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Forrest Gander
Singer-Songwriters and PoetryAny of us can get into a good fight arguing over singer-songwriters whose poetic lyrics we champion. And some singers, Leonard Cohen or David Berman (of The Silver Jews) for instance, publish books of their own poetry. In the seventies, a number of singer-songwriters made references to poets: Bob Dylan to Dante, Verlaine & Rimbaud, Patti Smith to Rimbaud, Lou Reed to Delmore Schwartz, and, um, Aerosmith quoted from "Hamlet." But who are some of the younger singer-songwriters referencing poems by other poets? (Steve Burt, who will know them all, is limited to two responses). For two of the best, click continue reading this entry, below.
One of my favorites, the blessedly darkness-haunted Will Oldham, aka Bonnie “Prince” Billy, includes this late poem by D. H. Lawrence (rather brilliantly edited by exclusion of the first and last two stanzas) on "Black/Rich Music". (The whole cd is included as a bonus on “Palace Music” as well). I don't think anyone but Oldham could pull this off (this well). The Risen Lord The risen lord, the risen lord The risen lord, the risen lord And he says: I never have seen them before, They are substance itself, that flows in thick It moves, it ripples, and all the time I never saw them, how they must soften If they didn’t, if they did not soften they would not be men, and they must be men, Lo! I am flesh, and the blood that races Lo! on the other side the grave Now I must conquer the fear of life, What do you want, wild loins? and what They ask, and they must be answered; they I died, and death is neuter; it speaks not, it gives So it is, so it will be, for ever and ever. *** On "North Star Deserter", his newest and maybe his best cd (with arrangements that shift from quavery whispers to choral harmonies to throbbing epiphanic rock), Vic Chesnutt includes a stripped-down song called “Wallace Stevens” on which he sings I saw a blackbird thirteen ways and then strew a fist many mountains away Alright, that’s a reference, not a quote. But on an earlier cd, "Little," Chesnutt sings these lines from “Not Waving but Drowning” by Stevie Smith (who during an interview with the Queen, once explained that she composed most of her poems while “Hoovering”: nobody heard him the dead man, poor chap he always loved larking oh, no, no, no, it was always too cold oh, no, no, no, it was always too cold CommentsI wish I knew them all. Two worth special mention: Karla Schickele of Ida, recording as "K.," has a version of Plath's juvenile villanelle "Mad Girl's Love Song" that, to my surprise, made me like Plath's poem, and the Pastels-- though it was twenty years ago-- recorded Auden's "If I Could Tell You" in a way that made it sound like Auden was writing, not Tin Pan Alley-inspired modernist anti-modernist lyric poetry, but the words to a very good rock song. Further references available upon request. Also, are you going to blog about your new... novel? I just discovered today that it exists! Are we allowed imaginary wishlists? Some days I would give anything, just about anything, to hear a deep roots reggae version of "Burglar of Babylon" -- http://www.poemhunter.com/best-poems/elizabeth-bishop/the-burglar-of-babylon/ -- by some singer with a real nice voice, maybe Burning Spear or even Tosh back from the dead. Can't you just hear it? And that reminds me also of the 10,000 Maniacs' startling early riff on Wilfred Owen's Dulce, with its gas gas gas: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JY69uFpcv5U Personal plug: I've set poems by Edward Thomas, J. M. Synge, Blake, Shakespeare, 2 by Dickinson, Leigh Hunt, Faye Kicknosway, Sam Shepard, a Frances Densmore translation of a Papago song, 19th popular poets, anonymous poets from Mother Goose to internet doggerel, as well as prose by contemporary writers; my "original" lyrics quote poets and writers from all over. Here's my setting of an obscure Mother Goose poem: Here's a song that quotes Tennyson, Francis Scott Key, the Bible, George W. Bush, and alludes to Joseph Conrad and Coppola, Eugene Debs, Freud, Kipling. I wrote it after Bush declared War on Terror. Back in the '80s and '90s I published some poems in obscure 'zines and journals but haven't sought publication in many years. Totally randomly, I was on the front page of Saturday's Seattle P-I playing guitar at an outdoors art event. I sang one of my Dickinson settings in that set. Also: My friend John de Roo (a different John) has set Frost and Millay and a Howard translation of a Baudelaire poem. He's a terrific songwriter and musician: Steve, do you know where I can find that K. "Mad Girl's Love Song" ? I did some searches but didn't come up with anything. Destroyer's "3000 Flowers" references Pound's "In a Station of the Metro." Music critics are constantly calling frontman Dan Bejar a poet (sometimes disparagingly!). Here are the lyrics to "3000 Flowers" (you can hear it at myspace.com/destroyer): She was part of an inner circle. I was a slow learner, I moved in flourishes. I was Clytæmnestra on a good day, dispensing wisdom to And, like a woman, I was kept as the wealthy Becca, I apologize: Schickele sets not "Mad Girl's Love Song" but another villanelle from Plath's juvenilia, "Telegram." It's on the first full-length K. disc, called "New Problems," and I do recommend the setting, and the song. I hope you're not too disappointed that my memory switched in the more famous for the less famous villanelle. Thanks Becca. Hadn't known about him-- and appreciate the warning about Rhode Island sinking into the sea. I thought it was just me. And John, I like yr high blues and that harmonica on Apocalypse-- and the Seattle PI piece was right timely. (There's a bit of Oedipus in that song too, no?) Vivek-- that Bishop is a choice selection. Tell me that in India, you know what it means to have two contos in the pocket. I don't believe it. The 10,000 Maniacs is a turn-on for me. Thanks for pointing that out. Curious to imagine what Owen thinks of it-- listening our way. It should be pointed out that David Berman, an MFA student of James Tate's at Amherst, might as aptly be described as a poet who releases singer-songwriter records as the reverse, though it is true he's been recording (and, very recently) performing more than publishing in the last few years. This is not to say that having an MFA is a necessary or sufficient condition for counting as a poet, just that he comes at "the page" from a different angle from, say, Billy Corgan, Wilco's Jeff Tweedy, or Jewel. Leonard Cohen, similarly, had several books out before releasing an album; it's doubtful he would have turned to songwriting at all but for the territory opened up by Bob Dylan. (Something similar might be said of Patti Smith; several chapbooks coming out of the LES/St. Mark's scene predate her fronting of a band.) The undersung English group The Blue Aeroplanes have used of a number of poems favored by their singer, Gerard Langley, as lyrics, including Sylvia Plath's "The Assistant," Louis MacNiece's "Bagpipe Music" (a natural, I daresay), and a fairly ambitious collage of sections from Auden's The Orators, under the title "Journal of an Airman." I commend their work to interested readers; Langley's own lyrics are often rewarding as well. Jon Langford of the Mekons made surprisingly effective three-chord rock and roll out of the "Butter" section of Stein's Tender Buttons on his 1998 solo album Skull Orchard. (Oddly enough, I just saw his band perform this at the Knitting Factory, accompanied by a 45-voice Welsh men's choir.) No Promises, the 2007 album by Carla Bruni (now the wife of Nicolas Sakrozy), consists entirely of settings of poetry: Dickinson, Yeats, Auden again, Christina Rossetti, and others. (I'm willing to count her as a singer-songwriter, as I believe she's responsible for the French lyrics on her other albums.) Perhaps this is not what you had in mind, but the text of Talking Heads's "I Zimbra" is one of Hugo Ball's sound poems.
Iowa City's own Greg Brown set Blake poems to music, on the album Songs of Innocence and of Experience. Here's a very strange video--not the official video--for Brown's version of "A Poison Tree." Sophie Auster recorded tracks featuring poems by Apollinaire, Desnos, and her very own dad, Paul. She's big in certain pockets of Europe. Fifth pockets. A couple more songwriters to poets and back again: Tupac. Jill Scott. Vic Chesnutt does a few Stevie Smith renditions live and on, what, Little? Can't remember now. And Bonnie Billy was in Providence hanging out with Brown U. poets back in the nineties. Asking for coffee milk. So I'm sure in that vast catalog of long as hell live shows there are some more poems set to music. Chan Marshall had a poem in Open City a few years back, too. Prince has a book coming out with some poems in there (seriously!) That dude from System of a Down wrote a book. Art Garfunkel did too. The Fugs are rather poetic. Didn't Ted Berrigan get a writing credit for "People Who Died"? Thurston Moore wrote a book called Alabama Wildman. Dean from Luna read aloud from Wenderoth's Letters to Wendy's a lot. When does Joshua Clover's first album drop? Ra Ra Riot have a song whose words are largely pulled from the ee cummings poem "Dying is Fine". You can hear that here; http://www.myspace.com/rarariot I'm glad Forrest Gander mentions Jon Langford, Vic Chestnut, and the Silver Jews, whose work does more for me than many contemporary poets. The Blue Airplanes do an especially striking version of Plath's "The Applicant," and Paul Westerberg, of the late lamented Replacements, has a scary and poignant song about Plath, entitled "Shackle and Drag." But my favorite of this sub-genre is a a song called "Everything's Turning To White" by the great Aussie singer Paul Kelly, who in about 4 minutes retells Raymond Carver's story "So Much Water So Close to Home," without pretense, and with astonishing complexity and compression. Hey Forrest--My favorite songwriter, Joanna Newsom, who claire It's worth noting that that articulate Franklin Bruno post complicating the notion of poet-singer-songwriter is by, yes, that most articulate poet/singer-songwriter Franklin Bruno. HIs songs are exceptionally smart, and the lyrics take advantage of his long obsession with (and in) poetry. If you haven't checked out his music, it's a memorable, deferred pleasure. Greek composers set lots of Greek poetry to music--Seferis' Sto Periyali To Krifo became a popular song. Certainly not new, but the Smiths' Cemetary Gates has "Yeats and Keats are on your side/ Wilde is on mine"... or some such. I don't know if she has aleady been mentioned; I adore Kris Delmhorst's Strange Conversation, that has versions and settings on it of Cummings, Browning, Millay, and Byron, among others. (Some are settings of poems, others are lyrics freely based on poems.) I was privileged to play a gig or two with Vic Chestnutt (and Burnley Vest) in the 90s in Athens, GA.... It was a great experience. (Yes, I was in a band, like everyone else...) There's been a lot of Neruda covers, especially by Latino artists surrounding the 2004 centennial. My favorite is the Brazilian Girls' (none of them being Latina, only one being a woman) rendition of Love Poem XV Me gusta cuando callas: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ov0q58AL8OY |
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Wanda ColemanOlena Kalytiak Davis Forrest Gander Lavinia Greenlaw Javier Huerta Travis Nichols STAFF WRITERS
Michael MarcinkowskiFred Sasaki Don Share Elizabeth Stigler Nick Twemlow Emily Warn PREVIOUS WRITERS
Christian BökStephen Burt Kwame Dawes Linh Dinh Daisy Fried Alan Gilbert Kenneth Goldsmith Rigoberto González Major Jackson Ada Limón Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Mark Nowak Lucia Perillo D.A. Powell Reginald Shepherd Patricia Smith A.E. Stallings Rachel Zucker RECENT COMMENTS
Political Poetry: An Epistolary Conversation (5)Hayden Carruth (1921-2008) (3) Empire in Funkville (7) ¡Maldición! (3) Read the foreign and the dead (3) RECENT POSTS
Hayden Carruth (1921-2008) (Emily Warn)Read the foreign and the dead (Lavinia Greenlaw) O LITERATI, GET UP! (Olena Kalytiak Davis) POETRY + MUSIC = INSPIRATION? (Wanda Coleman) Into the Mouths of Volcanoes (Forrest Gander) CATEGORY ARCHIVE
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Christian BökStephen Burt Wanda Coleman Olena Kalytiak Davis Kwame Dawes Linh Dinh Daisy Fried Forrest Gander Alan Gilbert Kenneth Goldsmith Rigoberto González Lavinia Greenlaw Javier Huerta Major Jackson Ada Limón Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Travis Nichols Mark Nowak Ed Park Lucia Perillo D.A. Powell Fred Sasaki Don Share Reginald Shepherd Patricia Smith A.E. Stallings Elizabeth Stigler Nick Twemlow Emily Warn Rachel Zucker Subscribe to the RSS feed. ![]() What is RSS? |

