Dogwoods Bloom, and Music Echoes

Pink Cornus florida cultivars drinking up the sun at a Portland, Ore., nursery. Ketzel Levine, NPR hide caption

The five-petaled flower of a Pacific dogwood, Cornus nuttallii. Ketzel Levine, NPR hide caption
Music for Dogwoods
Here's the music our experts imagined as the voice of the dogwood:
Faure: "Romance Sans Paroles, Op.17, #3" Kathryn Stott, pianist
Rachmaninoff's "Prelude in G Major, Op.32, #5" Megan Hughes, pianist
Mozart: "Concerto in A Major for Clarinet & Orchestra," Benny Goodman/Boston Symphony/Charles Munch
Copland's "Appalachian Spring"
A predictable, yet wondrous, event has begun around the country: the American dogwood is in bloom. This ancient creature, which is native to both coasts, has changed little since the time of the dinosaurs.
The brief flowering of the dogwoods can elicit thoughts of music: the blossoms build slowly to a crescendo, and then fade into the background for another year. To many, their more muted display only increases their sentimental appeal.
NPR's Ketzel Levine consulted several experts -- on music, and flowers -- to learn what kind of music they hear when they view dogwoods in bloom.
From Dogwoods: The Genus Cornus by Paul Cappiello and Don Shadow:
Growing Dogwoods in the Garden
Cultural management is the bane of the flowering dogwood's existence. The tree does best in moist, acidic soil in a site with a touch of afternoon shade. It will perform admirably in full sun with adequate moisture, but who can be trusted to provide adequate water? Can you just hear it now, "I promise, honey, I'll water it twice a week . . . !"
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