To anyone who ever asks The life, music, and mystery of Connie Converse

Howard Fishman

Book - 2023

"From a frequent music and culture contributor to The New Yorker, the mysterious, true story of the life of Connie Converse-a mid-century New York City singer/songwriter whose haunting music never found recognition-and the tale of one man's quest to uncover the truth"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Dutton, Penguin Random House LLC 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Howard Fishman (author)
Physical Description
ix, 564 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593187364
  • Prelude A Star Has Burnt My Eye
  • Chapter 1. Past All Dreaming
  • Chapter 2. "One by One"
  • Chapter 3. A Ghost
  • Chapter 4. Phil
  • Chapter 5. Pen Pals
  • Interlude: Genres
  • Chapter 6. The Filing Cabinet
  • Chapter 7. We Have Never Seen Her Like
  • Part I. The End of My New England Spine
  • Chapter 8. Converses
  • Chapter 9. People Say
  • Chapter 10. Eatons, and Evelyn and Ernest
  • Chapter 11. Sis
  • Chapter 12. The Life Under
  • Chapter 13. Mount Holyoke
  • Chapter 14. Fantastic City
  • Chapter 15. A Death in the Woods
  • Chapter 16. The Taking and the Keeping
  • Chapter 17. She Emerges
  • Part II. "Connie's Guitar Songs"
  • Interlude: Dizzy from the Spell
  • Chapter 18. Musicks
  • Chapter 19. A Family Visit
  • Chapter 20. Free to Be Free
  • Chapter 21. Bloom by Night
  • Part III. Connie's Piano Songs
  • Interlude: A Ghost, Again
  • Chapter 22. Nothing Else Would Do
  • Interlude: A Resurrection Project
  • Chapter 23. Harlem
  • Chapter 24. Cassandra
  • Chapter 25. "Connie Converse Sings"
  • Part IV. The Twentieth Twentieth
  • Chapter 26. The Nearest Star
  • Chapter 27. Markets of the Mind
  • Chapter 28. Reasons
  • Chapter 29. The Hard Tug of the Earth
  • Chapter 30. The World and Time and Space
  • Chapter 31. Out and Out
  • Chapter 32. The Disappearance
  • Coda Walking in the Crystal Air
  • Chapter 33. Past Recall
  • Afterword
  • Postscript: The Fall of a Leaf
  • Appendix A. The Songs of Elizabeth "Connie" Converse
  • Appendix B. The Cassandra Cycle
  • Appendix C. Converse's "FEDD" Memo
  • Appendix D. Converse's "Award" Letter
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Connie Converse wrote lovely songs that she performed at parties for her circle of New York City friends in the mid-1950s. Her clever narratives were strikingly prescient of a wave of folk music that would hit soon after she abandoned her musical aspirations for a career as an academic editor. The "mystery" of Fishman's title alludes to the fact that, in 1974, Converse vanished without a trace. Fishman--musician, writer, and frequent contributor to the New Yorker--is part of a small but passionate Converse fan base and has recorded her songs, produced an album of her art music, and written a play about her life (A Star Has Burnt My Eye). Now his deeply researched and absorbing biography interweaves the story of her complicated life with his own obsession with her accomplishments and frustrations, some of which mirror his own. His sense of connection adds poignancy to his portrait. "How many more Connie Converses are out there?" he asks, "Marginalized talents waiting to be heard . . . And what price do we pay, as individuals and as a culture, by continuing to use fame, wealth, property and power as our primary metrics for success?" Fishman's book will resonate with Converse devotees and introduce others to this fascinating and overlooked artist.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Musician Fishman debuts with a rich biography of Elizabeth "Connie" Converse, an outsider folk singer-songwriter who lingered on the fringe of fame before disappearing in 1974 at age 50, four decades before the first official release of her home recordings earned her a cult following. Born in 1924 to conservative Baptist parents, Converse suffered through a restrictive upbringing in Concord, N.H., before moving to New York City in the 1940s, where she ran in a social circle for whom she would play at house parties. Fishman's perceptive analysis of Converse's songs illuminates their artistic and autobiographical influences, with the most attention paid to how the sexual liberation implied in such songs as "Roving Woman" may have been inspired by her affairs, contrasting with her reputation as an awkward loner. Fishman's research is nothing short of remarkable; extensive interviews with friends, family, and coworkers blend with excerpts from Converse's correspondence to chart her depression after reaching midlife and failing to make a name for herself in Manhattan, and though her fate remains a mystery, letters she sent before she disappeared suggest she either died by suicide or made a new start somewhere. The scrupulous detail sometimes slows the pace, but Fishman succeeds wildly in uncovering the anguish and beauty in Converse's bewildering story. This should earn Converse some new fans. (May)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Musician, culture writer, and playwright Fishman's (A Star Has Burnt My Eye) extraordinary trek through the life and works of Connie Converse is a laudable endeavor. Born in 1924, Converse, a prodigiously talented singer/songwriter who dropped out of Mount Holyoke College after two years, spent formative time in 1950s Greenwich Village and Harlem, and then disappeared just after Nixon's resignation in 1974. With unfettered access to Converse's family members, friends, and colleagues and the artist's own notebooks and audio recordings, the author constructs an emotional narrative with a bit of sensationalism thrown in. The book also has valuable space devoted to the meaning of her lyrics and the sounds she created as a kind of predecessor of both Jack Kerouac and Bob Dylan, though she lacked their lasting renown. Interesting side excursions, such as why people feel a need to pigeonhole performers of certain types of music and assessments of the political and social milieu, are useful, as are the appendices of her texts and the copious footnotes. VERDICT Although its length is daunting, this tome is welcome. It's an interesting foray into Converse's glimmer of fame and sad subsequent neglect.--Barry Zaslow

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In-depth biography of an obscure midcentury American musician who disappeared in 1974. Early on in his debut book, New Yorker contributor Fishman, a musician himself, memorably describes his first encounter with Connie Converse (b. 1924), when he heard a recording at a party. "Contextually, I couldn't place the song," he writes. "It possessed the openhearted, melodic feel of an old Carter family recording, but there was also some gentle acoustic guitar fingerpicking…and harmonic movement….The traditional elements seemed so finely stitched together, with such a sophisticated sensibility, that the whole sounded absolutely original--modern, even. The song swallowed me. The party froze. The room disappeared." This was the beginning of an evangelical obsession to learn everything about Converse. Over the years, Fishman wrote a play about her and performed her songs in concert, and he spent more than a decade researching and writing this book. The text's power derives as much from the writer's obsession as from Converse's music. He compares her to a host of luminaries, including Bob Dylan, Dinah Shore, Hank Williams, Emily Dickinson, and Jack Kerouac. It's astonishing how much he hears in her and how far he has been willing to go to learn more, whether tracking down folks in their 90s who might have experienced a performance or visiting places where her family lived decades ago. Fishman writes about tapes recorded in her New York kitchen--at a time when it wasn't easy or common to do so--and in other unofficial venues. She never released a record or performed for a paying audience yet somehow made a morning TV appearance with Walter Cronkite. She later quit making music and vanished. Because so little is known about this private woman, Fishman is forced to engage in speculation about her influences, thoughts, and motivations, but his enthusiasm and diligence are infectious. Through the obsession of such dedicated fans as Fishman, Connie Converse will find a larger audience. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

CHAPTER 1 Past All Dreaming In December 2010, I was at a friend's holiday party. I didn't know many of the people there, and to ease my social anxiety, I was scanning the spines on the bookshelves when a song came up on the house speakers--one that sounded both entirely new to me and as familiar as my own skin. A woman was singing in a plaintive tone about "a place they call Lonesome," where she hears the voice of her absent love speaking to her in "everything I see"-- from a bird to a brook, "a pig or two," to a "sort of a squirrel thing." Contextually, I couldn't place the song. It possessed the openhearted, melodic feel of an old Carter Family recording, but there was also some gentle acoustic guitar fingerpicking that reminded me of Elizabeth Cotten, and harmonic movement that seemed to echo the songs of Hoagy Carmichael. The traditional elements seemed so finely stitched together, with such a sophisticated sensibility, that the whole sounded absolutely original--modern, even. The song swallowed me. The party froze. The room disappeared. Eventually, I sought out the host, who smiled knowingly when I asked him what we were listening to. "Oh," my friend said. "This is Connie Converse. She made these recordings in her kitchen in the 1950s, but she never found an audience for her music, and then one day she drove away and was never heard from again." The name of the song was "Talkin' Like You." On my way home that night, I stopped at a local record store that no longer exists and picked up a copy of How Sad, How Lovely , the recently released album of Converse's sixty-​year-​old recordings. Before going to bed, I cued up "Talkin' Like You," and listened to it a second time, now without any distraction. Again, I heard the bluesy, spooky introduction, sung over an unusual series of seventh and diminished chords--placing it decidedly on the refined side of the popular music spectrum. The combination of the mysterious melody and complex harmony drew me back in, as did the song's lyrics. In between two tall mountains there's a place they call Lonesome Don't see why they call it Lonesome I'm never lonesome when I go there. I listened as Converse's lilting, rolling guitar accompaniment followed, as the singer once again began her tale: See that bird sittin' on my windowsill? Well he's sayin' whipoorwill all the night through. Surely, this was a nod to the 1949 Hank Williams classic "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry." Like the protagonist of Williams's song, the whippoorwill keeps the narrator of "Talkin' Like You" company when others will not. See that brook runnin' by my kitchen door? Well it couldn't talk no more if it was you. The dispatch of her lover's comeuppance begins, and then does not stop until the song finishes. The object of her affection will not talk to her? No matter; the water outside her door will. Up that tree there's sort of a squirrel thing Sounds just like we did when we were quarreling. And there it was again. In a poetic leap, the singer identifies the curious sound she hears in a nearby tree as coming from "sort of a squirrel thing"-- and sounds far more like a millennial than a young woman writing in the early 1950s. In the yard I keep a pig or two They drop in for dinner like you used to do. Her ongoing traffic with nature continues. She keeps pigs, who join her for meals, the way her beloved does not or will not. The imagery could not be plainer: This person is no better than a pig, and she is perfectly happy to entertain other piglike comers if this one will not satisfy her needs. I don't stand in the need of company With everything I see talkin' like you. Up that tree there's sort of a squirrel thing Sounds just like we did when we were quarreling You may think you left me all alone But I can hear you talk without a telephone I don't stand in the need of company With everything I see talkin' like you. It is a bravura bit of songwriting, a lyric both empowering and entrancing. She doesn't need anyone--neither their sympathy, nor their pity. We all want to be like this, all the time: self-assured, witty, happy, reliant on nobody and no one. Free. Listening to this song, I found it hard not to be captivated by this person, to want her as a friend, to know her. Yet, as the rest of the album played, as I took in songs like "Playboy of the Western World," "Father Neptune," and "One by One," the suspicions that had been vaguely floating in my consciousness began to harden into the only obvious conclusion: This "Connie Converse" character had to be a hoax, a gimmick. The songs were too fresh, too modern, too anachronistic to have been recorded in the 1950s. And even if they had been recorded back then, someone surely would have discovered this person well before now. Music geeks like me would know about her, certainly, but more to the point: She was so good that we would all know about her. These recordings didn't sound like the music of a forgotten someone who was essentially doing a lesser-​known version of what other people had gotten famous for--a Big Mama Thornton to Elvis Presley, an Eddie Lang to Django Reinhardt, a Barbecue Bob to Robert Johnson. As far as I knew, there was no one from the early 1950s on the other side of the Connie Converse equation, not remotely--not in the wide margins of the years that came before her and not in those that immediately followed. This music, if I were willing to suspend my disbelief, would exist out of time, out of music history altogether. And the liner notes confirmed what my friend had told me: that Converse had literally vanished. Not like a J. D. Salinger, who retired from the public eye but then had continued writing in isolation. Not like a Terrence Malick or a Lee Bontecou or a Henry Roth--artists who stayed out of sight for decades before finally releasing new work. And not like a Captain Beefheart or a Su Tissue, musicians who'd walked away from their careers to do entirely other things. No. Like a Jimmy Hoffa. Like an Amelia Earhart. Gone. Online searches revealed spare facts, including images of a woman who looked and dressed like one I might see in my Williamsburg, Brooklyn, neighborhood on any afternoon. The cat's‑eye granny glasses, the shirtwaist dresses, the librarian hairstyle, the parlor guitar--it all smacked of a certain twee Brooklyn aesthetic that back then had already become a fad. No, no, I thought. No way. During my twenties and thirties, working as an independent musician, I'd come to know more than I'd ever wanted to about self-​promotion. I was now forty, and only too familiar with the cleverness required to hook people's attention--the spin, the reinvention, the PR stunts. I'd played that game. I knew the P. T. Barnum touch when I saw it. "Connie Converse" was clearly some canny hipster who'd come up with a clever marketing campaign for her music. Someone who--when not in character--had cultivated impeccable vocal fry and was devoted to the films of Wes Anderson. Her long vintage dress was likely hiding a series of inexpensive flash tattoos. She'd devised a name with a nice classic ring to it, like "Lois Lane" or "Marjorie Morningstar"; created a noirish backstory about a disappearance; photoshopped some images of herself posing in thrift store attire to make them look like 1950s-​era snapshots; and tried to pass off her own music as some kind of "lost" recordings made by this imaginary woman. John Lurie had done something like this in 1999, with his album The Legendary Marvin Pontiac: Greatest Hits , which was supposed to be the posthumously released lost recordings of a troubled musical genius who'd spent the last decades of his life in an insane asylum--though the album was actually Lurie and his pals having a bit of fun. "Connie Converse" was a Marvin Pontiac. She was not real. These were not old recordings newly discovered. She did not mysteriously disappear one day. There was no such person. She was a fiction. I was certain of it. To satisfy my curiosity, I googled some more. Sure enough, I could find no news reports of a disappearance, no YouTube footage of Connie Converse performing, no reviews or accounts of her concerts, nothing at all related to her music that was contemporaneous with the time she was said to have been making it. All I could see was a handful of recent blog posts and articles related to the release of How Sad, How Lovely --at which point the internet came to a dead stop. Then, rereading the album's liner notes, I noted a detail I'd overlooked--that Converse had served a stint as editor for something called the Journal of Conflict Resolution . I went back online and, much to my chagrin, there it was: a 1968 essay called "The War of All Against All," written by Elizabeth Converse, the journal's managing editor. Pause. Could it be true? Was she actually real, and had she indeed written these songs--little earworms that sound like absolutely no one else--in virtual obscurity in the early 1950s, a time in American music often associated with the safe, inoffensive sounds of performers like Rosemary Clooney and Perry Como? The more I listened to her music, the more my curiosity grew. I felt the need to know the rest of Converse's story, the details that had driven her to make this particular music, at that particular time (if, indeed, she had). What had led to her tragic fate, to her simply vanishing (if that's what actually happened to her). Who she was or, even, potentially, could still be. And I found that my experience was not unique. From what I could see online, Converse had already begun to attract a cult of followers who were freaking out about her on social media and chat boards. Because so little about her was known, she seemed more myth than person, and as Greil Marcus wrote in Mystery Train , "History without myth is surely a wasteland; but myths are compelling only when they are at odds with history." This certainly seemed to be the case with Converse, someone upon whom we could project our own personal narratives and agendas, and no one could argue. She'd already been taken up as a cause by outsiders of many stripes--each of whom claimed her as one of their own. I fell prey to this same tendency, the Rorschach inkblots of her recordings revealing characteristics I felt I had in common with her, for better or worse: outsize artistic ambition; vulnerability that lay protected beneath a hard veneer of willful self-reliance; a love of language; a disdain for conformity; a refusal to compromise; a desire to be understood; insatiable longing. Without knowing anything about Connie Converse other than what I heard in her music, I began to care about her. Extravagantly. Had Converse's songs other than "Talkin' Like You" been mediocre or worse, had that song been the only real keeper she'd written and recorded, her story still would have been a fascinating one in the annals of American music, albeit a minor one. A young woman writing and recording her own songs in the 1950s, a DIY singer-songwriter back before such terms existed, might have interested scholars and music historians in a footnote sort of way. But what I heard as I played these recordings again and again was far greater than that. The visionary, forward-​looking quality of what Converse had been up to seemed to suggest the need to update the narrative of mid-twentieth-century American song altogether. CHAPTER 2 "One by One" If Converse's musical catalogue, taken as a whole, is like some metaphorical message in a bottle cast off from the shores of a dull, homogenous time of which she wanted no part (and that wanted no part of her), her song "One by One" may be its unifying message. The lyrics are direct enough: We go walking in the dark We go walking out at night And it's not as lovers go Two by two, To and fro, But it's one by one-- One by one, In the dark. We go walking out at night As we wander through the grass We can hear each other pass But we're far apart-- Far apart,In the dark. We go walking out at night, With the grass so dark and tall We are lost past recall If the moon is down-- And the moon is down. We are walking in the dark If I had your hand in mine I could shine I could shine Like the morning sun, Like the sun. Converse crystallizes in song the feeling of disconnectedness of midcentury urban America, a trend that has exponentially increased to this day as the dominance of smartphones and social media has made us seem more than ever a nation of zombies cut off from one another and from ourselves (though it's also arguable that we're more connected than ever, only in worse ways). According to the How Sad, How Lovely liner notes, Converse had written and self-​recorded her songs while living in New York City in the mid-​1950s, at a time when new fissures in the bedrock of American culture and society were beginning to have devastating impacts, creating the anomie to which Converse was responding. Urban populations were exploding, middle-​class families were moving to the suburbs, and children in smaller towns and rural areas were becoming the first generation in their families to go off to college. Communities were in flux. In places like Manhattan, it had become a common place experience for a single person to feel, and to be, alone amid millions of other human beings. Modernity, which was bringing about medical and scientific miracles at a rapid pace, also caused its share of collateral damage. Excerpted from To Anyone Who Ever Asks: The Life, Music, and Mystery of Connie Converse by Howard Fishman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.