POEM: The Truth About Art Pepper
Posted 28 May, 2010 in Audio Poems, Jazz, Music, My poems, Poetry
Listen to this poem using the player above.
Art Pepper is my favorite alto saxophonist and one of my favorite musicians, period. I wrote this while listening to Stuttgart May 25, 1981 – Unreleased Art Vol. V. Art’s wife, Laurie, has been on The Jazz Session twice. If you’d like to learn more about Art, please listen to her appearances in 2007 and 2009.

Photo (c) Laurie Pepper
The Truth About Art Pepper
Art’s life is Synanonymous with art, the making of
with the alto saxophone, the playing of
with Ginsberg’s angel-headed hipsters, the slaying of
Art’s sound is a soaring cry that no bird of prey can outshine
he is a misty-morning muezzin atop the minaret calling the faithful
to the temple of pure emotion, architecture without artifice
Art is the inmate released, outpouring pent-up desire
archetype of the madness that bound those bound by the 50s
survivor of the plain old lives that crashed in the purple mountains
Art for Art’s sake, one foot hokey-pokeying on the ledge
the people like ants – aren’t they always? – far below
(although Art was never one to put himself above the people)
Art could play a ballad like he had Cupid’s arrow lodged between his ribs
could play the blues like he’d been struck down on a dusty road
could blaze like the nucleus of the sun, irradiating the audience with love
Art was the original Comeback Kid, cutman in his corner dabbing
his sweaty brow with a towel, handing him a new reed soaked
in the jar of blood and guts beside the ring
Art could take a punch, roll with it, let the kinetic energy of the blow
travel from his gut to his spine, slide up to his brain
there to spark the next invention, the next flight of fancy
Art is beauty and beauty is truth and therefore Art was the truth
he was the news that stays news, the last dispatch from the battlefront
Art could make the shooting stop, could arrest breath and pause time
Art’s most magical reality was that he was purely human
not carved from marble by a holy sculptor with a careful eye
but made from the same clay as we all, gifted with the breath of music
POEM: the ghosts of suburbia
Posted 27 May, 2010 in Audio Poems, My poems, Poetry
Listen to this poem using the player above.
This is the kind of poem you write when you eat lunch in a cemetery.

the ghosts of suburbia
(for Bunny, whoever she is)
the woman with bottle-colored hair
locked her car door at the cemetery
perhaps an overabundance of caution
among these long-sleeping thieves
on this false-summer day
like the bunny named on her license plate
she darted from the car to a grave
bent over momentarily and was gone
before the trumpeter playing on my car stereo
finished the first chorus of his solo
this visit was less about communing with the dead
more about checking in
either to make sure they were still there
or to confirm to them that she was
it looked like a visit to a silent parole officer
Sergeant Murphy no longer a desk jockey
now pushing daisies rather than papers
in triplicate, two extra copies to eventually
go to the landfill, as Murphy himself has
a few hundred feet away she stopped
at a second grave, repeated the ritual
apparently her relatives had hedged their bets
against the day when the housing development
next door would expand into the cemetery
they’d spread the family around
to buy the long-term mourners more time
in this oppressive heat their presence
is Bunny’s challenge — a test of her willingness
to leave her air-conditioned Lincoln
she passes the test and is allowed to live
until her next appointment
with the ghosts of suburbia, the spectres
who haunt Lincoln-driving women
with bottle-colored hair
POEM: The Last Siren
Posted 26 May, 2010 in Audio Poems, My poems, Poetry
Listen to this poem using the player above.

The Last Siren
you can’t take your eyes off her when she reads
she says it’s the microphone
you say the microphone’s in the way
the word allure comes from the same root as lure, bait
her words dangling at the end of the hook
you can’t resist biting
and then she has you – all of you – not just the eyes
sometimes she pretends not to hear
but only because she’s already been there
written her message in blood on the wall
where it waits for the unsuspecting traveler
wandering in from the night
to a room full of aspirants who hang, writhing
on her every word
she is the last Siren, come from her island
on a boat of pages torn from your secret journal
Jason played his lyre to drown out her song
Odysseus strapped himself to the mast
but still begged for release, screaming
until the ship drifted out of danger
and now here she is and here you are
and she is still singing and no amount
of beeswax can stop your ears
and you can’t look away
POEM: to swing you in the arms of the stars
Posted 25 May, 2010 in Audio Poems, Jazz, Music, My poems, Poetry
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A poem dedicated to the jazz musician Sun Ra, written after reading an article by Nate Chinen.

to swing you in the arms of the stars
you don’t need a rocket to get there
there wouldn’t be any there there if you got there
anyway
but HE would be there in a long robe
dime store rhinestones a glittering milky way
HE is a high priest with a congregation of everyone
arms lifted to create a horizon, the sun medallion
set into HIS space pope’s mitre
your eyelids are getting heavy, it’s all getting heavy
doo-wop be-bop swing and free
Space Is The Place for you and me
and HE and we and Muhammad Ali
the Black Christ descends from the highest peak
of the Andes, looks around slowly, sees
nothing of interest, climbs back to the summit
for some, it is just too much chaos
but there was order, too, and beauty, and reason
a cover story for those long kept under the great white thumb
isn’t the homesickness of 746 million miles
better than the sickness of a home in Alabama
where being a little green man would be preferable to being what HE is?
sure, HE had a name, HE was her man, her little boy
a baby from a womb not covered in stars
but released in blood and tears like all the rest
pushed into a world not of HIS choosing, HE chose not to be of this world
adopted for HIMSELF a new birth in the undiscovered country
fell from a new womb with the slight bounce of nine percent less gravity
as has been previously noted, we are spinning on a marble
that is whirling around a fire
the hole in the middle of the universe surrounded by black wax
HE pressed grooves into that wax and drew forth sound from the needle
while the tables turned – the polarity reversed – up was down
the black man was a cosmic prince, the king of the moonlit desert
couldn’t Pat Patrick wail over this awakening?
couldn’t John Gilmore swing you in the arms of the stars?
couldn’t HE tell you what your blood knows but your brain fears?
on the summit of the highest peak of the Andes
the Black Christ is clearing brush to make a landing place
for the ninth rocket, the one that will carry him away
we travel the spaceways from planet to planet
humming a tune born of a south too deep to bear
midwifed in stardust and held up in the harsh light of the sun for all to see
POEM: Lark Definitions
Posted 25 May, 2010 in Albany, Audio Poems, My poems, Poetry
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A poem for the Lark Tavern in Albany, NY, which was destroyed by fire in May 2010 and which will return.

Lark Definitions
it’s a bird noted for its singing
it’s a verb meaning to play
it can denote a certain lack of care
but that is itself a trick
a surface appearance that masks
desperate attention to detail
for we do care, each of us
we’ve stood naked under lights
that show blood red on film
we’ve bared all, opened our bone cages
to let fly the nightingales
(also noted for their singing)
we’ve confessed lovers, told
strangers truths no one else knows
all under the watchful eyes
of attentive servers who
notice yet don’t let on
a man in a bookstore asked me
how it feels to be the last
featured poet at the Lark
“I won’t be the last,” I said
POEM: Stand up, Moses
Posted 22 May, 2010 in Albany, Audio Poems, My poems, Poetry
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A poem for Albany-based writer and poet Moses Kash III. The first line is from a poem Moses read at Dan Wilcox’s Third Thursday Poetry Reading on May 20, 2010.
Photo of Moses Kash III by Keith J. Spencer
Stand up, Moses
white people have got hold of all the cash
except Americus Moses Kash the third
he remains independent of their influence
standing tall on bad knees and black sneakers
proclaiming … this word … and … this word … and …
the word, born of life lived with tall vision
he does not shirk his duty, tells it like it is
as he has seen it, felt its sting
captured its image in his lens
boxes and boxes and stacks and stacks
stacks and stacks and boxes and boxes
he still uses the word “mimeograph”
as if time stopped in the 1960s
and maybe it did
can you prove that your heart is beating?
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