New Music in New York

Jonathan Fields

A year of working in Manhattan's most important agency for advertising jingles. Together with David Horowitz, his wife Jan, and his band, the adventure of doing something together that stimulates creativity and multiplies possibilities

When I encountered the Movement, for me it meant recognizing immediately the chance to live. Not to live "spiritually," but to live. Before, in fact, I was not even able to move, I couldn't manage to do anything, I did not know how to finish what I began, how to work with my colleagues, how to deal with the relationship with my boss, with clients, all very complicated relationships. I told myself and asked myself: I can't make it, how could I ever make it? This became the constant question that I was always asking my friends, like a plea: How can I manage to do this?
If it hadn't been for some friends, who helped me to stick with my job, to change my mental outlook, to understand that this was the right place for me, I would certainly have been lost. Once again, this is not a matter of "spirituality," but of life. School of Community and my friends became my support system, one that I took with me to work every day, one that I talked about as the most important and precious thing in my life, my chance for life.
I started working better, winning jobs (because in a field like mine, you win jobs or you lose them), being more inside the life of a jingle house, creating unity in the office. I did not have the capacity for solving problems, but I could be of help to the people who were with me. I mean above all Ted and David. Their perception of the human dimension is incredible. So together we understood the possibilities that we had. Bit by bit that office became a place of friendship; we began to discuss details of work in terms of what I was living in the Movement. In fact, during our work meetings the others would stand up and say, "Jonathan says that the Movement says this or that." Then Ted would come in, "Let me add…." And I would be seized by panic, but then Ted would shape his thought, he would shape mine for me, and that would become part of the contents of the meeting, of how we would imagine our strategy for going ahead. Usually among musicians there is not much possibility for formulating strategies, but we would try anyway to find one.
What moves me is that now my closest friends have become or are becoming close friends also of David and his wife Jan. Now we spend our free time in a friendship so free and full of generosity that we even work differently.

Free at the Meeting
What happened last summer was incredible: we took two weeks of vacation together. That an important advertising agency like David Horowitz Associates closed its offices in August for two weeks-which are usually full of work-to go do a concert in Italy (for free!), at the Meeting in Rimini, was unbelievable. And this is something miraculous! I never heard of such a thing. Jan said to me, "You know something? It's fine like this; everything will be for the best."
It ended up that we did business even while we were away, we took home with us some unexpected jobs, and in the two months afterwards our way of being together was different, working on the assignments we received, facing things in an active way. We had the feeling that we were not alone. There was a moment when we had an incredible pile of work and everyone was heavily involved in it; the writers were working on two or three different assignments at the same time, and so we didn't have much time for talking among ourselves. One day one of the composers was particularly irritated because he had some very difficult clients on a job; we talked about it together, we tried to think about it, he asked some others, until he came into my office, all excited, exclaiming, "Here's where the problem is! We can't face things by ourselves. We won't make it. There needs to be at least two of us with the clients. We have to work together, be open with each other."

A mine of creativity
In this way work and creativity increased, not to speak of the change in David. He stayed with us more, pushing us in a creative way, helping us. And this is where hard work comes in, because in this push for something more-in which he is so active-David is pushing us too, so that we are not satisfied with our little solutions that in the end would be the death of an advertising agency like ours. He comes into the room (I'm on the edge of my seat when David comes in to see what I am doing) and says, "No, no, move in this direction… and then in that one!" But the great thing is that he doesn't just say it and go away right afterwards, but he stays there and, in a certain sense, he takes the reins and takes me elsewhere, where he wants me to go. So that being together seems more important even than getting all the assignments and being one of the best advertising agencies in New York, as in fact we are.
This year the Christmas Party was for me a great celebration. We sang Christmas carols together, we shared a great dinner, we recalled moments from the Meeting. And some of our clients were there with us, amazed.
If I can say one thing more it is that work never ends because it is living reality always in the face of the Mystery. I perceive even more my limits and weaknesses, which often causes a writer's block for me-, it seems almost as though my abilities have diminished. In this state, it is a miracle that I face situations that-as Father Giussani says-I couldn't even imagine. And this is what I desire for my children, how I want my marriage to be, how I want everything to be: full of this openness toward what has been given to me, betting everything on this charism.

The Oregon Trail to… Death?
The flyer that Young Student and the whole New York community distributed concerning the recent debate on euthanasia.
These flyers are created on Sunday mornings when, after Mass, a group of Young Student and adults gather together for brunch. They eat, discuss, and then write

Exactly 35 years after America was shocked by the death of John Kennedy, millions watched a tape of Dr. Jack Kevorkian injecting a terminally ill man with a lethal concoction of chemicals to hasten his death. While many might have been shocked, and few content, for us this event raised a question: is life always worth living or can life's conditions become so terrible that it loses its value?
We asked ourselves, "What is our experience of life?" And we answered, "It is a series of moments of satisfaction and dissatisfaction." In looking at our life, we see that at life's core lies desire, desire for truth, justice, goodness, beauty, love, in the end a desire for happiness. It is clear to us that at the center of our life beats a heart, a human heart that always whishes that everything in life would be great and fulfilling.
Nevertheless, we are not naive. Along with our experiences of beauty and gladness, we too know the disappointment and suffering life brings, from failing a test, or sitting bored in a class, to having a seriously ill parent or losing a close relative. The list could go on and on.
But, once a man walked the earth who had the audacity to say to a widow who had just lost her only son, "Woman do not weep." How could he say that, how could he say such a thing to one who had nothing left in life? He could say that because he is the reason to live. He is the truth, justice, beauty, goodness, love, and happiness. And he is present in our friendship, that friendship that at its greatest breadth is the Church. Staying with him we understand that all of life-its joys and sufferings like those of that man who was killed before our eyes-is always worth living. So that with St. Paul we say, "Whether we live or die we do so in Christ Jesus."

Merry Christmas Mr. Clinton,
Merry Christmas Mr. HousseinThe flyer that Young Student and the whole New York community distributed concerning the request to impeach President Clinton and the concomitant attack on Iraq

In these last few days before Christmas, our nation has been through incredible stress: the impeachment of William Jefferson Clinton and the simultaneous bombing of Iraq. We see a similarity in these two events: both have as their root a desire that justice be served. Indeed, the passion, anger and turmoil that these events provoke in the people of our nation, no matter what their opinion on either of these events, springs from a desire that the right thing be done.
We recognize this passion because we see it in ourselves when we want the right grade on a test or the proper wage for our work, or the appropriate treatment from our parents or friends.
What also strikes us is how, whether at the level of our nation or at the level of our personal lives, this desire for justice so easily translates itself into violence. Whether it be the violence of the whole impeachment process, the violence of bombing Iraq, or the smaller violence of simply yelling at our parents, this desire for justice often settles for just violence.
We want to proclaim that it is futile to hope for justice from anything merely human, and thus, from any government or state.
And that the one who alone is just passed His just judgment upon all of us in these days by coming among us as a baby, who would suffer our violence in order to reveal his tender mercy. God's justice is mercy.
And this Mercy is born anew every day in that broken, humble stable that remains in the world: our companionship, the Church.
So, we boldly say to the world and to our nation: do not look to yourself for justice; look to that stable during this time that gives us hope: Christmas.