Saturday, February 26, 2022

Cavellini il Magnifico/Eddie Rosenthal/Sondheim On Poetry & Music/David Alpaugh's Mixed View/Ed Coletti Poem/Letter to Mary Oliver


 Cavellini il Magnifico

At times, I still wonder if  G.A. Cavellini and I might be related to each other on my Tuscan mother's side. She was Anna Cavellini.  He was born the same year as both of my parents, 1914.  A knowing few appear to regard me also as somewhat of an absurdist.



Ed Rosenthal - my friend, poet, Chess Expert, website developer, dog whisperer, and all-around decent fellow has a new blog he wants shared with you.  The URL is


Sondheim Contrasts Poetry and Music

Stephen Sondheim intensely loved poetry.  Here he looks at the differences between poetry and musical lyrics. See also No Money In Poetry November 2011 edition

“Music straightjackets a poem and prevents it from breathing on its own, whereas it liberates a lyric. Poetry doesn't need music; lyrics do.”

“Poetry seems to me to exist in terms of its conciseness—how much can be packed in,” he told Bernard Levin in 1980. “Lyric writing has to exist in time … Therefore it must be crystal clear as it goes on.”

 I firmly believe that lyrics have to breathe and give the audience's ear a chance to understand what's going on. Particularly in the theater, where you not only have the music, but you've got costume, story, acting, orchestra. There's a lot to take in. The whole idea of poetry is denseness, is concision, is abutment of images, and that sort of thing. You can't do that when you've got music going, and expect the audience to take it in.

 Poetry is something that you can go back and read multiple times to extract its meaning. But with lyrics, you hear them once and they have to stick."

Now see David Alpaugh's mixed view on the subject in my then favorite of his essays which I originally featured here in 2011.


When Poetry Counts Even More

I once again caught myself wondering about what had happened to the status of poets actually influencing the course of history in many countries and the poet's quieter influence on the health of readers. I recalled my own poem in the Fall 2020 issue of  So It Goes: The Literary Journal of the Kurt Vonnegut Museum Library and especially the amazing letter of gratitude to Mary Oliver (1935-2018) from a teenaged girl who had been  pondering suicide.


If you do not take an interest in the affairs of your government, then you are doomed to live under the rule of fools.  — Plato

 

Underground During Ages of Autocracy

 when all the writers and artists who depart

facebook twitter instagram and even email

begin painting and reciting in caves catacombs

and other hidden chambers from which

their material work emerges clandestinely   

being distributed by hand subversively

much the same as the works of

 

Gallileo Voltaire Pussy Riot Ai Wei Wei

Pasternak Solzhenitsyn Thamsanga Mnyele

Wally Serote Thomas Paine Mayakovski   

 

whose creations became entwined with struggle

as ferns with mosses and mushrooms surviving

even thriving in the cool obscurity of caves

where these poets of truth and even hope expanding

as ocular pupils beyond restraint by the iris

enabling oversight engendering action

more substantial than  the statesmen politicians

and silenced effigies of incendiary leaders

 

while all the more of us in our catacombs

study and write our muses continuing in us

 

Diogenes Socrates Plato Sappho Pindar

Hypatia of Alexandria Hildegard Von Bingen

Thomas Merton Teresa of Avila Salman Rushdie

 

No one knows how it all ends

with a bang a whimper a sigh

something there is senses an ending

to the all there is was or won’t be

the scent from funereal blossoms waving

 

 Ed Coletti in So It Goes: The Literary Journal of the Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library (Fall 2020)


9 comments:

Joe Zaccardi said...

Great stuff Ed. Love Borgas and the Joe Cottonwood poem. Ciao, Joe

Mario Uribe said...

Hi Ed,
It’s been a while, hope you are well. Thanks for sharing the beautiful poem When Death Comes. I just recently re read it when a good friend of mine passed away.

Deetje B said...


Dear Ed:
Just want to let you know that letter sure did make me want to read Mary Oliver's poem!
(But of course I already love her poems, but I feel now the need to read this one. And I shall.
P.S. But I also found Sondheim's profound observations on the nature of poetry welcome: enlightening.
So, Thank you!

Marvin R. Hiemstra said...

Thank you, Ed, for a truly spiffy issue!

Ever onward,

Marvin

Norman Mitroff said...

Outstanding!!!



I love you.



Norm

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