"I think everything should happen at halfway to dawn. That's when all the heads of government should meet. I think everybody would fall in love"
About this Quote
Halfway to dawn is Strayhorn turning a clock into a tuning fork. He picks the hour when the city is hushed but not yet scrubbed clean by morning, when defenses are down and the world feels briefly improvable. For a composer whose most famous work ("Lush Life", "Take the 'A' Train") lives in the after-hours atmosphere of jazz clubs, that timing is the point: diplomacy should borrow from the bandstand, where listening matters more than posturing and where the next move is responsive, not scripted.
The joke lands because it's not really a joke. Strayhorn is smuggling a political theory inside a romantic image. "Heads of government" meeting at 3 or 4 a.m. is an anti-spectacle proposal: no cameras, no podium bravado, no daytime certainty. Just tired humans forced into a kind of honesty. The line "I think everybody would fall in love" reads like wishful thinking, but it also implies something sharper: most conflict is powered by ego and daylight performance. Change the lighting, change the behavior.
Context matters. Strayhorn was a Black gay man composing in mid-century America, often working in the shadow of Duke Ellington, navigating racism, secrecy, and coded social worlds. In that reality, "halfway to dawn" is also a refuge, the hour when alternative communities and unlicensed tenderness can exist. He imagines world leaders entering that same vulnerable register. It is utopian, yes, but with a musician's pragmatism: peace isn't argued into being; it's felt, then followed.
The joke lands because it's not really a joke. Strayhorn is smuggling a political theory inside a romantic image. "Heads of government" meeting at 3 or 4 a.m. is an anti-spectacle proposal: no cameras, no podium bravado, no daytime certainty. Just tired humans forced into a kind of honesty. The line "I think everybody would fall in love" reads like wishful thinking, but it also implies something sharper: most conflict is powered by ego and daylight performance. Change the lighting, change the behavior.
Context matters. Strayhorn was a Black gay man composing in mid-century America, often working in the shadow of Duke Ellington, navigating racism, secrecy, and coded social worlds. In that reality, "halfway to dawn" is also a refuge, the hour when alternative communities and unlicensed tenderness can exist. He imagines world leaders entering that same vulnerable register. It is utopian, yes, but with a musician's pragmatism: peace isn't argued into being; it's felt, then followed.
Quote Details
| Topic | Romantic |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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