
Jazz Poems
FOR ERIC DOLPHY
on flute
spinning spinning spinning
love
thru / out
the universe
i
know
exactly
whut chew mean
man
you like
titter
my sister
who never expressed LOVE
in words (like the white folks always d
she would sit in the corner o
and cry i
everytime n
I g
got a whuppin
Etheridge Knight
from Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young
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Jazz Poems
DARK TO THEMSELVES
Invent, experiment–Jazzthat doesn’t swing but dances tight
as a drumhead so taut it mightexplode: whole notes cleaved
into sixteenths with a single blow, melodiesrecoded as arpeggios. Say, what he calls this
composition? Tiny fingers diviningan architectonic flow, forearms jacking
cracks in the keyboard as wireand wood cry out in agony:
duo follow, ringing changes.Liberate the dissonance without killing
the blues. Unit structure cut it.They don’t teach this joint in the Conservatory.
Varèse via Jelly Roll, serial Waller,harmony ribbons in a Möbius strip. Recut it.
Enough is enough. Brother can’t playhere again, the customers ain’t paying.
Even Miles was giggling in the darkness.It’s always a bitch to be out
front. He summons the basslineof his thoughts in the shadows, tracing a new theory
of silence. Don’t worry about the next gig.Their ears are still learning.
JOHN KEENEfrom Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young
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Jazz Poems
SNOW
I cannot help noticing how this slow Monk sol
seems to go somehow with the snow that is coming down this morninghow the notes and the space accompany
its easy falling on the geometry of the ground, on the flagstone path, the slanted roof, and the angles of the split rail fenceas if he had imagined a winter scene
as he sat at the piano late one night at the Five Spot playing “Ruby My Dear”.Then again, it’s the kind of song
that would go easily with rain or a tumult of leaves,and for that matter it’s a snow
that could attend an adagio for strings, the best of the Ronettes, or George Thorogood and the Destroyers.It falls so indifferently
into the spacious white parlor of the world, if I were sitting here reading in silence, reading the morning paper or reading Being and Nothingness not even letting the spoon touch the inside of the cup, I have a feeling the snow would ever go perfectly with that. BILLY COLLINSfrom Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young
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Jazz Poems
FILLING THE GAP When Bird died, I didn’t mind I had things to do— polish some shoes, practive a high school cha-cha-cha. I didn’t even know Clifford was dead: I must have been lobbing an oblong ball beside the gymnasium. I saw the Lady right before she died— dried, brittle as last year’s gardenia. I let her scratch an autograph. But not Pres. Too bugged to boo, I left as Basie’s brass booted him off the stand in a sick reunion— tottering , saxophone dragging himmlike a stage-hook. When I read Dr. Williams’ poem, “Stormy,” I wrote a letter of love and praise and didn’t mail it. After he died, it burned my desk like a delinquent prescription… I don’t like to mourn the dead: what didn’t, never will. And I sometimes feel foolish staying up late, trying to squeeze some life out of books and records, filling the gaps between words and notes. That is why I rush into our room to find you mumbling and moaning in your incoherent performance. That is why I rub and squeeze you and love to hear your live, alterable cry against my breast Lawson Fusao Inadafrom Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young
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Jazz Poems
TRANE Propped against the crowded bar he pours into the curved and silver horn his old unhappy longing for a home the dancers twist and turn he leans and wishes he could burn his memories to ashes like some old notorious emperor of rome, but no stars blazed across the sky when he was born no wise men found his hovel, this crowded bar when dancers twist and turn, holds all the fame and recognition he will ever earn on earth or heaven. He learn against the bar and pours his old unhappy longing in the saxophoneKAMAU BRATHWAITE
from Jazz Poems ~ Selected and Edited by Kevin Young
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