Where You Left Your Heart: On Missing New Orleans and the Places That Refuse to Leave You
Some songs don’t begin when the music starts. They begin when you’re far enough away for memory to get loud. That’s the condition this song assumes. Not a celebration. Not tourism. Not civic pride. Distance. In 1947, a film called New Orleans introduced what would become one of the most enduring standards in American music: "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans ," written by Eddie DeLange and Louis Alter , performed on-screen by Louis Armstrong and Billie Holiday . On paper, it looks like a regional love letter. Moss-covered vines. Mockingbirds. Mardi Gras . Creole tunes drifting through humid air. The Mississippi River rolls lazily toward spring. But listen to the grammar of the first line. “Do you know what it means…” It doesn’t say, Isn’t it beautiful? It asks whether you recognize the condition of missing. The song builds its case gently. It reconstructs New Orleans in sensory fragments, like someone laying out photog...