Episode 548 – Howard Fishman

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Virtual Memories Show
Virtual Memories Show
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Virtual Memories Show 548:<br /> Howard Fishman “It’s incredible to me how close Connie Converse and all she did came to completely vanishing from the face of the earth.” Writer, musician and composer Howard Fishman joins the show to celebrate his amazing new book, TO ANYONE WHO EVER ASKS: The Life, Music and Mystery of Connie Converse (Dutton). We get into how he discovered the music of the enigmatic Connie Converse, when he realized her life was a rabbit hole that would take more than a decade to delve through, what it was like to write a biography around the gaps in her life, and the sheer amount of chance, happenstance, and miraculous occurrences that led to this book. We talk about how Connie Converse arose as a singer-songwriter in 1950s NYC (maybe) just a few years ahead of her time, her subsequent role as a public intellectual and progressive activist, her Cassandra-like nature, the analytical mind she brought to music, policy, and every other topic in her life, and how she vanished without a trace in the mid-’70s. We also discuss his time as a research assistant for NYT editor Arthur Gelb, how his idea of artistic legacy changed in light of learning Connie Converse’s story, the relationship between artist and audience (and the Cat Stevens story that first brought him to my attention), what it means to renounce one’s art, how he tried to do justice to the Connie Converse story, and a lot more. Give it a listen! And go read TO ANYONE WHO EVER ASKS! “She really was a Cassandra, in terms of being able to see the future and no one being able to understand what she was saying.” “When I first heard her music, it was the crystallization of everything I wanted to do as a songwriter and as a musician, except she was much better.”

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