A gift from the Duke Spirit.

It pays to pledge your support.

I discovered earlier this year that one of my favorite bands, The Duke Spirit, had a PledgeMusic campaign to support their new album, Kin (review coming soon).  Apart from buying a digital download or physical copy of the record, they had other fun perks such as guitars, drums, one-of-a-kind notebooks handmade by lead singer Liela Moss, and lyric sheets hand-written by Ms. Moss.  The notebooks were sold out, but I was happy to discover the lyric sheets were not and also at a stunningly affordable price.

This arrived in the mail yesterday.

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I must admit that I hesitated to open it, because I knew the song I had chosen.  It was the title track off the Duke Spirit’s first album – “Cuts Across the Land.”

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You ask why I hesitated to open something I’d bought, had shipped from England, and eagerly awaited to frame and hang on my wall?  It’s because “Cuts Across the Land” nearly made me weep when I first heard it.  It’s not because the song is maudlin or reminds me of a past relationship or the loss of a loved one.  It’s because the song is so damned good it almost made me cry.

I’m fairly certain I first heard “Cuts Across the Land” on the greatest radio station on Earth – BBC 6 Music.  I remember that I stopped doing whatever I was doing at the moment and just listened.  I was transfixed.  It was perfect mindfulness.  I realized after the first chorus that I was misty-eyed.  I thought, “Where has this band been my whole life?”

So I got misty again when I opened this and read it.  I will always treasure this because it is not only something made by one of my favorite bands, but it reminds me of how music can move us and take us out of the ordinary.

Keep your mind open.

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Nik Havert

I've been a music fan since my parents gave me a record player for Christmas when I was still in grade school. The first record I remember owning was "Sesame Street Disco." I've been a professional writer since 2004, but writing long before that. My first published work was in a middle school literary magazine and was a story about a zoo in which the animals could talk.

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