Mark Heard's Fingerprints On My Life
I guess the first time I heard about Mark Heard was in CCM magazine in the
fall of 1981. Karen Marie Platt reviewed his fourth album, Stop The
Dominoes, and wrote a feature article on him.
That article painted a picture of a man who was thoughtful, literate, skeptical, articulate, and in
love with his wife. Through twelve albums, over the next eleven years, I
found that picture to be accurate. His music spoke to me in ways that very
few other musicians did. Mark passed away on August 16, 1992 in
Springfield, IL. I will miss him deeply. Some random thoughts on what he
meant to me:
Just A Dumb American
In 1980 Mark released the album Fingerprint on the Swiss' Palmfrond label.
It included the song ''Es Tut Mir Leid''. Sung in German, the lyrics were: "I'm
sorry / I'm sorry / I do not speak your language / I am just a dumb American / So
please have mercy on me." My wife and I spent Christmas 1983 with friends
in Germany. Before heading overseas, I made buttons for both of us with the
German lyrics on them. "They just might get us out of trouble so wear it
all the time." I told her. Sure enough, I found myself alone on a bus one
day that did not seem to be going where I had planned. Eventually I ended
up alone with the bus driver who did not speak a word of English. He looked
at me and said something like, "Und sloppen der bratwurst in spiegel
hoppin?" I looked at him with a stupid grin and opened my jacket to reveal
the button. He read it and laughed. I showed him a map and pointed to
where I wanted to go. He laughed even harder as he pointed to where we
actually were. We were two cities and about 50 miles away. He motioned for
me to sit down and kept giggling, "Dummer Amerikaner!" Five hours late, I
arrived at my stop. Saved by a Mark Heard song! Betsy and I still have the
buttons, in case we ever go back.
Real Musicians Do Eat Quiche
In the early 80s, I worked campus ministry with IVCF at the University of
West Florida in Pensacola, Florida. We sponsored a lot of free concerts
with Christian musicians on campus. Usually we worked with a local CCM
radio station, so we mostly had radio-ready groups like Petra and 2nd
Chapter of Acts. I wanted to bring in folks like Daniel Amos and Mark Heard
but we couldn't get the radio station to fund groups that didn't fit the AM
CCM format. One day, a group of local churches came to me and said they had
some money that they wanted to use to hold some sort of event on the campus.
Did I have any ideas on what to do and would I work with them? A quick call
to Tim Alderson revealed that their amount would just cover Mark's expenses.
We set the date for January 13, 1984. I was ecstatic!
Mark was not in his best form that night. He had seriously cut his hand on
a spinning tape reel a few days before and had not gone to a doctor. He was
struggling to play well. This was around the time that he recorded Mosaics
and I remember him playing ''Broken Wings'' during the sound check. We got off
to a bad start when the sponsors insisted that I introduce Mark by talking
about the alliance of churches that was sponsoring him. This didn't seem to
please Mark. The audience was probably only about a quarter Christian and
he didn't want to make the others uncomfortable from the start by talking
about how "Christian" this show was supposed to be. Then, during the show,
he only mentioned Jesus once. And that was in the satirical line from
''Nothing is Bothering Me'' off Victims of the Age that mockingly encouraged
people to reject Christ. "Jesus is knocking but don't let Him in / He might
come like a thief and steal away your sin." The sponsors were not
impressed. "It didn't bless me," the Christians told me. "He really loves
people doesn't he," the non-Christians told me.
After the concert, we took Mark and Janet home for a late supper of quiche
and salad. I really wanted to sit around and talk art and music with one of
my idols and some like-minded friends. But, through an odd series of
events, three absolutely wrong people ended up in our living room. It was a
disaster. I've blacked the meal out in my mind and don't remember what was
said, but it sure wasn't sitting around talking art and music with one of my
idols and some like-minded friends. My wife, at least, enjoyed the
evening. It turned out that she and Janet were both struggling to have
children. Betsy and Janet had some comfortable talks while I tried to
protect Mark from the conversation from hell. I ended the evening early,
took the Heards to the motel, picked up a six-pack of beer and felt sorry
for myself in front of Friday Night Videos. Mark liked the quiche and asked
me to send him the recipe. I wrote him a letter later and forgot to include
the recipe.
The Best Album Ever Recorded
Second Hand was released around the time of Cornerstone 91. At least that's
where I first heard it. My friend, Carl, proclaimed it "The Best Album Ever
Recorded." This year Carl was not able to join me for Cornerstone 92. Two
nights before I left for the drive to Bushnell, Carl called me from
Jacksonville. He had just picked up Satellite Sky. He had changed his
opinion of Second Hand that day. It was now "The Second Best Album Ever
Recorded."
Satellite Sky may not be the best album ever recorded but it probably is the
best album Mark ever recorded. However, Ashes and Light remains my favorite
Heard album. In 1983 Mark recorded Mosaics only to be told by his label
that it was "too scary" to put out unless remixed. In 1984, they told him
that they wouldn't even release a remixed album unless he did another
acoustic album first. So, in five short weeks, he wrote, recorded, mixed,
and mastered the music that became Ashes and Light. A consistent moody
feel, haunting David Mansfield violins, thoughtful lyrics; this album
remains a classic.
Nice Shirt
After I put Mark on the plane in 1984 I did not see him for almost eight
years. I ran into him with his sister at the Cockburn/Phillips concert in
Atlanta last December. I was wearing my Second Hand t-shirt that night.
"Nice shirt." his sister said. We chatted about his new album, Pat Terry's
country songwriting career, and the unavailability of his early work on CD.
He was supposed to be playing guitar for Sam Phillips but had to drop out
because his father had died from a bad heart. "Weren't you embarrassed to
be wearing his t-shirt while you talked to him?", asked my friend Carl.
"Didn't you feel like a groupie?"
Cornerstone 92
Dan Kennedy printed my review of the Cockburn/Phillips show in The Cutting
Edge. It was the start of a great hobby. Something to take my mind off the
pressures of corporate management. I went to Cornerstone 92 with a press
pass and a mission to interview artists for TCE. Number one on my list was
Mark Heard. I spoke to him before his show and asked if we could get
together the next day for an interview. He said he was leaving early the
next morning but told me to call Dan Russell and set up a phone interview
the next week. I expressed my disappointment that Betsy and Janet weren't
there to compare pictures of our daughters. "Why wait on them?", he said as
he pulled his wallet out. We exchanged pictures and talked about how much
we loved being fathers for a while.
Mark's performance with Pierce Pettis and Pam Dwinell-Miner was marvelous.
His jokes were corny. His guitar playing was a little sloppy at times. The
new material was impassioned and challenging. His attacks on the
ghettoization of the Church was downright preachy. Apparently, he had a
heart attack during the show. After the show, Pierce came to the microphone
and asked if there was a doctor in the house. I didn't pay much attention
since I'm such a medical illiterate. A guy walked up to me and asked if I
was a doctor. "No, but I play one on TV.", I answered. A few minutes
later, I found out that Mark was laying backstage having a heart attack. I
sat at my campsite and watched the ambulance take him away. Depression came
in like a flood. There's no beer and Friday Night Videos to escape into at
Cornerstone.
The next day, I wandered in a fog of depression. The rumors were not
encouraging. I wanted to talk to somebody who would know how he was doing.
That night I spoke to Pam Dwinell-Miner before that At the Foot of the Cross
concert. She gave me the facts on his condition and I gave her a note to
let him know I was praying. Before the show, she gave an update on Mark to
the crowd and asked me to lead the group in prayer for him and for his
family. I had wanted to "do something" all day for Mark. It was a healing
moment for me.
How You Can Help
Mark's wife, Janet, and his four year old daughter, Rebecca, have been left
in a tough situation. Mark's music was not commercially successful while he
was alive. Janet and Rebecca will have to go on without even that income.
If you can help financially, send your donations to:
Heard Family Fund
c/o New Sound
PO Box 197
Merrimac, MA 01860
How Chris Christian & Larry Norman Can Help
As a longtime fan of Mark's music, I appreciate Chris and Larry's role in
bringing his music to the public. The albums Mark cut for their labels are
among the most valued in my record collection. I have wanted to see his old
albums released on CD for a long time. But, under the circumstances, I
don't think they should release them. I believe that they should give the
master tapes back to Mark's widow Janet and his four year old daughter Rebecca.
Chris and Larry, each of you has been given the opportunity to respond in a
distinctly Christian manner to Mark's death. I believe it is important that
you give Janet the tapes. It is not even enough to release the albums and
give her the profits. She have lost Mark, let her own his work. I realize
that Mark's music was not financially successful. Perhaps you even lost
money on his contract. But this not an opportunity to recoup your losses.
This is an opportunity to be obedient to James 1:27. "Religion that God our
Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and
widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the
world." I will be praying for you to do the right thing. I encourage
readers of The Cutting Edge to do the same.
Can You Hear Me?
It's amazing. A person I barely know captures his emotions and experiences
and forges them into poetry and music. Because our emotions and experiences
are similar, that music helps me make sense of my own life. Mark captured
this phenomenon in the song ''Remarks To Mr. McLuhan'' on the Fingerprint album.
If you too are, as Mark put it, "stuck right in the middle", then I'm sure
you find encouragement in the fingerprints and messages that he left frozen
in his records.
Remarks To Mr. McLuhan
What difference does it make
If this was once upon a time
You supply the stereo
And I'll supply the rhymes
I'm aided by machinery
In hopes to reach your mind
Can you hear me
Can you hear me now
Just a needle scratching ridges
On this one way plastic groove
My vinyl destination
My revolving imputation
I'm singing and I'm playing
But my lips don't have to move
Can you hear me
Can you hear me now
But just as loud and clear
You hear this song come through the air
It's funny, but it's as close as I can come
To really being there
Frozen in this record
Are fingerprints and messages
Can you hear me
Can you hear me now
Joe Kirk ( Cutting Edge, ? )
Copyright © by Joe Kirk for Cutting Edge Magazine
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