One Night ZZ Hill Sang at the Club Tupelo

The night ZZ Hill sang at the Club Tupelo
on the Westside of Chicago
he was built like a heavyweight boxer in a tailored suit
             bathed in a soft blue
light like the only thing
to see in that darkened
space where bluespeople came
to turn a tear into a holler
then a cry of joy and exultation.
The women lined up to kiss ZZ Hill
or at least shake his hand
but with a turn of his hand
he waved them away.
They couldn’t hide
disappointment,
but that’s the way
love treats a woman
sometimes.

He kept on singing, boxing the air,
those songs about promise, regret,
and living it, turning our hearts
tough like his voice got turpentine in it.
Do you know how ZZ Hill died?
In his driveway, laid out
under a bright midnight moon.
Like Heaven opened its refrigerator door.
The neighbors watched from their windows.
Wasn’t he on stage?
Whispering about how falling down
Drunk
He was
Disgraceful.
Dead.
Drunk.

He was, in truth,
gone.
From a heart attack at 49.
That fast. That young.
Leaving
Our hearts
Knocked out
In some down home
Blues.

Source: Poetry (April 2023)