of connection that can be taken for granted. And even beyond this reality, Losing Music is not solely a sad book. It is also a book of comforts, of joys, of closeness. I am thankful for all of its movements.”—Hanif Abdurraqib, author of A Little Devil in America
“John Cotter brings sound to the page as something tactile: abrasive, elusive, fluid, textured, a current between body and mind. He fashions language into a velvety pocket in a harsh world. Losing Music is a phenomenal book about what it's like to be sick and suffering, and in it, I recognize not only the isolating nature of illness, but also a powerful intimacy with one's own changing self.”—Elissa Washuta, author of White Magic
Losing Music is a vertiginous journey of loss and discovery triggered by the onset of an unpredictable and mysterious disability. With poetic energy, John Cotter describes the roaring and swirling particulars of Ménière’s disease, while he grapples with universal questions of meaning and suffering. The memoir effortlessly blends personal stories with delightful deep dives into sound dynamics, inner-ear anatomy, and eighteenth-century author Jonathan Swift, who becomes a much needed friend—‘articulate, accessible, free with his time,’ and, I might add, darkly funny, dramatic, and brilliant, not unlike Cotter himself.”—M. Leona Godin, author of There Plant Eyes: A Personal and Cultural History of Blindness
“I’m not sure what I’d do if my body became a seemingly unsolvable mystery, and I can’t know how I’d handle the fear, frustration, and despair, but I doubt I’d have either the fortitude or the imagination to do what John Cotter has achieved in this book. Losing Music is a remarkable memoir: unsettling, insightful, and gorgeously written. I’ll be pressing this book into many people’s hands.”—Maggie Smith, author of Goldenrod: Poems
“I think the hardest thing for a personal writer to do is think well and feel well at the same time. John Cotter’s writing is bursting with as much intellect as heart. It’s as clear-eyed and incisive as it is moving. It’s what nonfiction should be.”—Lucas Mann, author of Captive Audience and Lord Fear
Losing Music is a fascinating, heartbreaking, deeply personal story from one of the most talented essayists around. It’s a book about art and illness, the betrayals of the body, and what is kept and what is lost as time goes by.”—Justin Taylor, author of Flights and Riding with the Ghost


Praise for Under the Small Lights

“John Cotter’s prose is lyric, his images unforgettable, his characters richly complicated. From the first sentence to the last, I was captivated by this story and the characters that call out to the reader with mystery and beauty and terror, like voices in the night. Under the Small Lights is a book to be savored, and John Cotter is an exciting new voice in contemporary fiction.”—Laura van den Berg, author of The Third Hotel

“John Cotter has a way with words. He has a way with dialogue, with setting a scene, with crystallizing description and insight into just a handful of words. He has a way of wrapping his observations about lost generations, about the charade of the Bohemian lifestyle, about the fragility of ideals when they crash into immovable objects, into the characters themselves. . . . Cotter treats these themes with a rare intelligence and subtlety and a certain warmth for these characters who are charming and contemptible by turns. Cotter is going to be a writer to remember, and this is a great book. You should read it.”Tampa Bay (FL) Creative Loafing

Under the Small Lights is the kind of book I always look for and rarely find: a mellow meditation on friendship and romance and the romance of friendship told in prose straightforward and lovely. [Cotter’s] characters are urbane and articulate, foolishly impulsive, and heartbreakingly earnest. It’s been a long time since I’ve encountered a bildungsroman this successful, let alone a novella this bighearted.”—Josh Russell, author of Yellow Jack

“[Cotter] writes with insight, nuance, and respect for the complexity of these young people’s lives. The prose is lyrical and lucid; the scenes are powerful and vivid.”The Rumpus

“One of the strongest aspects of [Under the Small Lights] is Cotter’s ease with natural-sounding dialogue, which sparks, shambles, and darts along—the rhythm of you and your friends goofing on each other. . . . The book also has the substantial advantage of having a great atmospheric beginning, excellent action-packed climax, and a poignant ending. Under the Small Lights is a very good read.”New Pages

“[Under the Small Lights] moves through a series of scenes that surface like memories, wandering the way our attention spans and affections will, from friend to friend until our rash decisions blast everything away, or until we have to make new friends or risk the inevitable outcome that accompanies emulating / lusting after / emphatically loving your friends …What might otherwise be construed as a group of selfish kids is instead a group of self-aware kids, who are easier to relate to and easier to love.”Lit Pub 

Kirkus Reviews

2023-04-05
The author’s account of facing a life-changing health issue.

In an affecting debut memoir, novelist and essayist Cotter recounts the health crisis that transformed his sense of self and connection to his world. Beginning in early September 2008, he experienced a ringing and roaring in his ears along with intermittent attacks of vertigo. He tried fad diets, meditation, and even a change in environment, moving from the East Coast to Colorado. Seeking medical help, he came away repeatedly frustrated: Doctors in Los Angeles, Boston, Denver—where he lived with his ever patient wife—and even at the Mayo Clinic were baffled and too often dismissive. “Why do we assume doctors can fix nearly anything?” he asks. “Why do we assume that even when cures aren’t around now, they’re around the corner, or a few years ahead?” Eventually, he received the diagnosis of Ménière’s disease—the same affliction that beset Jonathan Swift—for which there is “no reliable treatment, and no consensus on its cause.” As his symptoms worsened, Cotter became newly aware of the physical and social consequences of being disabled. “I’m white, male, cisgender—for someone in a position of such social privilege to find himself falling into any amount of marginalization is a shock,” he writes. He felt ashamed of his deafness, depressed by an increasing sense of isolation, and even suicidal. Hearing aids offered some amplification but hardly clarity. Although much improved over ear trumpets of the past, “hearing aids, no matter how advanced or how expensive—can’t entirely separate foreground from background.” Nevertheless, as the vertigo began to abate, they allowed him to return to teaching. Besides assorted adjunct classes, for a month, he lived and taught in a homeless shelter, where he found he had “plenty to learn from people so intimate with loss.” He and his students, he discovered, shared the language of pain.

A gracefully rendered, candid chronicle of trauma.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176647150
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 04/11/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 1,109,366

Read an Excerpt

Prelude

 

I was in the car the first time music seemed strange: the instruments less distinct, the vocals less crisp. I was driving a lot that year, two hours total on my commute to work and back up the northern New England coast. I kept needing to turn the volume higher, kept straining to make out the words, if there were words, or the melody. At first, this felt like an indictment of my memory: surely the bass was louder? Didn’t the voices come in sooner? I blamed digitization, or my loud car. Something was missing.

Work was Marblehead and home was Boston. On my way south in the evenings I’d pull over at a public beach—or a private beach I could sneak onto—and I’d plunge into the water. Concrete debris cut borders on the sand. Rebar, reassurance of ruins.

Those forty minutes a day gave me an opportunity to clear my head, to let whatever thoughts needed to make it to me arrive safe. The music of the water against the sand clarified my feelings in the way music could, gave feeling a pulse.

It was early September of 2008 when the ocean disappeared. The September sun found its horizon earlier each day and the light was changing as I sloshed out of the water, started toward the parking lot, drying off with the pink towel a woman from Nahant had given me when I asked her where I could buy one. The breeze came from several directions at once—that time of year when the water is perfect and the air’s a little cold.

But I couldn’t hear the ocean. I couldn’t hear bird calls or traffic. All I could hear was a roar inside my head, a noise so aggressive it seemed to blot out the sounds around me.

For months by then I’d been hearing a ringing noise off and on, an engine or a siren in my ears that rose up unexpectedly and then disappeared. Doctors couldn’t explain it, couldn’t say how long it would last or whether it would continue to worsen. One minute I could hear as well as always and the next I’d have to lean too close to people, my ear nearly touching their mouths.

Everyone knows what happens to sound underwater: the full-head echo, slowed-down motors and shore voices. The sound I heard wasn’t like that. It was made of several tones, high and low together, like a lawnmower near your ear and a plane not far away. It announced itself with clicks and whistles, changing the pressure in my ears, a kind of buzzy gravity, a planet made of static.

I turned back to find the ocean. And I saw it, a surface of uneven glass. And once I could see it again I felt as though I could hear it too. As I would learn in years to come, the brain remembers sounds surprisingly well—or convinces itself it does—and so when it wants to tell the story I can hear, it releases its chemicals to help itself mimic noises the damaged ears have lost. You can hear what’s not there, and you can hear what was never there.

I worried the ground would start moving. It had been coming out from under me that last year in sudden vertigo attacks. They seemed connected to the noise, but they didn’t invariably pair with it. I tried to ignore what was happening to me, climbing into my car and turning the music up high to overcome the roar.

Inconveniently, my preferred listening that summer tended to the lugubrious, to music that unfolded slowly with lots of dynamic shifts: all those great ECM recordings of simple and gut-stirring stuff, Gavin Bryars or the Hilliard Ensemble. Repeat the same musical phrase enough and it changes. The softness of the pieces brought me to attention, directed the traffic in my head.

Summer weekends I’d drive to Hartford to visit my old college friend Golaski. He’d sit me in his living room, pour me a drink and walk me through the Led Zeppelin or Smashing Pumpkins that I’d tried and failed to connect with when it was popular, pointing out what had been new (and, so, important) and what I’d missed. After a few glasses I’d forget most of the details he was so painstaking with, but I loved hearing him talk about it, and I loved the sense that I was learning, deepening, better understanding these things that were so loved. Here we were listening to the MTV sound together, the one I’d struggled to appreciate as a kid; I was learning the shibboleths late, at age thirty, carefully filing them away.

On my own, I preferred the blues or pop that didn’t stray far from the blues. Or jazz. Or instrumental stuff that was avant-garde in the 1980s and by 2008 felt full of what the future used to be: Lori Anderson, Robert Ashley. For years I was notorious among my friends for abhorrent taste. It wasn’t just young friends: 60-year-olds hated what I played in the car every bit as much as 20-year-olds did. We’d be driving along and laughing and I’d pop in Congolese rhumba icon Papa Wemba and everyone would be patient for a couple of beats. Then somebody would break in with “Alright, what the hell is this?” and everyone else would second them. The CD would come out and some indie thing slid into its place.

What I loved about Papa Wemba singing “Awa Y’okeyi,” the piano version anyway, was the controlled, almost ritualistic swings of passion, the way the piano anticipated and then responded to his cries, and of course the fact that—as it was in Congolese—maybe less than five million people on the planet understand the words (nobody not born in Congo speaks Congolese, unless it’s a handful of haggard Belgian contractors who can’t seem to explain to the locals in French why they’re stealing all the minerals. What was that about money? Well, if you want a whole dollar a day we’re always looking for someone to dig through dirt …). Since the language is impenetrable, and any translation iffy, we’re left with pure sound, and we can pour anything into it, any fear or catastrophe or yearning, any warning.

Even if our tastes begin as a pretense they soon become who we really are, and one of the great lessons I’d learned was to periodically try to disrupt that ossification. I’d pick categories of sound and study them, heading off to the library with an empty knapsack and coming home with a dozen CDs of opera or early jazz or whatever was charting. I’d listen to all of them, save favorites, assemble secret playlists: a driving list, a jogging list, a list to send me to sleep.

***

 

As I ran along the north shore in 2008, I may have resembled a different version of my father. Dad was a jogger too back in the happy days when he was young and full of vigor. He’d run for miles though Mohegan Park and arrive home covered in sweat. He’d chase me though the house, frightening me a little, because he was a strong man and I was a child. Only a few years later he started drinking instead of jogging, then drinking through work, then drinking instead of work, then waking up at 3A.M. to drink. Nights when he drank and lashed out he’d come into my room at midnight with two glasses of coconut rum. I was maybe 14 by then. He’d hand me one and tell me the story of his life, always telling it the same way, always ending when he delivered his last briefing on the Cambodian cross-border operation to General Abrams and stepped onto the plane home at Tan Son Nhut. Sometimes he’d describe the last scene in The Killing Fields, how John Lennon’s Imagine begins to play just as the Cambodian genocide-survivor Dith Pran—played by actual genocide survivor Haing S. Ngor—tells his American colleague, a fellow journalist who’d abandoned him to the Khmer Rouge, “there’s nothing to forgive.”

“And that music picks up,” Dad would tell me as I sipped the rum, “and he sings Imagine all the people, living life in peace.” He never asked for forgiveness for the things he’d said and done while drunk; instead, he’d tell this story. And he’d head off to bed and I’d play the song on my portable CD player with my headphones.

In 2008 I was a hundred miles north of him, running across wet sand by the shore, smooth as beach glass. To make it harder on myself I’d move to the hotter and coarser and whiter sand uphill, or the pebble grade with its seaweed hopping with tiny insects and sharp with shells, just past the reeds, the beach grass, and the arrogant weathered cabins at its edge.

I ran to keep my body sharp, and because I could already tell that body was failing. Not the usual slowing pace of the body aging, but something capricious, that weird noise that blotted voices at work and only confused people when I tried to explain.

I was editing medical newsletters in 2008. Each month I overdrew rent on my account and paid it back in the week that followed. I wandered a wealthy town at lunchtime and listened to NPR voices talking, almost casually, about an economic collapse. I’d had 30 years to make something of myself.

On the drive home I’d try listening to Tom Waits’ “Town with No Cheer,” a song about a real city, Serviceton, that sported a thriving bar and restaurant in the first half of the century, when passengers had to switch rail lines—and drank and ate while they were there—in order to continue their journey from Melbourne to Adelaide refreshed and at their ease. But with the advent of café cars and the joining of the rail lines the town dried up and disappeared.

What makes the song so moving for me is what I strained to hear on those drives, and in the end what I couldn’t hear: the fade-in and fade-out of Waits’ voice in the persona of a dry local. He begins every phrase with something like a shout and then winds down to a defeated whisper, like a drunk lamenting his sobriety. The harmonium and synthesizer sound, respectively, of carnival and defeat; they merge and blur.

When my hearing cut out, beginning in 2008 and increasing with time, songs like that one came to me as though from down the street, as though the speakers were shorting out, as though I didn’t know the tune.

What I feared losing—the catastrophe the roaring shadowed forth—wasn’t just a series of structured sounds, but the world those sounds created, a world you could live inside: Bach on a snowy afternoon, hard blues on a long night’s drive, the background mood in a restaurant or at a party (or, increasingly, any public space not yet colonized by ESPN on flatscreen TVs). Music is color. When you’re young you’re the hero of a movie, and the Heifetz you play in your car or the Velvet Underground you first try out sex to isn’t just background, it’s location and weather. You feel it on your skin.

So many of the big, meaningful scenes of my life have become centered, in my memory, around music, and not just concerts. I think of the time I spent every last dollar I owned on a 3-disc set of Einstein on the Beach and put it into the stereo while I drank coffee and thought about finding a real job; from the first notes (the numbers, chanted) I felt like I’d walked into a new life. Or the time Golaski and I spent an hour driving through fogbound Portland, Maine on a bargain book tour and playing Genesis’s “Mama” over and over, not able to get enough of its brutal camp. There was the time Bill and I debated the respective merits of various Johnny Cash records on New Year’s Eve as we apportioned drugs on the back of one of the jewel cases. Or when Jaime and I realized, after seven years, off and on, that it was finished between us, this time for good, but she hung around my tiny apartment all afternoon because neither of us wanted our new lives to start quite yet. I played her Samuel Barber’s “Knoxville, Summer 1914”—she’d never heard it, didn’t know who Barber was—and we listened to every note and were ourselves silent, wholly owned, her cigarette smoke uncurling above us.

Cigarettes, drugs: lots of music seems hopelessly bound-up in cool. But obscure one-upmanship can be cruelly exclusionary. I remember eating dinner with a couple of friends in college when the conversation turned to indie bands and then to bootlegs and then to variants of those bootlegs and I was lost—were they scoring points against one another? Were they bonding? There were no smartphones then, so I took out a book.

But as much as I didn’t care about new music then, by the time I ran along the Swampscott shore I was coming to regard stereos and overhead speakers as one of the major obstacles to human language. Just as I didn’t understand how to share in the fruits of the cool in Bikini Kill and Run DMC when I was younger, now the sounds and rhythms that centered people around me, marked emotional turns, drove the economy, were becoming a kind of aural pain, obscuring the words I needed to understand.

I was worried about becoming no fun, transforming into the joykill who asks that the music—the background sound of good times, Shelley’s “where the spirit drinks until the brain is wild”—be turned low or off. Part of the fun of the music at those parties, or in those restaurants and elevators and supermarkets, is the way it connects us with our past. You hear a bad Billy Joel song in the freezer aisle at Safeway and time is refuted: you’re twelve years old, driving off to football camp, or to dancing class, your mother’s station wagon one major metal antenna.

Back in college my friend Vita gave me an EP cassette she’d found in a free bin at Newbury Comics, from a local group called, I think, Fledgling, and while the A side didn’t do much for me, the B side wouldn’t let go. The name of the song didn’t seem to appear on the tape, but the slow plucking of strings and the sudden rush of a woman’s raw voice and the rhythm kicking in … well, I loved the song. And I carried that EP from apartment to apartment until I no longer owned a means of playing it. One bit of the lyrics always got to me, just as the tune moves to an upswing: “when there’s so much out there you can’t imagine / it’s such a drag but it’s so much better than me …” The way she held out that “so” both times, dug into the “better,” clipped the “me” …

Twelve years later—maybe six months before my ears began to die—I was walking down Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge, past the Lizard Lounge, and as I sometimes did on a whim when I had an hour to kill on a weekday night, I walked down to the grotto to hear whoever was playing.

Within a few minutes of my ordering a drink, I heard that deconstructed chord, and the same voice. Eileen Rose and the Holy Wreck was the band’s name, and it was clearly her song, the same song Vita gave me in 1996. I didn’t even know Vita anymore.

Sitting there, listening and longing, my heart fluttered into my throat. Every moment I’d lived with the song compacted, contracted. I felt absorbed and released and excited for hours after. In the days that followed I tried to explain to friends just how emotional it had been, but it’s like trying to tell a dream.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews