Rosanne Cash and the Many Meanings of Love
One of the most gifted singer-songwriters of our time talks love, science and the deep space between men and women
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
“Yeah?” she says warily.
“I wondered about that.”
“Really?” she says. “It seems grafted on?”
“It seems like, they’re deliriously, dangerously falling for each other then suddenly, ‘Oh, I’ve done this before.’”
She laughs. “It was grafted on,” she concedes, but she thinks of it more as providing “a nice melodic release to build back up into the next verse.”
Actually it makes it a more complex song. I like Katy Perry, but Katy Perry wouldn’t have that bridge. It’s a pause for reflection: What am I, crazy? And then the next verse returns with accelerated, exacerbated vigor to the madness, only this time it’s with conscious deliberation and self-awareness—yes, I’m crazy and I don’t care—that makes giving in to the moment even more knowingly risky. In other words, it’s good to remember in the heat of the moment— when you think nothing like this has ever happened to you—that it has. And then, it’s good to forget.
Then she remembers something her mentor told her about her songwriting. John Stewart “always said, ‘Where’s the madness?’ You know, if I would try to write a perfect song. ‘Where’s the madness, Rose?’”
I ask what songs she’s writing now.
“Well, there’s one called ‘Particle and Wave.’”
“Is the male a particle and the woman a wave?”
“Something like that...but part of it is that I have a deep love of theoretical physics.”
Whoa. That comes out of left field.
“It started 30 years ago when I became interested in astronomy. I read about light shifts and that led me to theoretical physics. Things like time and how long it takes light from stars to get here. Black holes. Where you would come out if you went into a black hole.” She tells me a beautiful story about a physics-inflected song she’s working on, about how “light only slows to shine on the other’s face.”
“I had a conversation with Brian Greene [the celebrated physicist and author]. I asked him if God was the unified field. Greene’s response, she says: ‘It depends on your definition of God.’
“Theoretical physics is like a religion to me,” Cash continues, “and I have a lot of friends who are scientists. And I can only grasp this little part over here. I have a friend Lisa Randall, she’s one of the top theoretical physicists at Harvard. She just came out with a book, Knocking on Heaven’s Door. She’s very pragmatic about all of this stuff even though she’s a theoretical physicist. But a lot of her colleagues go way off into parallel universes.”
“Multiverses?” I say (realizing only later that songs are multi-verses, in more ways than one).
“Multiverse theory” is the idea much discussed recently in theoretical physics that there may be a potentially infinite number of possible universes encompassing all possible eventualities, in which infinitesimal and grand differences play themselves out.
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Comments (3)
Great article! Generated interest in both the author & Rosanne, who were off my radar. This article resonated with me because it posed questions or illustrated situations that are explainable. A refreshing change from a vast tangle of "beyond words". For example: The friend's comment in this article about narcissism is a classic example of how ego gets in the way of understanding.
Posted by Jack Seeger on November 28,2012 | 12:18 AM
Great article! Generated interest in both the author & Rosanne, who were off my radar. This article resonated with me because it posed questions or illustrated situations that are explainable. A refreshing change from a vast tangle of "beyond words". For example: The friend's comment in this article about narcissism is a classic example of how ego gets in the way of understanding.
Posted by Jack Seeger on November 28,2012 | 12:18 AM
An interesting woman whom I have never appreciated until now. I will forgive the author his total misinterpretation of "Sex at Dawn" for the sake of his introducing her to me.
Posted by DBGill on June 10,2012 | 10:28 AM