CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO SEE AND HEAR THIS SONG PERFORMED, OR THE JUKEBOX FOR THE ENTIRE LIBRARY.

Note by the person initially posting the lyrics:

“We confront the complex reality that something can be both insipid and profound simultaneously.”

You see, this song by Carolyn McDade can be awfully sticky-sweet, with its rolling 3/4 time often played too fast or too much like a beer barrel polka. And it seems both universally used and universally loathed. Friends Alex Haider-Winnett and Claire Curole were very clear the other day that they find the tune too boring and too cheery, and the whole “rose in the wintertime” thing either not at all special (because in California, where Alex lives, roses are just all over) or just wrong (because in Maine, where Claire lives, any rose you find in wintertime is the product of a dodgy floral industry).

A lot to dislike. For sure.

But I refuse to dismiss this one out of hand. Sorry, folks. More after the lyrics, which I encourage you to read, not sing:

Here’s why this song has meaning to another person:

On December 17, 1984, my father died. I was barely 20, and made any  number of bad choices in how I dealt with his loss – including not really processing it as well as I maybe could have. But I always remembered how beautiful and meaningful it was that whoever designed the graveside service had us put roses on the casket – Mom, a red rose, and my siblings and I, white roses.

Fast forward to 2006. December 17 fell on a Sunday, so I signed up to bring flowers. I ordered an arrangement that included three white roses and a red rose, in honor of my father. The sermon was, not surprisingly, about hope, and this was the closing hymn.

The impact of which did not for a second occur to me until we started singing – not in a lively style, but in a more contemplative tempo and mode. The way we sang it gave us a little time to think about what we were singing. “I’ll bring a song of love, and a rose in the wintertime.”

Cue waterworks.

Because I started thinking about my father, not in terms of all the things I never got to do with him or know about him which was my usual form or mourning for him, but about all the things I did get to experience and learn about him. I actually grieved for the man I knew, not that man that I wish I could have known. Singing this song, on that day, with that bouquet 10 feet away from me, allowed me to grieve again in a healthy way – and, although I didn’t know it at the time, helped make mourning my mother’s death a year later a little easier.

I can’t sing this song without thinking about my father, and about that experience.

[C] Come sing a song with me.   [F] Come sing a [G] song with me.
[C] Come sing a [Am] song with me,   that [Dm] I might [G] know your [C] mind.

[CHORUS] – – – – – And [G] I’ll bring you [C] hope,   when [G] hope is hard to [C] find, and [G] I’ll bring a [C] song of [Am] love, and a [Dm] rose in the [G] winter- [C] time.

[ C F G – C Am Dm G C ] Come dream a dream with me . . .  [CHORUS]

[ C F G – C Am Dm G C ] Come walk in rain with me . . .  [CHORUS]

[ C F G – C Am Dm G C ] Come share a rose with me . . .  [CHORUS]

[LIGHT INCENSE] – ACCAPELLA
[ C F G – C Am Dm G C ] Come drink a drink with me . . .  [CHORUS]

[ C F G – C Am Dm G C ] Come smoke a joint with me . . .  [CHORUS] … that I might BLOW your mind.

 

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