This weekend, Susan Herndon is one of the many musicians playing at the 100th birthday anniversary of Woody Guthrie in Okemah, Oklahoma. I know Susan has played the Guthrie shows before and I think she currently lives in Okemah.
Susan is a very talented musician. She is someone I always hoped would get a shot at bigger things as a writer, musician and singer. She took the big leap, leaving a steady paying job to pursue her dream, playing music. It’s funny, because the first time I heard about Susan, she was a new teacher at Cascia Hall High School in Tulsa. She had been hired as a French teacher. My wife Ashley, also teacher at Cascia, called me during the day and said, “You should see this new teacher we have. She’s like Aphrodite. She’s gorgeous!”
Ash said she knew right away this was a woman she would get along with because one of the first things Susan asked her at Cascia was “Where’s a good place to take a shit here?”
Susan promoted her career early. She teamed up with other local artists, including Dee Dee Ralph and my wife, , Ashley to put on a poetry and music evening. They read their poetry and Susan played songs to a group of invited guests for an arts happening. At one event, Ashley sang along with Susan on a song
Susann composed music for Ashley’s poem, “Saturn Returns.” Susan, Dee Dee and Ashley are all very talented ladies. Each of them can turn and phrase and create a scene with their words and music.
Susan began to play the local restaurants and clubs. She often played solo, and sometimes began to mix with other musicians. She would mix in originals with a large catalog of covers. We would go to Rick’s American Bistro to hear Susan play. We chose the French hen for an anniversary dinner because Susan was playing that night. Susan has always been a free spirit. She did move to France at one point, living for a while at a Buddhist Monastery, spending time playing her guitar, perfecting her style. She wrote many of her songs in French. When she returned to the U.S. and Oklahoma, she took the teaching gig for a few years, but it did restrict her playing time.
One of my favorite stories about Susan took place in my back yard. Susan wanted to take some photos for new next CD cover. She bought an underwater camera, brought it to my house so Ashley could take underwater pictures of her for the “1000 Pies” cover. They went out to the pool; Susan stripped off her clothes and hopped in. Ash climbed in the water and began snapping shots.
After they finished, my mother, the song leader and Sunday school teacher at a Southern Baptist Church, wandered into the back yard since no one had answered to door bell to find a stranger, the naked Susan standing poolside.
Susan also penned an instrumental called “Grandma’s China.” It never made it on any of her CDs, but it was great. She had come to dinner at our house with my wife, me and Dee Dee Ralph. Ashley had pulled out old China inherited from her grandmother. Susan was inspired and in fact, played that song as part of the music she did at the wedding of another friend.
Susan is nothing if not versatile. She sand lead for a Jazz band. It was a bunch of much older musicians with the much younger Susan on vocals. We got to see them perform at the Philbrook. The led guitarist was the elderly writer of the song “Tequila.” She has played with more Red Dirt oriented musicians and even cranked out some rockin’ stuff with others. Susan has her groupies and dedicated followers. I try to see her play every time she is at Mayfest of local festivals. Her area of play has increased from the Tulsa bars and restaurants to stretch across Oklahoma and Texas.
Often, Susan’s songs will come up on my IPOD shuffle playlist, and they always make me smile. It always makes me think of the dinners, late nights hanging out at her house, Dee Dee’s or ours, For a while there, the 4 of us, Susan, Dee Dee, Ashley and I kept in close touch. It was nice, and life seemed to have a soundtrack with it.
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