Monday, December 17, 2007

In Memory of Dan Fogelberg

I subbed today at the middle school and when I got my class settled on their task, I got on line to check my email and check the headlines. I was stunned to read that folk-rock singer and songwriter Dan Fogelberg passed away on Sunday morning from prostate cancer. He was 56.

I was surprised how shaken I was about it.

Dan Fogelberg (DF) was pretty popular back in the 70's and 80's. He had a number of hits and put out some great music. A friend that worked at a record store introduced me to his music when he gave me DF first album, "Home Free." I was swept away with its very first cords on "To the Morning" and stirred with the lyrics of the closing song, "The River."

Shortly after receiving the album DF came to town and a couple of friends and I went to hear him. It was a wonderful evening of folk and rock with his back-up band "Fools Gold." His closing song "There's a Place in the World for a Gambler" got the entire crowd singing and we sang the song all the way home.

His music served as an essential part of my life's soundtrack. When I graduated and hit the road with those same dear friends for a month, traveling down the east coast, we wore out his tapes. When I moved into the dorm on campus, it was the music of Fogelberg that filled our room. When a dear friend was in a bad place and couldn't see it, it was DF song "As the Raven Flies" that I would play around him.

I don't know what place his life was in when he died, whether he had a faith in Christ or not, but in some of his songs there was a longing for more, a soul searching for answers. When he released his album "Nether Lands," the first song caused several of us to wonder if maybe, just maybe, he had found Christ:
High on this mountain
The clouds down below
I'm feeling so strong and alive
From this rocky perch
I'll continue to search
For the wind and the snow and the sky
Oh I want a lover and I want some friends
And I want to live in the sun
And I want to do all the things that I never have done
Sunny bright mornings and pale moonlit nights
Keep me from feeling alone
Now I'm learning to fly and this freedom is like
Nothing that I've ever known
Oh I've seen the bottom and I've been on top
But mostly I've lived in between
And where do you go when you get to the end of your dream
Off in the Nether Lands I heard the sound
Like the beating of heavenly wings
And deep in my brain I can hear a refrain
Of my soul as she rises and sings
Anthems to glory and anthems to love
And hymns filled with earthly delight
Like the songs that the darkness composes to worship the light
Once in a vision I came on some woods
And stood at a fork in the road
My choices were clear yet I froze with the fear
Of not knowing which way to go
Oh, one road was simple acceptance of life
The other road offered sweet peace
When I made my decision
My vision became my release

That song still makes my soul soar when I listen to it and, whether or not it was a result of the discovering of Christ in his life, it certainly made me sing it in praise to my Lord!

I wrote my wife this morning and told her I lost a dear friend yesterday. I hope that in his struggle to live, that he came to meet Christ. Believing that all good things come from God, I believe that Dan Fogelberg's music was a gift from God. It will always touch me and fill me with wonderful and sad memories. But I hope that, as his music lives on, that God will us it for His Glory and touch another soul who is searching for the Nether Lands.

Thank you Dan for touching my life with your music.



Check out his website at http://www.danfogelberg.com/news.html

From the mid 70's
From 2003

8 comments:

Stillwater said...

Jim,

I don't know if you still get any notice of responses here. I was reflecting on Dan and the impact his music had on me in the 70's - and still today. I'm 51 and a Christian, and dealing with so many issues. But God has been faithful in the long run.

I enjoyed your comment about how even if we are unsure of Dan's final spiritual destiny, we are both convinced of what a gift from God his talent was and music still is.

Just wanted to let you know I appreciated and agreed with your comment. I think Dan's music hit home with so many people that many of us felt he was perhaps like a brother. Interesting.

Thanks,
Cary Browne
Waynesville, OH
cary.browne @ gmail.com

Stillwater said...

Jim,

I don't know if you still get any notice of responses here. I was reflecting on Dan and the impact his music had on me in the 70's - and still today. I'm 51 and a Christian, and dealing with so many issues. But God has been faithful in the long run.

I enjoyed your comment about how even if we are unsure of Dan's final spiritual destiny, we are both convinced of what a gift from God his talent was and music still is.

Just wanted to let you know I appreciated and agreed with your comment. I think Dan's music hit home with so many people that many of us felt he was perhaps like a brother. Interesting.

Thanks,
Cary Browne
Waynesville, OH
cary.browne @ gmail.com

Anonymous said...

Whether it was a formal acceptance of Christ as Savior or not, I believe Dan had a strong belief in God. I think this came later in life. His song, Magic Every Moment, summed it up:

"You can see forever in a single drop of dew
You can see that same forever if you look down deep inside of you
There's a spark of the creator in every living thing
He respects me when I work but He so loves me when I sing"

Jim Elder said...

Thanks for sharing those lyrics. I think today will be a Dan listening day. Blessings

Anonymous said...

I remember going to one of Dan's concerts in Indiana and when I heard the wonderful songs about our Earth/Creation I remember praying that Dan would worship the Creator more than the created. I continued praying for him when I would listen to his music or hear about him on TV. I prayed he would find the Lord when he searched for Him with all of his heart. I believe he honestly sought truth that only comes from knowing our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. ♥

Anonymous said...

Listen to his song "Don't let that sun go down". ... He knew Chrst well. No doubt.

Unknown said...

Hello. I am also a Dan Fogelberg fan and have also been pondering so much seeking info on Dan about knowing Christ. I know he went to church with his parents. I am assuming he may have accepted Christ then but who knows. I have heard several songs that Dan did that sure do indicate that he knew Jesus. He seemed to be more content and at peace at a certain point in time. Yes and thanks to God for giving Dan his talent we all get to listen to his wonderful songs. They never get old.
I think all of his fans feel like they lost a good friend. He was a very genuine, personable and peaceful guy. We are all so blessed to have the music he left for us.

Unknown said...

So very beautiful and quite telling.