Here's the first studio version of String Field Theory playing Sid Stutzman's song "House on a Hill." I don't sing at all on this one, just play fiddle. The band members keep remarking, "You're a poet. How about writing a song?" But I keep changing the subject.
Because today is bread-making day and writing-about-Keats day, I'll share a poem from How the Crimes Happened that doesn't mention Keats, although it does seem to mention almost everything else. As you can see, it would make a terrible bluegrass song.
Aubade
Dawn Potter
And what about the small eye, Walter?—
the leaves of grass you overlooked, winter
lichen clutching fenceposts, a draggled
dead squirrel in the snowbank, the red
letters of my name, serif by slant?
It was bliss you sighed, panted,
howled for: the View from Space—
big comet Walt chasing Madam Eos
across a streaky sky, old guilty dawn
tempting another kosmic shaman
to lurch word-drunk from the rafters . . .
oh, I grieve for every morning-after
groan rising from your sallow bed
as I fire your cookstove, bake your bread.
1 comment:
Really enjoyed hearing the band!
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