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The Geez

Page 5

by Nii Ayikwei Parkes


  onto sheet extracts

  its solid claims

  like fish from a hyperbolic sea.

  These men’s catch is passed on

  to their wives for sale

  and most are happy with this

  arrangement.

  So the wives dot the shoreline

  with grin-like glints angling off

  their hand-beaten aluminium pans

  as their voices soar

  over the collusion of waves

  to sing out the price of fish.

  the women wrap patterned cloth around

  their breasts; the knots of which serve

  as carriers for their earnings.

  At night these women slide

  money like dreams

  into the men’s hands

  to buy comfort

  in alcoholic volumes.

  and volumes of these sea blue

  blooded men have passed unseen

  to the other side.

  it is said

  that water maidens

  in glowing raiment listen in

  on their drunken speech

  and cast blue spells

  upon the disgruntled.

  with woven diamond fingers

  and meshes of cotton onyx hair

  they hypnotise, their cowrie

  beaded hips sinuous as waves

  Their complexion is whatever the water gives

  their touch is the toe caress of dying waves

  their smile is sunset on an overturned horizon

  and their kiss is a blend of amnesia and ambrosia.

  These are the world’s greatest

  beauties!

  they leave men dumb-founded

  floundering in invisible waves.

  The disgruntled never re-emerge

  they vanish after consecutive evenings seen

  staring out over the sea – copper blue

  like sub marine greek

  statues.

  Zest

  Our Love is Here to Stay

  Clouds gather under a blue moon,

  like trouble brewing as strange fruit

  continues to swing – keeping time –

  while Columbia turntables refuse to spin

  the song; is vinyl too black, too flash to be

  sleeved in white prisons? The answer lies

  like white gardenia petals on a bruise

  too subtle to separate from wind; like

  a trumpet caught in the ill wind of a jet’s

  prejudice in the company of clouds – a

  rumble in a jungle of noise, the forgotten b-

  side that holds its breath. Trouble brewing.

  There’s nothing random about rain;

  It clears the sky’s throat for the sun’s shrill

  voice; the white hanky is for black sweat.

  They’ll all laugh when I say it, whisper

  as though I’m making whoopee with Communist

  ideals. They’ll laugh like they laughed

  when Louis appeared coal-sketched on screen,

  years before he lifted the smoke and called

  Eisenhower a spade, said let’s call the whole

  Soviet thing off, as sweetly as he sang that song

  with Ella ___ and there’s silence where the applause

  should be; because it’s OK when the needle hits

  the dark flesh of wax and causes blue screams,

  but when the tip hits the dark flesh of a woman

  and she wails for justice; shooting off ideas

  as she reloads stimulants, suddenly music is

  treble trouble. And everybody knows

  that the calm comes before the clouds…

  There’s nothing random about rain; so blow

  Louis, blow from cheek to cheek, blow

  under a blanket of blue until you get a kick

  from a laughing Ella and switch the tone

  so swift // so hot // so dark

  that the only bright thing will be the spotlight

  of struggle illuminating a girl in Baltimore,

  learning as time goes by that life isn’t a fine

  romance, love, but your soul won’t desert you;

  like the note can’t leave the music, like

  the shadows can’t leave the darkness.

  The secret is to listen; to the slow creeping

  embrace of the trumpet’s protest, the percussive

  defiance of the piano’s syncopation, the indrawn

  breaths when the song learns the body that sings it.

  Crossroad vs Blues

  (or You Wouldn’t Talk About Crossroads If You Knew My Life)

  “I went to the crossroad, fell down on my knees

  ...standin’ at the crossroad, tried to flag a ride...

  didn’t nobody seem to know me, babe, everybody pass me by” – Robert Johnson

  Belly

  I see a road growing branches, but these hands sure can swing an axe

  I see a jungle of confusion, but these hands still can swing an axe

  Come hell or highest water, I’ll still be on the road making tracks

  I came up on Fannin’ Street, with just a guitar and walking shoes

  All the halls and saloons in Bottom, with a guitar and walking shoes

  (I) met ’leggers, girls and hustlers, came away singing Shreveport blues

  Got mighty fine stories stranger; I don’t need to make no deals

  Got a chain of chanting work songs; I don’t need to make no deals

  Hand me my 12-string over yonder; I’ll show how the blues are meant to feel

  It’s Huddie, Sal’s little boy, but e’erybody calls me Lead Belly

  I’m promised to sweet Martha, but on the road I’m Lead Belly

  Even jailers couldn’t hold me, once I made them hear me clearly.

  Buddy

  I picked balls before strings, so my tunes all carry weight

  I started with diddly, arms strong from lifting cotton bales

  Two-fifty to the two-string, all my stories carry weight

  I crossed roads with my tow truck, but I never hung around

  Baton Rouge to Chicago, Friendly Chap never hung around

  If you needed to find me, I was where the folks was brown

  I cook a mean rack of ribs; I learned that from my mama

  (I) play a polka dot Strat; I do that for my mama

  and I don’t need to do no deals, don’t need that type of drama

  I learned the licks by listening, then plucking by ear

  I’ve been playing these blues ten dozen nights a year

  When streets are bare and night has fallen, I’ll still be playing right here.

  Rosetta

  I was told I’d see some creature; all I see is a raft

  I was warned to take a preacher; all I see’s a bobbing raft

  I don’t need no floating lyrics cos I was born with the craft

  Had my own words since I was four; in church I made my voice strong

  Had an axe since I was four; it’s how this girl got her freedom

  I don’t need no outside hand, cos I build my own kingdom

  Who needs a night devil when a girl’s got black magic?

  Who needs a night devil when a girl’s got black magic?

  Don’t it take you close to heaven when you hear my guitar lick?

  I take light into the dark, I see strange things everyday

  (I) take my Gibson into basements, I see strange things everyday

  I rock harder than high rollers, but the blues showed me the way

  Stevie

  Had a mean old daddy, his hands rained pretty heavy

  Had a sour-faced old man, whose palms were rough and heavy

  I learned real, real quick, Stevie gotta take care of Stevie

  As a boy I turned to Mama, but she was weak for his kisses

  See, Mama had a strong arm, but she was weak for his kisses

  A sharecropper’s g
irl, she sure knew what the blues is

  Cos Mama wouldn’t leave him, we were caught at his crossroad

  (Me) and my brother Jimmy, used guitars to find our slip road

  Till spinning crossroads come for me, I’ll be on the road

  When it comes down to choosing, I’m my mama’s boy

  Don’t waste my time with the devil, I am my mama’s boy

  She couldn’t leave Daddy’s slow hand; I use my hands for joy.

  Howling Wolf

  Howling, howling, but I never saw no wolf

  Red Rooster rustler, I’ve been howling since my youth

  But when I found the blues in Patton, I knew I’d found the truth

  What’s all this racket? All this talk of Devil deals?

  I stand six-foot-three, look like the Devil’s nemesis

  My mama’s rejection showed me what my path was

  I played Lemon, I played Rainey, played every hour I could

  Sonny Boy taught me harp, Charley’s licks made my guitar smooth

  (I) got dragged into the army, but still made my way to school

  Drove up to Chicago, with pockets full of dough

  Paid everyone I played with, never cheated a soul

  If I’m not in the spotlight, ask Lillie if I made it home.

  Robert Johnson

  Know that song of 27? First riff on that comes from me

  and I’m an endless rambler, jump on every train I see

  but I ain’t never met no devil, unless they came to see me

  (I) played in many hellholes, still couldn’t pay my bills

  Till 100 past my birthday, gals were my only other thrill

  If you take away my music, there’s nothing more to reveal

  In my head I hear boogie and turn it blue on my strings

  Just like Zimmerman taught me, I pluck these blues from my strings

  Watch me sing my heart out on corners, like an angel floats on wings

  Call me invisible, call me ghost – you won’t forget my name

  Number 11 of my mama’s children, you won’t forget my name

  Hear blues, rock and roll playing and know I changed the game.

  Ma Rainey

  Can’t nobody hold me back, baby, Ma Rainey is my name

  I always made my own damn way, Ma Rainey is my name

  I wear a collar, tie and gold teeth when I come out to play

  First hit me in Missouri, been singing the blues ever since

  Gripped me like a lover’s thighs, I’ve been hooked ever since

  Went on the road like See See Rider, my smile gleaming like flint

  Did I come in April or September, Georgia or Alabama?

  See I’m hard to pin down, I’m slippery as a spinning spectre

  Why go to the crossroads when the world spins around my centre?

  I’m the first, I’m the mama, I’m nobody’s coon shouter

  Call me names, I’ll knock you down, you can’t prove it on me after

  I worked hard, paid my dues, my songs will ring in the hereafter.

  Slim Gaillard

  Slim slam flim flam vouto is my McVouty voodoo

  If you know the blues, ain’t no need to translate for you

  You can jive and have a ball, it still reaches into you

  Every pack has a wildcard and I ran wild all my life

  If you ask me what the blues is, I’ll open the book of my life

  Stranded in Greece as a boy, but, man, I turned out fine

  My guitar weeps blues, my voice scats in jazz

  If music were a crossroad, I’d be the question to ask

  There’s no deal to hold down a language that moves so fast

  The twelve-bar is everybody’s bar; we all drink out there

  Jelly Roll, Louis and Duke, they all hang out there

  I scat around the crossroad, cos there’s no devil to fear.

  Muddy Waters

  My grandmama called me Muddy, the Waters came with the harp

  You might think you know my blues, but you don’t know the half

  (A) sharecropper’s measly wages is how I bought my first guitar

  Had my own joint by eighteen, listened to the blues all day through

  Like the waters of the Mississippi, the flow of it stays inside you

  Anyone from the hell of plantations, loves water and feels the blues

  A boy raised in hell don’t make deals with the devil on the side

  (I) heard my own voice played on the juke and knew I had heaven inside

  Stayed with my grandmama a little longer, but I knew I had heaven inside

  Only deals I ever make are with good ole Willie Dixon

  He gives me all the right words when my blues need fixing

  My archive runs deep as water, all rolling stones need my benediction.

  Big Mama Thornton

  A church singer’s daughter from Alabama, I’m the original Big Mama

  Bessie Smith and Memphis Minnie, their voices were my teachers

  I can sing high, I can sing low, cos my daddy was a preacher

  I was on stage before Elvis, he ain’t nothing but my hind dog, I say

  And when Janis Joplin copied Ball & Chain, Bay-Tree took all the money

  When you’ve met real-life devils, who needs to go to the crossroads to play?

  I can beat my own drum and I play the harp pretty good

  I made music with all the good guys, with Muddy and BB too

  And everybody knows I don’t need no microphone to sing my blues

  You’ll find me where there’s good singing and the liquor supply’s ample

  I may not be wearing no dress, but you’ll know me by my dimple

  Feet on the ground, singing from my heart; I’m one of the blues’s finest examples.

  Blind Lemon Jefferson

  East Texas streets is where I fine-tuned my blues

  In bootleg corners with bad men and fine women, a blind man singing blues

  Couldn’t work with the sharecroppers so this is how I put my hands to use

  Been at a hundred crossroads, but I ain’t heard nothing but revelling

  Stories about devils is how they pretend we didn’t rise by struggling

  I’ll record 100 songs in thirty-six months and every one will be sterling

  See I’m so damn original, even the devil couldn’t copy me

  With my quick-fingered magic, there ain’t many that can play like me

  When B.B. King holds Lucille sometimes he tries to sound like me

  They call me Blind Lemon Jefferson, sweet and high is how I sing

  When T-Bone was starting out, he walked with me and I guided him

  My sound is so indescribable, I leave black snakes moaning.

  Big Bill Broonzy

  Odd jobs by day, guitar by night; that’s how I made it

  One of seventeen kids, I know how to work till I make it

  From the fiddle to the guitar, I pulled strings till I nailed it

  Played the two-stages but went to war for everyone as one

  Now I write my own tunes; don’t need no crossroads plan

  Got rights to more than 300 songs and the devil ain’t got none

  (I) got the keys to the highway so I ain’t afraid of the road

  Opening for folks who don’t know struggle, but I ain’t afraid of the road

  I’ve got a boy out down under; I made him on the road

  Got the blues from childhood and I’ve played it near thirty years

  I cooked, swept and carried loads. but the blues still rang in my ears

  So I picked up this guitar and you’ll be hearing me for years.

  Interpretation

  You must not have heard

  the one about the butcher who became

  a classical conductor: it is

  said he coaxed blood from warm flesh

  the same way he makes strings whine

  and horns mimic a bull’s lament in allegro.

  His
feeling for time signatures as true

  and unshifting as an Accra sunset,

  you can set a seed’s germination into pale

  clef-shaped shoot by his baton,

  his restless foot, the shapes his body forms

  as he conjures sound and silence.

  Audiences flock to see him lead

  virtuosos from the highest high to the deep;

  he gives new life to the Mendelssohn woman –

  Fanny – buries old notions of Beethoven and Rachmaninov,

  but, as with all music, interpretation varies

  and the historic question hovers always in the air

  like a trenchant treble in an echo chamber

  of wonder. Was he a butcher of livestock

  or of men? Was his past work in an abattoir

  or a boardroom? Did any of his victims

  lean their heads into the curve of a melody,

  sun striking one ear, tuned for the song’s end?

  #Labour

  Two girls are tending a sick calf, kneeling

  in the direction of Mecca. I would call it

  worship, except religions have spoiled the heart

  of these simple acts; of a body moving and finding

  orientation; of hands placed on flesh to help

  with healing. A haze of dust hangs in the air,

  the criss-cross sticks of a Moringa fence makes a grid

  that frames their labour. The calf is twisting, but still

  – although there is no sign of its mother. One girl

  strokes its back. Her scarf is made from a piece

  of Presbyterian Church anniversary cloth. The other

  girl wears knock off Off-White trainers; conceived

  by a designer favoured by Rihanna and Louis Vuitton,

  an Ablorh with family roots enshrined less than 400km

  away from the earth she crouches on. With coaxing, the calf

  finds its feet. Unsteady at first, it regains balance and turns

  to lick the hand of the Presbyterian girl. Both girls

  dust off their long, bright skirts, rising as the sun sets.

  Moonwalk

  Once you nail it, you’re hooked as a baby

  that’s discovered rhythm; round a bright corner

  and back; in the middle of a mate’s party

  the crowd parting as if you have dark wands

 

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