Wednesday, December 14, 2011

AMERICAN TRAIN LETTERS ~









A sign in Amtrak
city station —
REPORT ANY SUSPICIOUS
LOOKING PEOPLE
I look around
we look at ourselves



It is so, we all die. Each and every one of us; no matter the car of wild kids swerving us on a curve heading north from El Paso on Route 10, and by the looks of it they might be headed into something bad earlier than they should; or the old guy peddling fruit and vegetables from the rear of his pickup truck parked alongside the road. He'll die too and I wish he wouldn't. I hope that little boy who sat between me and the taxi driver — who at one point while driving put an arm around the boy and hugged him — I hope that little boy lives longer than me, just as I hope my own son thrives and his mother with him. I can see Susan and Carson living a very long time as mother and son. I'd like to be with them, and if it can be forever, I'll take that too.

This is how
you come to feel when you read these wonderful household poems by Bobby Byrd. It's the living and the dying and the inbetween. You read a poem, then look up and realize — my god, I want to read it again — or at least say it out loud to someone, tell others about it. Bobby's poems bring people together and everything looks easier than it is. How fortunate to be able to live a life like this, a life that is ready for any death and a life that would have friends say, "Yeah, Bobby, he lived a good one." Behind it all, the poet puts on an accomplished act of fakes and feints and laughing through the pain; one just doesn't gain the hospitality Bobby gathers in his poems without the struggle, and for that I consider him one of the best poets in El Paso, even though I know he would stand up at least a dozen other poets from the city and describe how he learned from them.

We're driving
out of the city in less than one hour after we arrive passing up the opportunity to visit Bobby and his wife Lee, and maybe it is because we don't want to ruin a good thing, but don't ask me what that means.

We go
on to pass Keith and Heloise Wilson just north of here in Las Cruces — close friends with Bobby and all of these good folks friends with some of our friends. Because Drummond Hadley was on the phone with a mutual friend who said we were about to leave on a train in the early morning, Drummond called our house from his ranch in one of the corner pockets of Arizona. He'd heard we were coming his way and he would be delighted to have us visit, he even knew the train passed as close as Lordsburg, New Mexico.

Hadley, Wilson and Byrd are three champs of South
west poetry (for lack of a better term) since the 1950s and not one of them was born there (except Keith) and I have a hunch that makes all the difference: for whatever reasons they arrived, fell in love with a place and stayed. In Hadley's case as a poet, he has almost disappeared there; it's just that serious.

It certainly
seems like we are the fools, preoccupied, selfish, that we leave behind Bobby in Texas and slip past Keith in Las Cruces which is so easy to locate on this highway, and never make it as far as Lordsburg with a junction route that allows you to drop gradually into Arizona. Even Ted Enslin, a friend to all three of these poets and not too concerned about these visits we miss — like me he knows it will happen — but by letter Ted wishes we had taken the little highway from El Paso that wanders to Las Cruces through old towns Berino, Vado, Mesquite — "And you would have been in the shadows of the Organ Mountains the whole way."

I
know, I know, we can't please everyone but we already have plans to return and find Ted's highway, and I hope we can do it by not being noticed as we did two days later on this trip to La Luz, New Mexico. A tip from a New York Times travel section noted this small town — close enough to the sensation of White Sands, as an authentic old-style New Mexican hideaway, and after driving in for a moment and leaving, I wish everyone would leave La Luz alone, just leave it be. The Times readers arrive with bed and breakfast trappings and the need for an immediate fix from an urban rapidity; in other words — they want everything. La Luz is so close to Alamagordo that it doesn't seem possible there could be a feeling of relief as you sink into the shade of cottonwoods floating over the town's narrow roads. We stayed one hour eating oranges and pretzels in the parking lot behind a church with a freshly painted, or refurbished, mural.

There were many such excursions and wrong-that-became-right turns and pleasant discoveries all through the New Mexico we visited. A little like Vermont, with the best swimming holes and trails and sloped pastures no one has written about, and we found a few. Or else we appeared at some places during a day that completely won us over and these places didn't even have a name.

Americans seem to
have an agenda where one visits a location that everyone else has been to so you have something to talk about to someone when you return. Yosemite experience to Yosemite experience, Grand Canyon to Grand Canyon, Big Sur drive to Big Sur drive just won't compete with watching falling leaves settle into a mountain stream in Arizona. I figured out after a few trips to the Southwest and a few more to go, the reason we haven't visited with any of these poets we do love and admire, is that we are coming to terms and introducing ourselves to the land, which is in the best way, getting to know the people, whom the best poets know.



~ Bob Arnold, from American Train Letters
(Coyote Books, 1995)




photo © bob arnold




Tuesday, December 13, 2011

EARTH ~







All wars, whether just or unjust, disastrous or victorious, are waged against the child.


~Eglantyne Jebb, founder of Save the Children, 1919






photo "tick~tock" © bob arnold





Monday, December 12, 2011

LOVELY ~





Bill Tapia



This obituary from the New York Times by Douglas Martin about Bill Tapia was just too irresistible not to share!



Bill Tapia, Virtuoso Ukulele Player, Dies at 103


In 2001 Bill Tapia took one of his guitars to a Southern California music shop to get it fixed. A woman was buying a ukulele, and Mr. Tapia asked to see it. He began playing it, masterfully, with a distinctive jazz inflection.

“Hey, who are you?” the store’s owner asked.

If Mr. Tapia could have seen the future, he might have answered, “Duke of Uke,” the title of an album he recorded in 2005 at the age of 97. But at the time, he knew only that he was sad that his daughter and wife had recently died in quick succession, and that playing the ukulele felt good.

Mr. Tapia, who died on Dec. 2 at the age of 103, first played the instrument as an 8-year-old street musician, then went on to become one of Hawaii’s premier young ukulele players in the 1920s and ’30s. But after World War II he switched to the guitar to get jobs playing jazz, his favorite kind of music, gave away his ukuleles and for a half-century had almost nothing to do with the instrument that had defined his youth and middle age.

Then something astonishing happened: Mr. Tapia was “discovered” as a ukulele virtuoso at a time when the instrument was having a resurgence of popularity. He became a ukulele star, twice making the Top 10 on the jazz charts, wowing concertgoers by playing the ukulele behind his head à la Jimi Hendrix, and making three albums — one of which honored his 100th birthday. He was elected to the Ukulele Hall of Fame.

“Bill Tapia has been involved with the ukulele, jazz and Hawaiian music perhaps longer than any other living person,” the Hall of Fame said when it inducted him.

His daughter, Cleo, and wife, Barbie, died in 2001. He is survived by grandchildren, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.

William Tapia was born in Honolulu on New Year’s Day 1908. He fell in love with Hawaiian music listening to sugarcane workers play. He bought his first ukulele at 7 for 75 cents from one of the first men to make them commercially. His father abandoned the family the next year, and young Bill dropped out of school to collect tips as a street musician.

At 10 he came up with his own version of “Stars and Stripes Forever,” which he played for troops headed for duty in the last months of World War I. At 12 he played vaudeville. At 16 he worked on luxury liners. At 19 he performed at nightclubs and speakeasies in Hollywood and at parties at the home of Charlie Chaplin. At 21 he sat in with Louis Armstrong’s band at a Los Angeles nightclub. By this time he was playing the banjo and guitar, in addition to the ukulele, and was moving between Hawaii and the mainland.

When the Royal Hawaiian Hotel staged its grand opening in 1927, Mr. Tapia played ukulele in the orchestra. He was the only one of the original musicians to return for the hotel’s 75th anniversary — and its 80th. The second two times were better, he said: he got fed.

In 1933, the Royal Hawaiian hired him to drive one of its touring cars — a yellow-and-blue seven-passenger Packard — to ferry the wealthy and famous to scenic spots. He played the ukulele for his passengers and threw in a lesson for anyone interested. His pupils included Jimmy Durante, Shirley Temple and the stars of the Our Gang comedies.

He even claimed to have taught a lick or two to Arthur Godfrey, whose ukulele playing on television sparked the instrument’s popularity in the 1950s.

During World War II, Mr. Tapia organized entertainment for serviceman in Honolulu. After the war, he moved to the San Francisco area and devoted himself to the guitar, and to jazz. The big bands and combos with which he played had no use for ukuleles.

More than 55 years later, Alyssa Archambault was researching the background of her great-great-grandfather, a steel guitar player in Hawaii, and approached Mr. Tapia. She had been a disc jockey and promoter, and was captivated by Mr. Tapia’s music and his story. She got him in touch with professional ukulele players. They thought he had died years ago, but were awed at what they heard.

He released his first album, “Tropical Swing,” in 2004, when he was 96, and “Duke of Uke” the next year, both on the small Moon Room label. A live recording of his 100th-birthday concert at the historic Warner Grand Theater in San Pedro, Calif., was released this June.

He played concerts regularly, delighting audiences with songs like “Little Grass Shack.” The most recent was on Feb. 11 — not counting his regular gig at a local senior center, the last of which was only several weeks ago.

Mr. Tapia had a line that never failed to impress audiences: “Here’s a song I performed during World War I.”

~ Douglas Martin (The New York Times)

(Published December 11, 2011)







Sunday, December 11, 2011

LOVE ~







Friends ~ and you know who you are ~
we lost Shizumi Corman
on November 30, 2011.


Shizumi is now where she always said she always wanted to be,
with her husband Cid Corman (1924-2004 ).


Kyoto has a dove flying overhead.


I had a thirty year strong relationship and correspondence with Cid, often four letters a week, in the good old days of blue aerogrammes. Who, possibly, has that much to say? But we did. And when Cid was gone, for those few years more, when I wrote to Shizumi, she asked that I continue addressing the letters as I always had "dear Cid & Shizumi". Including having Cid's name on the mailing envelope.


The muse behind 1000 poems.




I leave my

life with you



Make of it

what you can.




~ CC





Shizumi Corman
(Konishi Shizumi)





Baby—we've all jumped

from the pot into the fire.

Ain't we something else?


~ CC





calligraphy © shizumi corman
longhouse publishers & booksellers
photo © susan arnold



Saturday, December 10, 2011

EARTH ~





Leonard Cohen



01_Avalanche by Leonard Cohen on Grooveshark







Friday, December 9, 2011

EARTH ~





Hubert Sumlin (1931-2011)
was often heard on his 1955 Gibson Les Paul Goldtop guitar



How Can You Leave Me, Little G by Hubert Sumlin on Grooveshark





Thursday, December 8, 2011

LONG AGO, NOW ~





Alice Neel's portrait of Kenneth Fearing (1935)




The great American Depression poet Kenneth Fearing was in his roaring early thirties when Alice Neel sat him down for his portrait. Amazingly, the elder painter, long after Fearing was gone, would appear on talk shows like Johnny Carson's forty years later and speak about her portraits and hardy survival. Fearing was one more of the Oak Park~Illinois wonders, born in the summer of 1902 and gone in the summer 1961. Melanoma. He battled years of alcoholism. His poems are terrific, pulp novels gripping (often penned under the name Kirk Wolff), and one or two down to earth classic thrillers like The Big Clock (1946) have been left with us. As fine a film as it is a book. Ray Milland. Charles Laughton. Directed by John Farrow. Top drawer. For the usual literary legacy note, Fearing was the founding editor of The Partisan Review.




WHAT IF MR. JESSE JAMES SHOULD SOME DAY DIE?


Where will we ever again find food to eat, clothes to
-----------wear, a roof and a bed, now that the Wall
-----------street plunger has gone to his hushed,
-----------exclusive, paid-up tomb?
--How can we get downtown today, with the traction
-----------king stretched flat on his back in the sand at
-----------Miami Beach?
--And now that the mayor has denounced the bankers,
-----------now that the D.A. denies all charges of graft,
-----------now that the clergy have spoken in defense of
-----------the home,

O, dauntless khaki soldier, O, steadfast pauper,
-----------O, experienced vagrant, O, picturesque
-----------mechanic, O, happy hired man,
--O, still unopened skeleton, O, tall and handsome
-----------target, O, neat, thrifty, strong. ambitious,
-----------brave prospective ghost,

Is there anything left for the people to do, is there
-----------anything at all that remains unsaid?

But who shot the man in the blue overalls? Who
-----------stopped the milk? Who took the mattress, the
-----------table, the birdcage, and piled them in the
-----------street? Who drove teargas in the picket's face?
-----------Who burned the crops? Who killed the herd?
-----------Who leveled the walls of the packingbox city?
-----------Who held the torch to the Negro pyre? Who
-----------stuffed the windows and turned on the gas for
-----------the family of three?

No more breadlines. No more blackjacks. No more
-----------Roosevelts. No more Hearsts.

No more vag tanks, Winchells, True Stories, deputy
-----------sheriffs, no more scabs.

No more trueblue, patriotic, doublecross leagues. No
-----------more Ku Klux Klan. No more heart-to-heart
-----------shakedowns. No more D.A.R.

No more gentlemen of the old guard commissioned to
-----------safeguard, as chief commanding blackguard in
-----------the rearguard of the home guard, the 1 inch,
-----------3 inch, 6 inch, 10 inch, 12 inch.
no more 14, 16, 18 inch shells.


KENNETH FEARING
from POEMS (1935)








Alice Neel:











Wednesday, December 7, 2011

EARTH ~




You Ain't Going Nowhere





photo © bob arnold



Tuesday, December 6, 2011

READER REDUX ~












More books! being read all the time and shared. This is a companion piece with the Nov. 2011 "Reader" short film. Since then the small studio room has changed. I just finished building a double face floor to ceiling book cabinet ready to engulf more books, 100 square feet to be precise. It was halfway finished when I made this new film. I remember once reading Jan Myrdal's autobiography where he measured his library in feet. I was a hungry young lad then reading a book-a-day and making a floral personal library. Books by-the-foot to a builder and a reader is music to the ears.

The authors: Kent Johnson, Gabriela Mistral, Ursula K. Le Guin, Gerard Malanga, Eudora Welty, William Maxwell, Alfred Jarry, Bill Deemer, Peter Berg, Benjamin Cawthra, Johnny Cash, Kitchen Cat, Clarice Lispector

film © bob arnold




Monday, December 5, 2011

BACK ROAD CHALKIES ~





Clarice Lispector







photo © bob arnold

Sunday, December 4, 2011

EARTH ~
(The Oak)




the mighty acorn



EARTH ~





Oak Around






sculpture & photo © bob arnold

this is an oak firewood cairn (a cord) I built on Thanksgiving Day and will burn in two years (allowing oak to season). As I hauled the firewood out of the woods and built the sculpture, from afar I saw two passersby over three hours hiking the muddy road, and we waved.






Saturday, December 3, 2011

EARTH ~







Lenny Bruce being hauled off the stage like a criminal he refused to be




The Steve Allen Show by Lenny Bruce on Grooveshark




MY SWEETIE SAYS . . .


whenever
I play


Lenny Bruce


she
hears


Judy Garland








some great moments in television:

Rin Tin Tin
Lenny Bruce
Steve Allen Show
Jack Kerouac on Steve Allen
Paladin
Dylan on Johnny Cash
Ed Sullivan with The Beatles and The Stones
Hendrix on Dick Cavett
Zappa on Joey Bishop
(going by memory, it'd cheating otherwise)
(more to come)








EYES WIDE OPEN ~

















Friday, December 2, 2011

TED ~








And if he sings

-------------------with care,

he sings

------------------a new song

made of old

---------------flints struck.

New fires/

--------------------/flames.

O.K. He sings his source.









The photograph above is Ted Enslin a year ago right in his natural habitat: the Maine seacoast.

I'll miss Ted for sure. Next to no one like him the last 50 years in US poetry, maybe the last 100 years. He stayed independent to the shivering end.

Thanks again to Whit Griffin who took some of the finest photographs of Ted in his last decade.

The poem of Ted's is from an appreciation piece I wrote about him tucked inside his Little Wandering Flake of Snow, published by Alec Finlay as a Morning Star Folio 1/4, Edinburgh ~ Scotland.

photo © whit griffin








Thursday, December 1, 2011

DECEMBER 1st ~






Kokomo the Cutie Pie checks out a December 1st







photo © bob arnold


Wednesday, November 30, 2011

READER ~









a little blurry of the images but hopefully you get the gist of beautiful books!

film © bob arnold






Tuesday, November 29, 2011

BACK ROAD CHALKIES ~










ARAM SAROYAN
COMPLETE MINIMAL POEMS
Ugly Duckling Presse
www.uglyducklingpresse.org

photo © bob arnold



EARTH ~








BIRDHILL



a bird

a hill

it's fair



road

curves

under



a wood

slow

through







~





make

matter

wave






~







here

where



all

is



tiny

pieces






~






corn

no not corn

run on ahead



& wonder

could it be

barley






~






on the bypass



kestrel hovers

over grass



& drops

as I drive past






~






SHANAGOLDEN



it's a real place

it is

we went there






~






sweet

this song

is not



meaning

my sons

asleep



listen

to catch

a breath






~






or other

words

are lost






~BILLY MILLS
from Lares / Manes
(collected poems)
Shearsman Books
www.shearsman.com






fixing books this morning in the bedroom I found Billy's lovely book of poems, thinking I had misplaced and all the while it'd been right near my head! selected a few as I read / typed with one finger, other hand holding the book open. went out and took a photograph before breakfast, about to rain. well recall the many letters and poems from Billy (and Catherine) once upon a time from Barcelona and Ireland.



KEEP COUNTING ~