We Speak Music
Author Camari Knox Releases Debut Poetry Book The Silence of Snow Is So Loudly Deafening
A Stirring Exploration of Trauma, Introspection, and the Unquiet Mind
Author Camari Knox announces the release of her debut poetry collection, The Silence of Snow Is So Loudly Deafening—a hauntingly lyrical examination of identity, psychological trauma, and the relentless pursuit of inner clarity. Self-published and unapologetically raw, this collection is a resonant testament to the quiet chaos that often lives within us.
Crafted over two decades of self-examination, the book offers readers a mirror rather than a map—revealing that perhaps there was never a question needing to be answered in the first place. With intimate, piercing verses, Knox invites readers to walk the blurred lines between silence and noise, truth and repression, reflection and resistance.
“For those who tough love never really worked for. For those who sentimental words of encouragement made them feel uneasy. For those whose only wish is to find someone, something, some words that alleviate every grievance their body has taken on.”

Camari Knox is a self-published author and emerging literary voice with a deep-rooted interest in the complexities of the human experience. Inspired by poets, novelists, and philosophical thinkers, her work balances analytical depth with emotional sensitivity. The Silence of Snow Is So Loudly Deafening draws from her own journey through psychological trauma, offering poetry that is both deeply personal and universally relatable.
With this debut, Knox establishes herself as a fresh voice in contemporary poetry—one that doesn’t seek to provide comfort, but rather companionship through the discomfort. Her words do not simply speak; they echo, resonate, and, at times, pierce.
The Silence of Snow Is So Loudly Deafening is now available through Amazon, Good Reads
We Speak Music
RANDY EDELMAN & TONY ORLANDO • JULY 24
One Last Encore for the Golden Ear
Reunited After Fifty Years, Randy Edelman and Tony Orlando Take the Stage in the Shadow — and the Light — of Clive Davis
Every great song has someone standing just offstage — the one who heard it first, believed in it hardest, and pushed it into the world. For an entire golden age of American music, that someone was Clive Davis. And when Randy Edelman and Tony Orlando reunite on Friday, July 24, 2026, at 8:00 PM at the Bellmore Movies & The Showplace — sharing a stage for the first time in more than fifty years — the man with the golden ear will be standing just offstage one final time, the way he always was. This time, in memory.
Davis, who passed away in June, was the towering figure of the modern record business: president of Columbia Records, founder of Arista, and, to the very end, chief creative officer of Sony Music Entertainment. He guided Whitney Houston, Aretha Franklin, Bruce Springsteen, Santana, Barry Manilow, and Alicia Keys — a roster that reads like the history of the radio itself. But the truest measure of Clive Davis was never only the superstars. It was the moments — a phone call, a green light, a single yes — that quietly changed the course of an artist’s whole life. The two men reuniting in Bellmore are living proof.

The Yes That Made Tony Orlando
In 1970, Tony Orlando was a music executive at CBS’s April-Blackwood publishing house, his teenage hitmaking days behind him, when friends asked him to lend his voice to a little song called “Candida.” It was a favor — sung anonymously, with a possible conflict of interest hanging over the whole thing, since Orlando worked in the Columbia Records family. The decision could have been killed at the top. Columbia’s president was Clive Davis. He let it happen. “Candida” went around the world, “Knock Three Times” followed it to number one, and “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree” became the biggest-selling record of 1973. One quiet yes from Clive Davis, and Tony Orlando and Dawn — Carnegie Hall, primetime television, five number-one hits, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame — came into being.
The Believer in Randy Edelman
Randy Edelman’s road ran through the same rarefied world. A young staff songwriter at that very same April-Blackwood office — where Orlando was the executive and Edelman the kid with the melodies — he wrote “Weekend in New England,” which Barry Manilow, Davis’s signature Arista superstar, carried into the Top Ten and into history. Edelman himself recorded as an Arista artist under Davis’s banner, and his songs found their way to The Carpenters, Patti LaBelle, Olivia Newton-John, and Dionne Warwick before Hollywood claimed him as one of its most beloved composers — The Last of the Mohicans, Gettysburg, Dragonheart, The Mask, My Cousin Vinny, Kindergarten Cop, the MacGyver theme, and the Emmy-winning music of NBC’s Olympics. The golden ear heard Randy Edelman coming, too.
The Encore
So understand what July 24 truly is. On the surface: a magnificent evening of music — Randy Edelman at the piano, presented by Tony Orlando, in the intimate, roughly 325-seat jewel that is the oldest theater on Long Island, just steps from the Long Island Rail Road. Songs, film themes, and a half-century of stories between two men whose paths began in the same office and never crossed a stage again until now.
But beneath the surface, it is something more tender: the first time these two artists stand together in a world without Clive Davis — and the most fitting memorial imaginable. Not a eulogy. A concert. Because men like Davis never asked for monuments; they asked for music. Every note played in Bellmore that night is a note he, in some way, made possible — two careers his instinct touched, harmonizing at last.
The lights go down, the piano begins, and somewhere just offstage, the golden ear is listening. This one’s for Clive.
Randy Edelman & Tony Orlando — Reunited After 50 Years
Friday, July 24, 2026 • 8:00 PM
Bellmore Movies & The Showplace • Bellmore, New York — steps from the Long Island Rail Road
Tickets available via Eventbrite
Produced by JD Sarantakos, JD’s Productions •Supported by Paul’s Pianos 1115 Theodora St., Franklin Square, NY 11010
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