[New-Poetry] Rock & Roll and Poetic Composition
David Graham
grahamd at ripon.edu
Fri Feb 22 08:59:25 EST 2008
An odd & interesting piece on poetry & music. An ABC essay (excerpts
from E & F below, followed by link to full essay).
Parallel Lines and Power Chords: A Meditative ABC on Rock & Roll and
Poetic Composition
by Michael Morse
E is for "ending." I'm always a sucker for the long, extended,
reflective, meditative jam at the end of a song that swells towards a
conclusion, simultaneously meditative and edgy. I think of Frank
Zappa's meditative solos in "Watermelon in Easter Hay" from his
crazily operatic Joe's Garage, or Talk Talk on their album Laughing
Stock, or any number of narratives ("Telegraph Road" comes to mind)
by Dire Straits. Perhaps my personal favorite: the Pixies' "No. 13
baby" on their Doolittle release. It fronts the edgy lyricism of
petulantly savvy Black Francis and ends in a satisfying feast of surf
guitar rhythms, Kim Deal's pulsing bass, and a sharp Joey Santiago
solo that fades off into the songset—put on the 11th cut and take
note when the song hits the two-minute mark—the next minute and 50
seconds are exponential bliss. Download Tom Petty's song "It's Good
to be King" and wait out its simple lyrics until the melancholy pop
slides into something ethereal. The tension between beauty and power
and the more tentative or reflective creeping out into new territory
inspire a kind of reverie, a poetic dreaming.
F is for fragment, our cultural bellwether. Find it in the sound
bite, the jump cut, the sample, the appropriated image or text: "A
glimpse suffices to trigger an entirety," says Cole Swenson.
I've taught with Ann Carson's collection of Sappho's fragments (If
Not, Winter), asking students to generate their own language within
the bracketed spaces, indications where missing papyrus once housed
language—letting them use the Sapphic fragments as springboards to
work of their own. The work of discernible fragments and gaps rife
with potential for play reminds me of listening to Rock as a child.
In singing along or deciphering, fragments and snatches were the
order of the day, with mistakes and missteps de rigueur. Echoing the
compilation of misheard song lyrics, 'Scuse Me While I Kiss This Guy,
I remember how a friend once thought that the refrain in the Beatles'
"Paperback Writer" was "Take the back right turn." I've always loved
the space to play off of a text, and Sappho's fragments remind me how
Rock lyrics, in drips and drabs, clear or garbled, can also generate
a play space for language. Speaking of play space and the letter F,
let us praise funk—as in Parliament, as in George Clinton. Funk with
bagpipes and strings? Oh, yes.
http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/20010?
utm_source=poetsupdate_022108&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_campaign=content
&utm_content=morse_abc
========================================
David Graham
grahamd at ripon.edu
Home Page:
http://web.mac.com/drjazz/iWeb/Site/About%20Me.html
Poetry Library:
http://web.mac.com/drjazz/iWeb/Site/DGPoLibrary.html
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