Back to Back to Back, a Variant:
Most curious to me is that at one time or another in my life I could have written either of the first two poems, albeit not as well, and that I did write the third and last poem at this time in my life.
The Day Lady Died
The way I imagine it, Louis Jenkins read the Frank O'Hara poem back in his days at the university. He then let it slip into his subconscious mind to percolate. The poem, the prose poem, that emerged, years later, is called:
Jazz Poem
By Louis Jenkins
I always wanted to write one of those jazz poems. You know the kind, where it's three a.m.in some incredibly smokey, out of the way, little club in Chicago or New York, April 14, 1954 (it's always good to give the date) and there are only a few sleepy people left in the place, vacant tables with half-empty glasses, overturned chairs... and then Bird or Leroy or someone plays this incredible solo and it's like, it's like... well, you just should have been there. The poet was there and you understand that jazz is hip, intellectual, cool, but also earthy and soulful, as the poet must be, as well, because he really digs this stuff. Unfortunately, I grew up listening to rock and roll and decidedly unhip country music and it just doesn't work to say you should have been in Gary Hofstadter's rec room, July 24, 1961, sipping a Pepsi, listening to Duane Eddy's latest album and playing air guitar.
So, sometime within the last couple of years I read both of these poems, and liked them both a lot. They percolated in me, as good poems do, until about three months ago when, late one night or early one morning on 10/8/21, the following poem entered my mind. It addresses the two preceding poems and how they mesh, unavoidably, with my own experiences and sensibilities. The poem is called:
Outside the Five Spot Cafè, NYC
By Fred Staal
Not for me,
hiking into the tall timber,
pushing across the icy scree.
Nor, for that matter,
the tinkling ice
in a glass of scotch,
the smokey saxophones, and
Thelonious.
Yes, I stood outside the Five Spot Cafè
(2 St. Marks Place)
one cool night in 1965
(no way to even guess the specific date),
and listened a while,
as the notes filtered through the door
But I didn't go in...
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