More connections spring to my mind with your reply! I imagine they will only entertain me-- if syncronicities, they are extremely idiosyncratic ones. But it is also amusing to me that:
..."Nardis", with its odd spelling, could be seen as "pseudo-Nardos"...
...that "spike lavender" seems to me to be an apt description of Miles Davis himself...
...by far the most famous album that Miles Davis and Bill Evans worked on together was "Kind of Blue" (which is exactly what lavender is)...
"Kind of Blue", while possibly the most famous jazz album of all time, also brought an end to their working relationship. One reason why, possibly, is that, just as with Nardis, there have ever since been persistent rumors that Bill Evans actually wrote one of the songs, and that just as with Nardis, Mercurial Miles stole authorship. The other song in question?
..."Blue In Green". Which is again, exactly what lavender is. Lest you think I am just reading anything and everything into lavender, I submit as evidence the nursery rhyme:
Lavender's blue, dilly dilly Lavender's green When I am king, dilly dilly You shall be queen
Which, as it happens, my elder daughter (elder berry?) is fond of and sometimes sings, after catching it from a book of illustrated nursery rhyme sheet music that I acquired a few months back.
I doubt very much that any of this actually helps you toward whatever your dreams were pointing you toward. Though I guess you never know.
As for me, though, I almost feel like I'm actually on to something here!
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..."Nardis", with its odd spelling, could be seen as "pseudo-Nardos"...
...that "spike lavender" seems to me to be an apt description of Miles Davis himself...
...by far the most famous album that Miles Davis and Bill Evans worked on together was "Kind of Blue" (which is exactly what lavender is)...
"Kind of Blue", while possibly the most famous jazz album of all time, also brought an end to their working relationship. One reason why, possibly, is that, just as with Nardis, there have ever since been persistent rumors that Bill Evans actually wrote one of the songs, and that just as with Nardis, Mercurial Miles stole authorship. The other song in question?
..."Blue In Green". Which is again, exactly what lavender is. Lest you think I am just reading anything and everything into lavender, I submit as evidence the nursery rhyme:
Lavender's blue, dilly dilly
Lavender's green
When I am king, dilly dilly
You shall be queen
Which, as it happens, my elder daughter (elder berry?) is fond of and sometimes sings, after catching it from a book of illustrated nursery rhyme sheet music that I acquired a few months back.
I doubt very much that any of this actually helps you toward whatever your dreams were pointing you toward. Though I guess you never know.
As for me, though, I almost feel like I'm actually on to something here!