I picked today’s song because WordPress tells me that this is my 100th blog post.
If I had been asked to guess how many blog posts I’ve written since I started in 2013, I would have said 30 – 40.
So I am surprised to discover that this is #100.
As loyal readers from the past years can attest, I do not write on a regular schedule.
If I do the math, however, I find that I have averaged one post per month.

I am often happy — and sometimes even overjoyed — to be part of our WordPress writing community.
It is thrilling to check my statistics and find that folks have been reading and listening from different countries around the planet.
THANK YOU to everyone who has read and/or listened to one of my blog posts during the past eight years!
And a special thank you to the folks who have taken the time to leave a comment.
Reading and responding to these comments — and also writing comments after reading other people’s blog posts — is how the WordPress community comes to life!
“Overjoyed” was written by Stevland Hardaway Morris a.k.a Stevie Wonder and first appeared in 1985 on his 20th studio album, In Square Circle.
I am not sure when I first heard it — maybe when he performed it on Saturday Night Live or perhaps when a college friend, Rex Dean, sang it?
It became somewhat of an obsession for me and several of my musical friends…

I finally performed “Overjoyed” in 2006 as part of a program of songs written by people named Steve — which also featured songs by Stephen Schwartz, Stephen Foster, Stephen Sondheim, Cat Stevens, Stephen Flaherty, Steve Schalchlin, and my friend Steve Sweeting (several of whose songs have been highlighted in previous blog posts).
This recording is from a rehearsal at pianist Doug Hammer‘s studio north of Boston, MA, which was attended by a journalist, Joel Brown, who ended up writing a lovely feature story in the Boston Globe to help spread the word before my performance at Scullers Jazz Club.
If you are curious, you can read it on my website (look for “Interviews — Boston Globe June 4, 2006).
This recording also features a wonderful musician, Mike Callahan, playing clarinet.
I met Mike when he was an undergraduate at Harvard.
He arranged a bunch of songs for me to sing with the Harvard Pops Orchestra — and then later with the Timberlane Pops. You can click here to see him and me in action if you are curious.
He can play just about any instrument (which is very useful when one is arranging a song for an entire orchestra) and is also a delightful human being.
Mike went from Harvard to the Eastman School Of Music, where he earned an MA and a PhD and is now a professor at Michigan State.
If you click here, you can read his bio to learn more details about his outstanding musical life.
Finding strong takes from previously recorded rehearsals and then polishing them with Doug via Zoom has also been a process which has given me much joy during the past year.
And — well-masked — we’ve even started recording a new batch of my original songs in the past month (I take off my mask when I am in the vocal recording booth…)
Hopefully a few of them will turn out well enough for me to share them in future blog posts.
Watching things grow in the planters on my back porch this past summer has also been a quietly joyful pastime.
I started with kale, basil, tomatoes and marigolds.
The tomatoes yielded a small but sublime harvest of vegetable gems.
Mine were yellow, and I did not document them with a photograph because they were so tasty I had to eat them as soon as they became ripe.
But my friend Carole Bundy sent me this lovely photo of HER first two tomatoes.
I’ve also been eating one brilliant green leaf of kale every week or so…
When the tomatoes were done, I replaced them with cut up chunks of a potato which my mother brought to family gathering earlier this summer.
It was one of a batch which she described as being the most delicious potatoes she had eaten in a long time.
I wasn’t sure if the cut up chunks would grow, but they did have many “eyes” on them…
Now I am overjoyed that one of them has sprouted, grown tall, and even flowered!
I was very surprised by the flowers, which are quite pretty and fragrant.
They have also lasted a long time.
Now the soil under the flowering plant is starting to bulge a bit.
I think I may need to pile more dirt on top of what may be one or more baby potatoes growing down below…
The cat in this photo lives with our neighbors upstairs.
I may write about her in a future blog post.
Trixie did something on 9/11/21 which was heart-wrenching (not to her but to me and maybe also to her owner).
But that is a story for another day and another blog post.
Today’s theme is joy and gratitude.
Thank you to the great photographers who share their photos with the world via Pixabay.
I am overjoyed that I can include your photos in my blog posts.
Thank you to all the great songwriters named Steve.
I am overjoyed to sing your songs.
Thank you to Doug and Mike for your musical gifts — and thank you to Doug for your engineering magic, too.
I am overjoyed to be able to make music with you both.

Thank you to the plants which have been so patient and cooperative with my humble attempts at gardening — as well as generous with their fruits and leaves and roots!
I am overjoyed that you breath out what I breath in and vice-versa.
I know I thanked my readers earlier in this blog post, but I will now thank you again!
THANK YOU.
It is a pleasure and an honor to be part of this WordPress community.
PS: You are always welcome to visit my website — where you can find all sorts of songs.
Or you can find me singing — with Doug Hammer playing his Schimmel grand piano — on Spotify, Pandora, Apple Music and other digital music platforms.
And if you are hungry for more music, you are welcome to listen to a sublime version of “In My Life” which I recorded with Doug Hammer.on a bunch of different digital music platforms.