OurBrownCounty 24Jan-Feb | Page 31

Some souvenirs don’ t just make you recall personal times and events, they can be time machines. Behind me sits a Victrola from the nineteen-teens given to me in about 1961 or 1962. With it came a collection of 78 rpm records. Together they represented a time machine of music and culture from forty years before.
From those old 78s I gained an appreciation for Bix Beiderbecke and early jazz. Listening to Bing Crosby and the Happiness Boys vocalizing with the Paul Whiteman band took me back to a time when young folks living in the sticks could be entertained by the best music the big cities had to offer( before the Internet).
The light in this room comes from a beautiful pottery lamp made by my incredibly talented sisterin-law. My coffee cup reminds me of Nashville, where it was made by a potter friend. I have a print of a painting of a schooner ship under full sail hanging on the wall. It was a Woolworth item from the 1930s or before. I got it from my grandparents’ house where it hung when I was growing up.
This museum that I call“ my office” is filled with music. I have found that music and smells are two things that can evoke memories that are amazingly vivid. And for me music can take me back to the house I grew up in. The radio was going about all the time with soap operas, adventure stories, and pop songs.
I remember the house we were living in when I first heard Patty Page singing,“ How Much is that Doggie in the Window?” I remember the kitchen with the yellow formica and chrome dinette set, where the radio, an ivory Sears Silvertone, sat on the refrigerator. Often the aroma of fresh baked brownies was coming from the oven.
While the radio introduced me to pop tunes and later rock’ n’ roll, it was TV that taught me about early jazz and classical music. The soundtracks of the Looney Tunes and Merry Melodies cartoons from the 1930s and 40s got me to appreciate the jazz of that era. And I’ m sure I’ m not the only person whose initiation to classical music was Bugs Bunny cartoons.
I dare anybody to close their eyes, hear the William Tell Overture and not think of the Lone Ranger. When that happens, I can see myself sitting

Women’ s boutique, kids and teen clothing, men’ s clothing, and household items

Selling gently used items to benefit Brown County. Accepting clothing and household item donations.
Look for the signs
Tuesdays and Thursdays 10:00 to 5:00 Fridays 10:00 to 3:00
Like us on Facebook at Brown County Community Closet, New
284 South Van Buren in Nashville( near stoplight, behind Subway)( 812) 988-6003
cross-legged on the living room carpet, waiting for Silver to rear up and hear that famous exclamation,“ Hi-Yo Silver! Away.”
Those things, and many more, are the souvenirs that I have picked up along the way.
So, we can all say that our souvenirs are keys that open gateways to our personal pasts. They allow us to revisit our past selves, friends and relatives who are no longer with us, old adventures, sweet moments, and the world as it once was.
Oh, and the next time you’ re visiting Nashville don’ t forget to remember to pick up a souvenir of Brown County. •
Jan./ Feb. 2024 • Our Brown County 31