Here is an excerpt of Deborah's page dedicated to this wonderful tree. Check it out! You can even hear the internationally famous song, Belinda here!
" In short, I'd ridden past this beautiful tree many times on my bike, but one day I stopped, saw it and was completely overwhelmed with how magnificent the tree was, how unexpected in Somerville and how inspired I was that someone loved it enough to protect it and let it grace the city in that way. I loved it, but had no idea it had a name.
Then one day I was working with a temp in my office. I asked him where he lived, he said he lived just down the street from the beautiful willow. I knew exactly the tree he meant! He told me the willow's name was "Belinda." The next time I walked by the tree I looked up and thought, 'That's Belinda!" and spontaneously began singing a little samba, which became the song "Belinda."
I sang "Belinda" for years in my concerts – with the audience singing along. I even wrote a version of the song for full orchestra -- so people have now sung and heard the song all over the US and Europe.
One day, about five years after I'd started performing it, a man came up after a show and said, "That tree you sing about? I know that tree. But it's not called Belinda — its name is Bertha!" So the NEXT time I walked past I looked up and thought, "Hunh! So that's BERTHA!" and AGAIN, spontaneously a very different tune came into my head. That became the song, "Birth 'a Bertha."
I've gotten many stories from fans who've visited the tree and love it. One of my favorites is from a woman who wrote to tell me that she was picking up a twig from under the tree when a man asked her what she was doing. She said she wanted to take a part of Belinda home with her, root it and plant it in her own garden. The man was surprised and said it was his own father who had first planted the tree.
In Summer 2008, the Arlington High School Choir Director, Cheryl Christo, asked if I'd come do a project with the High School music students. I live in Arlington and have long been impressed by the music and theater departments there, so we agreed to perform three pieces of mine: one with chorus, one with orchestra and one with band. The vocal piece they chose was "Belinda" and composer (and former music department head of AHS), Pasquale Tassone, took my orchestral score and arranged it for 4-part choir of about 80 kids.
Here's an idea Deborah: To prevent other Berthas and Belindas from going on, let's hear from folks out there who have their own favorite trees that they want to save!





