I fell in love some years ago with a woman very much not my age.
I only have to hear her voice, and I am set to tripping down the steps of my memories to a different time, a different New York, a different world. One little laugh, one elocutional filip, one turn of a phrase and I leave today—the here and now—and I am sent spiraling like a football through the crisp autumn winds—back to a time when we used to have crisp and autumn.
It started, the affaire d' cerebellum, when I heard this song:
It's not like, like Beverly Kenney, I hate rock n roll. I actually can, in small doses, tolerate it. But what I found here was a kindred spirit.
From the fuzziness of the recording--which I enjoyed for it's raw authenticity--to the out-of-stepness with our times, I had found the woman for me.
I was born 30 years too late. And like Wordsworth--who walked an estimated 175,000 miles in his lifetime as he wrote long un-written-down poems in his head (as I do) the world, today's world, is too much with me. I am one, for instance, who believes we have placed lead in our societal pipes and as a culture we are getting dumber and dumber by the microsecond.
But Beverly Kenney gives me belated hope--funny for someone who killed herself at 28 with an all-you-can-eat platter of alcohol and Seconal.
Despite that gloom, she first brought me joy when Hector Quesadilla, my manager when I played for the Seraperos de Saltillo down in the Mexican Baseball League in 1975 would play this song over and again, especially loving the bit about the bull-fight and the ball game.
Despite that gloom, she first brought me joy when Hector Quesadilla, my manager when I played for the Seraperos de Saltillo down in the Mexican Baseball League in 1975 would play this song over and again, especially loving the bit about the bull-fight and the ball game.
Then there's today's abject political dumbness--a veritable dumbageddon where--as Shakespeare's Three Weird Sisters said--'fair is foul and foul is fair.' Dig on the whole thing below--bearing in mind it's better to read/hear while imagining a storm of the ages (currently known as normal "global warming weather.") That Shakespeare, well, only 'cause I love her, reminds me of this from Kenney.
ACT I SCENE I
|
A desert place.
|
|
[Thunder and lightning. Enter three Witches]
|
||
First Witch
|
When shall we three meet again
|
|
Second Witch
|
When the hurlyburly's done,
|
|
When the battle's lost and won.
|
||
Third Witch
|
That will be ere the set of sun.
|
5
|
First Witch
|
Where the place?
|
|
Second Witch
|
||
Third Witch
|
There to meet with Macbeth.
|
|
First Witch
|
I come, graymalkin!
|
|
Second Witch
|
Paddock calls.
|
10
|
Third Witch
|
||
ALL
|
||
Anyway, that's it for me for now for the end of Jewish year 5777. I say without irony, "Have a Happy."
No comments:
Post a Comment