Friday, April 16, 2010




STEVEN FAMA



Here's a link to his fine blog

And below is Steven's review of Longhouse publication Mock Orange by Joseph Massey

the glade of theoric ornithic hermetica


Quick (really!) and really (really!) good


Joseph Massey
Mock Orange

(Longhouse Publishing, 2010)


Late last month as spring began Joseph Massey sat down in Humboldt County, California, where he lives and works, and wrote a sequence of nine poems.

Around March 27th, Massey e-mailed his poems to Bob and Susan Arnold in Green River, Vermont, asking if they’d be interested in publishing them. As you probably know, the Arnolds are the long-time proprietors of Longhouse, a small scale / big vision publishing and bookshop operation.

The Arnolds said, “Let’s do it” and then did, justlikethat. Over the next few days, they designed, printed, neatly glued, and otherwise did what was needed to get Massey’s poems out to the world. On April 7th, the resulting three color fold-out booklet (4.5" x 3") with wrap-around band was listed for sale on the Longhouse web-site. That same day, I ordered up two copies, using Paypal to transfer the cash.

Longhouse must have filled and sent my order quickly (no surprise there!) because yesterday (Monday, April 12th) the mail carrier delivered their business-sized envelope to me at work in Berkeley. Massey’s Mock Orange – that’s the title of the work – was in hand.

How’s that for blending a bit of the timeless (the diligence of poet and publisher), the new (the internet), and the old (snail mail) to bring about something quick (really!) and really (really!) good? I mean, it’s less than three weeks since Massey sat down and wrote Mock Orange. And yet here are his poems, in a beautiful little booklet, having traveled from California’s North Coast to Southeastern Vermont then back across the country to the Bay Area. Wow! Belatedness be damned!

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I’m nuts for Massey’s writing. Last April I wrote about his Areas of Fog (click here, if you please), and later included it on my list of the year’s top five poetry books (click here). I also called his The Lack Of, published in December, the chapbook of the year (click here and scroll down a touch).

So when Mock Orange arrived, I read it right away. It didn’t take long: its nine untitled poems range from four to ten lines. I read it again on the train coming home, and a few times more last night. Getting up this morning, I decided to do this post tonight, fast as I could, to honor the spirit of this (really!) quick and really (really!) good book (well, at least I’m quick).

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satellite view -- Arcata (in fog), the bay, the ocean

Massey’s poems, and those in Mock Orange are no exception, mostly come from the particular place he’s at, the actual geographic/physical location. He lives in what might rightly be called an adequate enough shack (I visited Massey there last fall, for a couple hours), situated on a rise or hillock just a mile or two from Humboldt/Arcata Bay, and a bit further from the Pacific. He can walk to the center of Arcata, and via bus or other ride get to Eureka, the county seat a few miles south. Many perceived particulars, from right at or near home or the more general area, get into and maybe sometimes give rise to his poems.

But Massey’s poems also come from the particular place he’s at with regard to – among other things – modes of perception, ways of thinking, maybe how he feels, and approaches to making poems. This mix of what’s within (the head, the emotions, the words) and without (things perceived) is of course what it’s all about. As Rae Armantrout has said, “The best poetry is looking outward and inward at the same time. A poet, like any artist, just doesn’t feel satisfied with the world; a poet has to answer the world, not just be a passive receiver.”

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The results of this outward/inward mix, in Massey’s work, are usually intense. Because the poems are short, there’s no wandering or fluff. They are hot. The poems are also intense because – follow me here – Massey has a particular attraction for particulars that convey some particular moment. His poems, including those here in Mock Orange, seem mostly to convey a moment, one of (to list some that I sense in these poems) definition, recognition, loss, doubt, and wonder.

Ultimately, all the possibilities of the mind and the world might make a poem for Massey, if there’s something that gives rise to it. He gives special attention, I think it fair to say, to moments of thought, of perception. It’s like each poem, no matter how small, is a double-shot of some intense instant, realized in words. It’s very invigorating, a rush of specificity and alertness. This is all the more special here because it all comes from just about right now -- this spring -- just a few weeks ago.

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I’m going to share and discuss a bit just one poem from Mock Orange. I don’t want to give away Massey’s (or his publisher’s) goods, and I want to keep this post quick, in the spirit of the poem-writing and booklet-making. Here’s the fifth poem in the sequence, one of the shortest of the nine. The poem has two primary images, with a kind of pause in between, and so it works in a way that is similar to haiku:

docks swallowed
--------------------in fog—

a transient talks
--------------------into a pine cone—

Now that has one heck of a (call it killer) final image: who can’t picture the street person there? This poem works mostly in the frisson and maybe friction between that image and the one that precedes it. I’m not going to parse it out fully (and probably couldn’t even I wanted to) but somehow the two images seem to go together. Part of it is Massey doing a bit of sleight of hand (and eye), putting the same extended hyphen at the end of each line, resulting in an unusual visual rhyme -- the punctuation -- that links the two couplets (those hyphens also permit the respective images to remain open, forever). There’s also a connection given the rhyme of “docks” and “talks,” and perhaps also in the anatomically close pharyngeal / laryngeal locus of “swallowed” and “talks.” There’s also in both images, and maybe this is the most significant link, disappearance: the docks into a mist, the words into the cone. What sub-surface elegance there, in that uncommon juxtaposition!

And maybe that’s what this poem is about, a moment of connection between the two seemingly disparate observations. But there also seems to be a tension between the two images. The second image is unexpected after the more traditional poetic image that comes first. The disjunction’s fairly severe, actually. Reading it several times the last two days, I sometimes laugh at the weirdness of it, of the idea of somebody talking to a pine cone popping into the poem there. Yet talking to a pine cone might not be so funny, in that it may be a snapshot of (let’s say) schizophrenia. As such, it disturbs too. Does Massey suggest, or at least ask us to consider the possibility, that “docks swallowed / in fog—” is as much a delusion as talking to a cone? Is this a poem about doubt, with the second image undercutting the poeticizing of landscape embodied in its first image? Hmm. So it goes in these poems, seemingly simple but with possibilities coming through once the reading gets close and the ideas start spinning.

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There are eight other poems in Mock Orange, and each is a – forgive me, I’ve used the following term before about Massey’s poems, but it works here too – a gem. There’s one – # viii – that can be read as one short (eight line) poem or almost as three separate smaller poems, given how it’s arranged and spaced; the shape neatly matches the perception presented. Another (# iv) convincingly turns the afternoon haze into a kind of ocean surf. Two others (# vi and the final poem, # ix) show how an observation, something seen, can animate the most unassuming of places, at least (especially) if the poet’s words can get it down right. And these are just a part of this really (really!) good and (really!) quick booklet.

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Endnotes


The description regarding the writing and publication of Mock Orange is based on information found in Joseph Massey’s April 7, 2010 blog post (click here and scroll down), and Bob Arnold’s April 11, 2010 blog post (click then scroll here, if you please).

Mock Orange is available at the Longhouse website (click here, it’s the sixth book down from the top). The price is $8.95 plus $2.00 for shipping/handling in the US. It’s also available via ABE (click here), although with a higher shipping charge.

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April 13, 2010


Thursday, April 15, 2010

Vassilis Zambaras



IN CREDIBLE EVIDENCE



If you would like to purchase the new booklet, please link here


For the complete Longhouse titles we offer, please link here





With a close friend, I sort of worked behind Vassilis's back — which isn't hard, since he is tucked away in Greece — and chose some favorite poems we liked by this fine poet. We wheeled through his blog Vazambam, a daily bread of poetry and goodness and found plenty. . .then I asked Vassilis to just empty out the cupboards and send what other poems he had. Nothing like a poet who jumps with the joy of making, so we made.






THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES


On top of poems are written

Other poems, thus



The destruction of the world's

Perfected.





Wednesday, April 14, 2010






THE SPRING WOOD IS GREENING




The spring wood is greening

the mud roads are gone

the river an emerald

bird calls pinpoint the yard's axis

leaves all raked and composted

lettuce and spinach coming up

you put on a royal blue baseball cap as a lark

I say keep it on

you look terrific









photo © susan arnold

Tuesday, April 13, 2010



SUSAN'S CABINET







photo © bob arnold

Monday, April 12, 2010

FEDERICO GARCIA LORCA





NIGHT


Candle, lamp,
lantern, and firefly.


The constellation
of the dart.


Little windows of gold
trembling,
and cross upon cross
rocking in the dawn.


Candle, lamp,
lantern, and firefly.

translated Jaime de Angulo




Every art and in fact every country is capable of duende, angel, and muse. And just as Germany has, with few exceptions, muse, and Italy shall always have angel, so in all ages Spain has moved by the duende, for it is a country of ancient music and dance where the duende squeezes the lemons of death — a country of death, open to death.

Everywhere else, death is an end. Death comes, and they draw the curtains. Not in Spain. In Spain they open them. Many Spaniards live indoors until the day they die and are taken out into the sunlight. A dead man in Spain is more alive as a dead man than any place else in the world. His profile wounds like a barber's razor. The joke about death and its silent contemplation are familiar to every Spaniard. From Quevedo's Dream of the Skulls to Valdes Leal's Putrescent Archbishop, from seventeenth-century Marbella who says, while dying of childhood in the middle of the road,


La sangre de mis entrans
cubriendo el caballo esta.
Las patas de tu caballo
echan fuego de aquiltran...


The blood of my womb
is covering the horse.
Your horse's hoofs
throw off black fire...

to the more recent youth of Salamanca who is killed by a bull and moans:

Amigos, que yo me muero.
Amigos, yo estoy muy malo.
Tres panuelos tengo dentro,
y este que meto son cuatro...


Friends, I'm dying.
Friends, it's pretty bad.
Three handkerchiefs in me,
and this one makes a fourth...









Federico Garcia Lorca (1898-1936)
In Search of Duende
(New Directions 2010)


photo: http://thestainofpoetry.wordpress.com/2008/03/24/absent-soul-alma-ausente/


Sunday, April 11, 2010

WALTER FRANCESCHI



A GOOD IDEA


~


A dozen more poems by this quietly alive Italian poet working to this day in the Florence region, where Dante showed us his soul. This is the second Longhouse booklet for Walter. Also see ~ Little Satori




If you would like to purchase the new booklet, please link here


For the complete Longhouse titles we offer, please link here











STAR


That little point

is bigger than me.




BECK



Often, but not always, grasping a 'vintage silvertone' guitar when on stage ~ Beck Hanson was born in 1970. His maternal grandfather was visual collage maestro Al Hansen. Already famous, what influences Beck ~which casts a wide net, from Hip-Hop to Latin music, to theater, puppets, jugband, full throttle rock 'n' roll and a family enriched Scientology ~ seems to influence those who listen. There's no stopping the guy.




Saturday, April 10, 2010

JOSEPH MASSEY

Mock Orange




If you would like to purchase the new booklet, please link here


For more Joseph Massey and the complete Longhouse titles we offer, please link here






Joe's out there on the edge of northern California. I came through the town where he is fifteen years ago after driving and hiking through redwoods the day before. With a little boy you drive a little, you hike a little. Two weeks ago Joe sent this sheaf of new poems by electric mail. I read and wrote back with a "Let's do it." We designed and printed and folded and wrapped all the next few days of rain. Good old rain.






docks swallowed
-------------------------------in fog —


a transient talks
-------------------------------------------into a pine cone —

Friday, April 9, 2010

AMIRI BARAKA







"Imperialist society removes every thing from humans except Appetites. It feeds those appetites' self-destructive confusion about the nature of the world, and if not stopped will eventually destroy, at least, human life on this planet. For instance, imperialism removes arts from humanity, making "art" a mysterious marketable commodity that must reflect the pathology and philosophy of imperialism to be valued. But art is the ideological reflection of life. Art is Creation. Art versus Aren't. Imperialism pushes Aren't. It wants to turn the world into Aren't. Make all us Wases."

from Digging, The Afr0-American soul of American Classical Music (U Cal.)




JIMMY SCOTT






"To listen to Jimmy Scott is to enter a ghostly corridor of unlikely romance" Amiri Baraka















Thursday, April 8, 2010




ROLF DIETER BRINKMANN



Under Glass

Translated by Mark Terrill




We are showing half the booklet for your reading enjoyment.


If you would like to purchase the booklet, please link here



(b. 1940 Vechta, Germany / d. 1975, London)


from Under Glass

please click onto poems to enlarge








Even though he has been gone for 25 years, we believe Rolf Dieter Brinkmann is one of the forefront poets in Europe. Someone or other likes to compound his influences from Gottfried Benn to Ted Berrigan — a saucy range — but he may be all by himself. No need for the comparisons. For years Mark Terrill has been working with dedication and care on his Brinkmann translations. We first published a handful when editing together the Origin sixth series, and Mark continues to turn up each year with another riotous bunch. Three-cheers to those who keep good things ongoing.





Mark Terrill






photo: loqasto.wordpress.com/.../rolf-dieter-brinkmann/

photo: poetrydispatch.wordpress.com/2009/05/


Wednesday, April 7, 2010






LESSON



You’ve lived

long enough

to see official

human beings

shoot civilians

on the nightly

news



this means it’s

permitted



this means

yr dead








vi april 10

Tuesday, April 6, 2010




BARBARA MORAFF


~


--------Vermont farm richly green


-----& rolls & spreads to every growing hand


trees there lift uplift embrace


----------as we do air in wind sun earth & water


-----the secret blazing within








Love Thy Poet card #58

first published by Longhouse 2007 available here, plus Barbara's foldout booklet of poems "Footprint",




Monday, April 5, 2010






PEGLEG



we saw the fox at a distance
hopping on three legs


we later went to find his snow
tracks crossing the pond


sure enough — three paws down
one paw up


this morning we found his
tracks closer, climbing


stairs to the porch and stopping
to look into our bedroom door








photo © bob arnold


THIS MAY BE THE LAST SNOW REPORT OF THE SEASON, BUT ONCE I STICK FIRM TO THIS, IT WILL SNOW. SURE ENOUGH. ALL THE SNOW IN THIS PHOTOGRAPH HAS VANISHED. TWENTY YARDS BEHIND THE SQUATTER'S HEAD, PEEPERS ARE DAILY SINGING.
MY BET IS THE FOX IS SNOOZING IN THE WARMING SUN.


~


Sunday, April 4, 2010



SAM COOKE



With vocals unlike any before or after, Sam Cooke was another of the divine born in Clarksdale, Mississippi.

A savvy composer and performer, he had twenty-nine Top-40 hits between 1957 and 1964. Almost all recognizable with anyone having the dexterity with a radio knob.

His time on earth would end at age 33 on December 11, 1964, in circumstances dubious to this day. Shot down in self-defense by Bertha Franklin, manager of the Hacienda Motel in downtown Los Angeles, Cooke was found in her office-apartment wearing a sports jacket and shoes, period. And maybe it was just one shoe. He was shot once in the torso, dying there with his last words, "Lady, you shot me."

There is a mystery woman, Elisa Boyer who had been with Cooke moments before in supposedly strange and violent circumstances. Others believe the great singer was murdered in a decade of great murders.

What is known is Cooke's funeral in Chicago had fans strung out for four city blocks, and his music has never stopped.








RISEN






SWAN SILVERTONES


The masters — who went through many transformations as a gospel group and by name. First formed by Charles Jeter, a coal miner from West Virginia, with a tenor voice that could lullaby a bear to sleep. The final name the group landed on, gorgeous, was a combination of their sponsor "Swan Bakeries" and Jeter's earlier group the "Silvertone Singers". The Swan Silvertones choired the radio airwaves and charts through the 40s, 50s and 60s with their tenor, crooner, field shouter, and other singing associates spelling magic. Jeter would leave the group for the ministry in 1965. Listening to this song, some would say, he was always there.









photo: http://www.obit-mag.com/media/image/swansilvertones.gif

Saturday, April 3, 2010


MARCIA ROBERTS
Collagraphs




We are showing half the booklet for your reading enjoyment.


If you would like to purchase the booklet, please link here.











from Collagraphs

please click onto poems to enlarge









Marcia Roberts has had three books of poems published by Skanky Possum or Effing Press, both out of hot-stuff Texas. Have a look at these fine presses.

We were able to further the Marcia run in Origin, 6th series, an on-line anthology of 1700 pages edited by Bob Arnold. The anthology is now available on CD.

Forthcoming will be a generous book of poems What She Knew from BlazeVox.

Marcia lives with her family in San Antonio.


photo courtesy: Marcia Roberts


CAT POWER





Cat Power is Chan Marshall (b. 1972) ~ releasing during the last 15 years a great bunch of records, showcasing a fine songwriter, unpredictable performer, and with a gift for covering other artists material. The song below is pulled out of the mouth of babes, Michael Hurley. A rocky childhood and some years of personal struggles floats around and above her breathy vocals.












Thursday, April 1, 2010





SOME DAYS YOU LOVE EVERYBODY



I know it's Spring ~ the glue on the sides of my rubber work boots finally looked up at me and said, "We've had enough, Bob." They split open just as the sun was coming out today.


No complaints, the boots lasted all winter. They were already old.


The sun we haven't seen for four days. The days and days of rain.


Which has made the river run thick as a rope.


We came out the back door this morning and could smell the sea.


Sweetheart said, "I smell the sea." She did so I did. The Atlantic is 200 miles east.


All the lighting has changed. Winter is gone, even if it snows again.


We drove out of the mud hole to town and half of the trip was along the river rope. Green and white small rapids and twisting. Made of snow and rain and woods shadows. Nowhere along the way to here does this river pass through any town. It comes from the backside of a pleasant village further up in the hills. In the shadows. Victor Hugo once said, "To meditate on shadows is a serious thing."


After we did the wash and sent out mail in town, we headed for groceries. Sunshine spread everywhere, no wars in sight.


We walked over to a small park bench to sit awhile and just be with the day. On the way to the bench I saw two young guys sitting together talking. They looked like rugby players for some reason, not football, rugby. Quick and compact. Both in t-shirts, short hair, and both with casts on their wrists. One had his on a right wrist, the other on a left wrist. They had colored their casts ~ or maybe they come that way now in the hospital? One orange, one green.


I had to stop a moment and talk. "So you both broke your wrists?" I smiled.


They looked up, squinting in the sun, smiled back. "Yeah, I broke mine and so he went and copied me." Smiles broaden.


"But you didn't break'em hitting one another, did'ya?"


Chuckles all around.


The sunlight certainly feels good.










photos © bob arnold
"tweet"
"my girl"










Wednesday, March 31, 2010

T.A.M.I. SHOW






Finally! here it it is. Boy have we waited.

I can remember over the past three decades and even longer, how many pirate copies I have seen available, at a high price, of this legendary concert. A pirated VHS edition in scrubby slipcase on Cape Cod going for $45 and "maybe the Beach Boys are on it, I dunno, man." said the seller. He was probably right, he didn't know. Not even the director of the film, Steve Binder, knew what had happened to the Beach Boys that he knew he had filmed but where were they on his film?

It will all tie together decades later, after everyone has their arguments over music rights and legalities and the usual fuss. But keep in mind, along with the dynamite acts, you're watching a house band called the Wrecking Crew, famed for jazzing all Phil Spector hits and backing just about every record that rose out of rock 'n' roll L.A. in the 60s. Jack Nitzsche is manning the wheel and Leon Russell and Glen Campbell are in the band. The Byrds haven't yet released "Mr. Tambourine Man" but the magic of the Byrds guitar sound can be heard chiming from this band. Dean of Jan & Dean will skateboard on stage.

Quentin Tarantino calls TAMI Show, "In the top three of all rock movies..." and I love him for that and would go even one or two better and say it is the best rock movie ever made. All the ingredients are here, and it's years before Woodstock and even Monterey Pop, which by then is in a haze of too much drugs and mud (Woodstock) but still fantastic, and Monterey Pop's lush calling out of the tribe and they come, still tipsy with dreams, and squabbling groups and promoters. The TAMI Show is hardcore Beatlemania without the Beatles. Don't need them. We've got the Rolling Stones, and this is pure early Stones with Brian Jones and they're fresh off the boat. British boys meeting American blues and the cocktail is like none other. And if that's not enough, they close the show, plus follow James Brown. And this is one of James Brown's most riveting appearances on film, ever. Just look at scuff on the knees of his pants! Think the king of soul meets a gospel seance, because that's what happens here. There is a ton of talent before soul power, and the whole concert begins with a guy by the name of Chuck Berry. Yes, indeed this film, this legend, was made in heaven.

Mastered from a high definition transfer, so shelve those scrubby cassettes you bought, the TAMI Show was directed by a twenty-three year old Steve Binder who was already gaining his chops and wisdom under the wings of the Steve Allen Show. The Allen Show is yet another rich pot on the stove you may stick your wooden spoon into for a taste...all Binder knows is that free tickets have been given out to all the local high schools in the LA/Santa Monica region for a concert to be held at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium for two days : October 28 & 29th, 1964. What would come would be the best thing that ever hit rock 'n' roll: teenage girls, like thousands. My wife Susan would be one of them.

So other than A Hard Day's Night, the TAMI Show is going to give you the rawest spectacle of music meeting teenage power, and then some. There's no promoters in the way, no attitude, no limousines, no fences to breakdown and crawl over, no Angels with pool sticks. The performers are basically singing medleys of their hits or lighting into songs not even recorded yet. Unheard of. The ratio of black and white performers is exhilarating considering we're tight inside America's war for or against civil rights. People are dying horrible deaths for the color of their skin or politics while black and white on this stage dance and zoom and move and touch and mesh the dynamics of rhythm and blues with sweet old rock 'n' roll. Four months earlier, in darkest Mississippi, three civil rights workers by the name of Goodwin, Schwerner, and Chaney (two whites and one black guy) will be lynched by the Klan. That's right young readers: lynched. Here on this film and during the concert beauty exalts. Just watch The Supremes move with their own rhythm as the cameras move with them and the slippery dancers move in and around them as the young audience swells. If you're a young boy like I am in 1964 two months after this concert and now it's playing as a film in my local theater of small town and all-white USA, you may be as enthralled and falling in love as I am with the beauty of Diana Ross, Marvin Gaye, Smokey Robinson, Chuck Berry, James Brown and the fabulous Flames. Nothing in Black History brought this white boy deeper into the arms of civil rights than to see these acts give so freely and beautifully and swoon. Try to count how many goosebumps are on your arms when "Where Did Our Love Go" comes on.




Susan well remembers how she wrote away to a Sunset Blvd. office for the free tickets as announced in the local newspaper; and passed them out to her pals and they all skipped school on Monday and went to the concert. She wasn't aware then or even now, there was one part of the concert on Sunday; that's why she missed seeing Berry and The Beach Boys, probably Lesley Gore. But she knows she saw The Supremes and Brown and the Stones because she arrived with her pals for the rehearsal that day and got to meet Jagger and Richards when they snuck through a back door and there they were, presto! They signed their autographs (so did The Barbarians) and really were only a few years older than the girls. Susan is standing (no one sat!) in the front row, stage right, dark clothes, blonde hair and holding her jacket. As the Stones light into "It's All Over Now" like an air-lift — and now I know why we have all these years loved that song — the camera moves up along Jagger for a close up of his face (the camera work gets better and better in this film from The Supremes on) while the young and bold director sweeps his cameras out into the audience so you're in the high with them...and there's Susan with thousands shaking up & down, waving her jacket, possessed and natural, changed forever and ever, listening to the soon to be greatest and longest running and most popular group in rock 'n' roll history start their journey. Our journey. And without James Brown, Jagger wouldn't even know how to dance.

Own this. Put it on your book shelf. You'll dance for years to come.













Tuesday, March 30, 2010




BACK DOOR PRETTY, MARCH 2010





photo © bob arnold

Monday, March 29, 2010

BOZ SCAGGS






Here's the LP to look for in the dollar bin, it's waiting for you. There's a photograph of Duane Allman naked in there, and he shouldn't be dead. Some of his best playing is on this LP. William Royce Scaggs was born in Ohio, and by the time his family had moved to Texas and settled in, the boy was "Boz". And he could sing Jimmy Rodgers, as he proves in this song below. Click on it and go to Texas.











photo: http://images.jamsbio.com/images/boz/boz.jpg



Sunday, March 28, 2010






LOCAL









photo © bob arnold

Saturday, March 27, 2010

VICTOR JARA



Activist, singer, songwriter, renown theater director and member of the Communist Party of Chile, Victor Jara was tortured and murdered along with thousands in the Chilean Coup of 1973, which likewise brought down President Salvador Allende and broke the heart and took the life of Pablo Neruda. Jara was beaten and played with by monsters, his musician hands busted worthless, and a game of Russian roulette forced upon him by goons under the leadership of Jose Adolfo Paredes Marquez who was formally charged with Jara's murder in 2009. The military regime destroyed a vast majority of the musician's master recordings - burned them. If not for the courage and love of his wife Joan Jara, who retrieved her husband's battered body in a street in shanty town Santiago, and also smuggled out of Chile her own copies of his recordings, we might not have this song. Listen to it rise like the greatest bird.









photo: cubalmater.wordpress.com/.../