Monthly Archives: January 2009

Patriotic Song (revised, yet again)

My instinct tells me
my country doesn’t need bifocals.
America needs the long view only.
America knows reading rots the mind.
America loves kittens on chin-up bars
because the letters are big and spelling doesn’t matter.

My instinct speaks in a voice that sounds like
my mother’s wrinkled brow
over my crib. (How I love you, Mom, your
gray eyes like the storms of myth,
and how I love my father,
steering us toward the perfectly
integrated calm of promise.)
My instinct tells me
I am right to see America
as a present from nostalgia.

Love America, says my instinct.
Love the wordless ways by which all Americans assemble meaning,
America is a Rose Bowl
of equally loving machineries
opposed on principle
and battling it out
despite loose bolts and general disrepair.
It keeps going anyway
propelled by ruptured stream pipes
that burn off skin
while leaving the muscles intact.

My instinct speaks to me, saying
the muscles! The muscles are what matters!
That and the bones are all we need! Forget the skins
and all we’ve said about them! We’re cured!
We’re aglow with blisters and blisters hold
pure fresh water! America is a vast reservoir
and we swim in it every minute!

My instinct says cruelty is a television turned off
and a radio that plays requests while planting trees.
My instinct says a warmer planet leads to more housing starts
year round! It says the pocket of my jeans
will brim with honey without my asking for such sweet treasure.
How can I refuse such a pleasing God?

Instinct, I love you! Let us listen to each other always,
only forgoing our real dialogue on national holidays.
You want me to race ahead of it all and I shall!
Experiment in progress, Instinct!
We are the new imagination of the new century! I am as blind
as instinct is deaf to the rejects who tell us we are aiming
for a cliff above Babylon! I grow my hair out into locks
of clean red shimmer, bloody ground forgotten in favor of Valhalla,
streaming out behind me as I fly the course!
Flip me over, I’m done!
Show me the river!
Show me an America I believe I already inhabit!
Show me I am right to trust my gut
that laps over my belt
with the fat of a stolen birthright,
one I would never sell without your OK!
Is this it? Is this the OK?
If it is, say it! Instinct,
tell me what to charge!
I await your instructions
with all my intubated breath!


Obit

he was a secretly weepy man
whose life was overall easier than he let on
and at the same time fraught enough
with occasional tension that he allowed it to color
the good times, which were long enough
to make him feel guilty for being in pain.

he lived a long time in one place
and then again in another.  nothing felt like
home at all except once in a while
and he pushed that down right away
because he felt guilty about always feeling alone.
rootless old dog that he was
he kept secrets.  they were like home to him.

he used to say that the typical cynic
is just a clumsy romantic.
he knew the former worked better for him
because the latter needs more tending
and he let things spoil
through inattention all the time.

he worked too hard on easy things.
he never wore his heart on his sleeve
because it was too jumpy to be pinned down.
he slept too little.  he talked too much.
he walked away when it suited him
and he would have called you a sentimental fool
for bothering to call after him.


Howl

This AM, downloaded the 500th installment of Indiefeed’s performance poetry podcasts — the first ever recording (indeed, the first ever complete reading aloud) of Ginsberg doing the complete "Howl."

I saw Ginsberg do this once.  This recording is rough, but boy, is it potent.  Go listen to it here or download it here.

Thanks to mongobear  for all he does, for all of us. 


Restaurant Review (draft, still — revised)


So, I did this last night at the Vernon (whichyou should have been at, by the way, as David Surrette gave an awesome feature) as a dual voice piece with Dave MacPherson.  (Yes, I wrote and performed a multi-voice piece.  multimediagrl , you may faint now.)  Based on how it went, I’ve made some extensive edits. 

I think it’s safe to say that seeing Danny Hoch at 13 earlier this month may be influencing me a bit.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"Hey, it’s me…you call?  Yeah, I’m outside…wait a sec, I’ll move and see if the reception’s better…how’s that?  Good….Lunch?  Sure, where do you want to go?…Homegrown Foods?  Ok, but if we’re gonna eat there, we gotta eat inside.  Yeah, I know it’s nice out…see, the other day I’m trying to ignore this homeless guy who’s ranting on the street while I’m sitting and trying  to eat my lunch on the patio there and he will not shut up…"

gimme gimme

gimme gimme jimmy gimme gimme

lift up your sheets for a minute
lift up your foil
lifted his aluminum dog tags
lift them up

listen
I’m not completely crazy
I know I’m not sane if you think about sane
the way you do

"and this guy is just going on and on about nothing, you know, like they do…
"

who’s the new president?
al gore?
or is it barackbarack obamamamama
the old one was gimme gimme gimme gimme george
old or new
they didn’t know him
didn’t know
gimme gimme
jimmy
gimme jimmy stallings

listen
I used to know this guy with a red hat
gimme gimme jimmy
had a hand out all the time but who doesn’t
I used to be that guy’s best friend
he died
who doesn’t
no more gimme gimme jimmy

"and all I’m trying to do is have a fucking sandwich, y’know?"

I knew him
someone poorer than him kicked him to death
he died
on the sidewalk right there
stole his shoes his bag
I lifted his dog tags
I told everyone
keep telling everyone
gimme gimme jimmy gone
no one came to see when I told
I knew him
I’m just a howler they say
but it was true
even when no one came to see
gimme gimme jimmy
go

"and that’s just like completely screwed with my appetite…it used to be a nice place…yeah, i know, but how’re you gonna keep anything down with that in your ear…and he kept looking at me…"

bagged him without a tag
didn’t even ask me what happened
no gimme gimme the news about jimmy jimmy gimme gimme
what do you need to know the story for
it’s always bad somewhere
always a potter’s field for someone somewhere

"so I call the manager over and I say, can you do something here? and he’s all yes sir, yes, I’ll call someone…"

gimme gimme gimme gimme gimme
jimmy
yeah
I still have his dog tags —
lift them up and let them shine
listen
gimme gimme jimmy loved being a soldier
he said war’s not reasonable but we need it
it’s like god that way
rich people aren’t god
and this isn’t war
this is gimme gimme
they’re reasonable
when the rich get poorer
so do the poorer-than-them
that’s the way it is
sensible

"Yeah, so the manager calls the cops…and they come.  Takes them long enough…and all theydo is move him down the block and he keeps shouting back at me, I think…yeah, maybe not, but it seemed that way…"

one’s got
the other gives up
one’s angry
the other gets cut
one lives
the other gets buried alone
one gets unruly
the other makes a gun
one makes another kill another with a gun
take away the guns
melt them into forks
gimme gimme gimme a fork to shoot
forks are empty and who cares
can’t shoot anyone with a fork

"the guy never shuts up even while they’re driving him off.  At least they comped my meal, so it wasn’t a total loss…yeah, right.  You’re funny.  I’ll gladly pay for the meal if he’s not there…so we check the patio first, see if he’s there, then maybe we eat outside…"

gimme gimme gimme your hands
i’m so dirty
my hands are dirty
hands always get dirty in order
of how much dirt they’ve touched
the poor touch a lot of dirt
touch it before the rich do
but we’re all dirty sometimes
lots of digging to be done
if we need more guns to dig with
we’ll just melt down the forks and start over
how hard can it be

"But seriously — I’m cool with Homegrown.  What time?  Twelve thirty?  Yeah, that’s fine.  Who ever gets there first, they check out the patio, if he’s gone, we’ll meet there…look inside first though…ok, I’ll see you.  Let me know early if anything changes…"

who needs a fork anyway
who’s eating these days anyway
who’s eating
gimme gimme gimme gimme
jimmy
don’t need food now
I got his dog tags
I remember his name


Slammin’ Johnny Speaks Of Love

"When I was sixteen
I was hornier ‘n six minks in a mail sack.
At twenty-one I learned how to let ’em out one at a time
and make it last all night long.
‘Slammin’ Johnny,’ the women called me
and I bet you can guess why.
At thirty they started to die off.
At forty, I slept alone more often than not
with the bag just stirring now and then.
Now I’m old as the dirty dozen
and I wouldn’t know a mink if one bit me,
but a body next to mine keeps me warm
so I make the effort once in a while.
There are times when it’s enough
to know that if I wake up next morning,
it won’t be alone.  And if I don’t wake up,
maybe it’ll mean something to whoever’s
lying there.  Maybe they’ll remember me
for a week or two after they get over the shock.

"You know, ‘The Dirty Dozen’ was a great movie.  All those ugly guys
making people watch them.  I was ugly as any of them
but I wasn’t famous. I had to make do
with that bag of minks and a reputation
for taming them.  I can’t say I was ever in love
with that.  I always liked the idea of that movie more
than any other — ugly guys banging away
and getting it done when no one else could.
Maybe I should have watched more movies.
Maybe I missed something.

"Ah, you could spend all night listening to me say, ‘maybe.’
Maybe that’s what you want.  I dunno.
I can’t tell you shit about women.  I useta think
I could, but I can’t.  I useta think it was love
when it was just me jumping off and on till I was done,
and done felt good enough to make me think it was love,
but it never lasted.  But I ain’t complainin’. I’ve had it good.
Maybe that’s why I’m here tonight, and not cold in some grave
already.  Maybe that doesn’t cut it for everyone,
but it’s how it was, and how it is.  Now,
you wanna buy me a beer
and stop asking me so many questions?
I gotta bed upstairs that’s calling my name."


Memoir

I have seen more sunrises
while falling asleep than I ever wanted,
closing my eyes to blood seeping back
into gray skin and charcoal sky.

I’ve held my own hand
just to know it still could grasp
another.

I lived so long
on a patch of cloth
on a worn couch
or in a cracking leather chair
that I forgot what eye level
was like.  I looked up at anyone
talking to me because down
is where I did my best work,
my only work.

I couldn’t say a good word
about myself
without imagining
how it would sound in
another person’s mouth,
and I couldn’t get it right.
My spit tasted
of dust bowls
and cedar splinters
driven into skulls
by tornadoes, and I couldn’t help
swallowing.

On the nights when
I did see the sunrise,
I never warmed up.
I welcomed
snow and rain in the morning, better still
if it rained into snow
and everything became deep slush.
That was the only time
I felt like I fit, when everyone was
as cold and sodden as I was,
when the steel shade of the outside world
looked like home.

I look at all that now
in the mornings when I rise
to the sun falling lukewarm
upon the ice outside,
and I can see
how water is still running down the street,
but now,
it’s from the melting.


The Ferret

the ferret
pours through holes so small
water could only seep through
if it found them. when it’s time to sleep,

she sleeps. when it’s time to eat, she eats.
every detail delights her just long enough
to send a shiver up her tuby body,
and then it passes.

she’s the perfect stoner’s pet
with a thousand ideas and urges
in the course of a minute.
you could watch one not-thinking for hours.

too many nips on my toe and she gets caged.
she always eats and drinks then.
I wonder if it’s strategy
and not punishment at work…

nah, she loves being out too much.
lots of things to do.
places to see. worlds to discover
and rediscover.

an exacting enactment
of life in the moment.
I sit on the couch
for hours, just watching her.


I hate snow.

Don’t try to tell me I’m wrong, or all about the childlike wonder, or the beauty of it.

Alligators are pretty too, but I don’t like walking on them.  Tigers are gorgeous creatures, but I don’t want to have to move them away from my car every time I want to go somewhere.


By The Numbers

An ancient poem, and one we’re recording for the new CD.  I mentioned it a couple ofposts ago. 

I thought when I found it that it was written after Columbine, but it’s in files on the laptop that go back to 1999 or so.  So it’s an old piece; not super old for me, since I still routinely perform a couple of poems I wrote in the 1980s, but old enough.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

One aching
head, one steady eye;
one Glock, one sporting
rifle held in reserve, one combat stance —

two hands clenched, two
ears plugged to block the stun, two
hours before final dark, two faces
inside this boy facing off at last.

Three sirens, then more;
rising soundtrack for Three Fates dancing
around three bodies lying still
three stories below his stand.

Four times four makes sixteen
years that have passed
since his mother spent four times four hours in hard labor
bringing this young gunner out to see

this five fold world of land and sea and air
and daily rot and failing will.
He thinks: there are six sides to every story,
and six times six again if you add all of your own. He keeps calculating:

seven miles to the nearest hospital,
seven times seven rounds left;
eight doors from the lower floors out onto this roof;
eight bombs set to blow when the knobs are turned.

When the snipers finally find him
he lets the nine millimeter fall and
seizes hold of the long gun,
thrilled to be not yet dead, waiting for them to open the doors and die as they come for him,

twisting around
before the first door blows, casually aiming before smoke can obscure the target,
already knowing the end result: they will wait ten minutes
after their last shot is fired to be sure it’s safe to bring him down.

And then someone will tally the bodies and the reasons,
the number of hazardous songs that he knew,
all the things that someone should have noticed.
Someone will have the nerve to say it doesn’t add up.

He would say that it always adds up, but he would also remind us
that some learn to count by irrational numbers,
working their way through ragged sequences
until they’re sucked into a Fibonacci swirl that is already starting again somewhere,

the wheels turning click after click after click,
until it’s time to blow again,
until the sound of those counters
again finds its voice in another boy’s head: one, two, three …


John Updike

John Updike, dead at 76.

I don’t read very much fiction.  I made an exception for Updike.  Time to go back into the archives and read him again.


Notes for today

First off, there’s GotPoetry Live tonight in Providence with Sam Grabelle making a return visit to her old stomping grounds, along with Gary Mercure on guitar.  8-10 at Blue State Coffee in Providence.  Be there.

On an extended note…I’ve been spending more time at the Gotpoetry.com website recently, reading and thinking about poetry in the Workshop Forums. 

While the site continues to have a high percentage of newbies, and while critique is still a difficult thing there (we’ve still got way too many people on the site who are at that "how can you say this is a bad poem, it REALLY HAPPENED TO ME AND I FEEL IT DEEPLY" level of reaction, and too many people who say "this is a great poem because I can see it was hard for you and how much you FELT IT"), it’s slowly beginning to develop back toward a more serious place for critique in some random corners, and there are some poets beginning to work toward higher levels of craft.

I wish I could get more people who understood how to give good critique to newbies on the site.  I know we’re all busy, but it’s such a humongous resource with such possibilities and tools available, I hate seeing it go to waste.  I’d like to think it’s got room for everyone from the hobbyist writiing poems about his kitty to more serious poets engaging in dialogue on issues of craft. 

If you haven’t been by in a while, or if you feel the slightest inclination to check it out and offer even the occasional hand in making that happen, I’d appreciate it.  I no longer have any staff status on the site, so this is an unofficial request by any definition.  Still, I’d love to see you there and would love to try and bump up the level.  There are some new folks who would love it. 

Gotpoetry.com


GotPoetry Live 1/27

GotPoetry Live presents the return of Spoken Word Founder Sam Grabelle and Gary Mercure for a feature at Blue State Coffee, 300 Thayer Street, Providence, RI.

Sign up 7:30
Reading 8-10

$2.00 suggested donation/1 food or drink item minimum

We really need to start seeing folks there…it’s been a little up and down lately in terms of attendance, and your presence makes it all worthwhile. So come out for what promises to be a special night of nostalgia and new
work…

Thanks,
Tony and Ryk


Recording session notes…

Good stuff.  Four tracks down:

Celia (finally; we’ve been performing this long enough without having a version of it recorded anywhere)

The Last Word / Revelation (the poem colloquially known as "Let’s Fuck," now wedded to an old love poem as its second part; heavy, complex slap funk from Faro and a sick bridge to the more melodic second section, modulated up from D to G and simplified.)

By The Numbers (the surprise of the day — a really old piece about a school shooting, something I stopped performing probably six years ago.  I pulled it out on a whim and Faro laid down a gorgeous chordal progression with harmonics on the bass that lent a strange air of meditation to a piece I’ve always thought of as fairly creepy. )

We listened to "Carve," the piece I’ve got posted on the Myspace right now and the first serious piece I’ve done with me on guitar. Decided that it’ll probably stand as is in terms of arrangement (solo guitar w/vocal, although we are semi-considering adding a bass line), though it will be re-recorded for production values, but it won’t be released until I figure out how to perform it live.  Reciting a poem while playing guitar is ten times harder for me than singing a song while playing; add my natural reluctance and insecurity about playing guitar live and this will be a daunting project.  Still, I need to do it.

We also worked on "Get Up," a piece from the bass suite that Faro wrote a while back, but got no satisfactory takes.  We’ll be rehearsing it more before trying it again — lines to tweak and timing to solidify.

A good session.  Feels like we’re back on track.  Nothing to post yet, as we’ve got mixing to do, but I like what we’ve got so far.  I suspect this CD will end up being far less political in content than the last one, if the stuff we’re working on is any indication. 

Later, gators…


Long day ahead

Editing work, then getting ready for an afternoon/evening Duende recording session.  Hope to have at least some rough tracks for posting later in the week. 

Gigs coming up:

FEB 3 — I’ll be reading at Teapot Gallery, Westfield MA, as part of the book release for the "Appleseeds" anthology from Sacred Fools Press.  7:30 PM, I think.

FEB 17 — Duende at GotPoetry Live, Blue State Coffee, Thayer St, Providence, RI.  8 PM.

MAR 2 — Duende at Stone Soup reading, Out Of The Blue Gallery, Cambridge, MA.  8 PM.

MAR 16 — Duende at the Dirty Gerund, Ralph’s Chadwick Square Diner, Worcester, MA.  8:30 PM.

APR 25 — Duende at SlamRichmond, Richmond, VA.  9 PM.  I’ll be running a writing workshop earlier in the day, too. 

I believe I’ll be adding one more in there somewhere shortly.  Stay tuned.

No release date yet on the book.  Again, watch this space. 


Unabomber Blues

I have this crazy dream
that haunts me from time to time
over a cup of tea in the late evening

when I’m watching the tube
or reading the news
I start to fear

that I’m gonna go
Unabomber
one of these days

Who needs the inconvenience
of a particular cause
when there’s so much to choose from

I’ll carve some intricate parts
Load up a box with tiny nails
Blow it up and laugh at the reporters

Maybe there will be deaths
Surely there will be maimings and investigations
and profiles that pin me down like a snake to water

I’ll only write my manifesto
after I’ve already begun
to make my mark

and when they finally take me down
I’ll go quietly with a leaden stare
into whatever hole they’ve got in store

for I’m committed to the plan
from conception through closure
doing my best to be an object lesson

on what happens when someone takes action
that doesn’t fit the mold of what’s expected
Everyone will stop

They’ll mostly deplore me
Some will adore me
And some will think me mad

But if it happens I should be forgiven
for my model behavior
These late nights have taught me

that someone will make themselves a scapegoat
at least once in any generation
that won’t acknowledge the extent of its sins

until the goat bearing them away explodes in the wilderness
It takes a pile of blood to make it happen
I’m afraid that one day if I offer my stinking back for the load

in my eyes you’ll see
just before you lock me away
the one truth that drove me to this

that a bad dream can happen to anyone
and in fact is happening to everyone
everywhere at once