A brief collection of poetry devoted to jazz…and love

November 7th, 2023

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“Jazz Diva” by Marsha Hammel

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All That Jazz

I was a Simon & Garfunkel, Motown kind of gal
He brought Maynard, Miles, and Hancock to the mix

Learned to love Billie Holiday’s smoky, sultry songs
Filled with yearnings, loss, and lynchings.

Floated away with Norah Jones, swooned with Etta’s
At last, melted with Nat’s Unforgettable.

My being swayed by new rhythms, blues, and beats
Hips swaying, bodies entwined with the timber of new love.

by Linda Freudenberger

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Now It’s Time To Go a Journeying 

I’ve lived a whole lifetime without you
Impossible task, but easily observed
In the rear view: Sad as a gypsy
serenading the moon

Palpable need, notes floating like
November-song, circling my head as I seek
Love as my shelter. An ex told me that when
I sit in my car under a tree to eat my fast food
Breakfast with coffee, enveloping leaves and
Branches above my sunroof top, that I probably
Look like I’m homeless

He could be right

But I just feel free
And now here’s Gregory Porter on my radio singing
“Skylark” and I think about birds sailing through the sky
Above my head being asked by any and all forlorn souls
To be led to a kiss

That’s probably a lot to ask of a bird
Minding his own business, just singing
for the sheer joy of it

Love is rare but it’s something I still feel
Free to find, key in the ignition and above us all
The melting clouds – grays and deeper grays
Like the entrance to that final mystery,
Where all that once was elusive is now
Beautifully clear:

Won’t you lead me there?

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by Connie Johnson

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The Bombshell’s Waltz

You walk down the street
like a flashforward
from a coming-of-age novel
or a Kamasi Washington solo
from a feelgood jazz collection.
You’re cranberry
like canned Thanksgiving relish.
Your jacket shimmies
and your lips pull back into a grin
like a gibbon pissed off
at a bunch of tourists.
I embrace you, hoping to avoid
the glitter spilling from your cheeks.
You shout, It’s been too long!
I don’t say, Not long enough.
Because I’m caught up in your act,
like when Kamasi’s sax carries me
aloft and I become him for a moment.
Your red lipstick stains my cheek
and your perfume invades me.
I’m with you again.

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by Geer Austin

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Dig It *

The lady was my barbecue
and far from being a battle,
she was barrelhouse,
a canary chick I collared.

She crept out like a shadow,
wearing a cool drape
and warned me,
“Don’t play me cut rate, Jack.”

I was togged to the bricks
and enjoyed a bit
of trickeration and the lady
just couldn’t help herself.

“You are too much,” she said,
“not at all off the cob.
Kill me, Baby.”

So, off we went
to do a little pecking
at the club.

Dig it?

 

[ *with a nod to Cab Calloway
and The Hepster’s Dictionary ]

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by Russell duPont

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Love Song

A long, subdued blast of a trumpet.

The gentle humming strum
of an upright base.

The warbled sound of a saxophone
making its presence known.

Fingers running across a piano keyboard
impersonating a tap dancer lightly tap dancing
across 88 upside-down steel drums.

A vocalist singing a song
calm and clean
straight and smooth:
a song that is a love song,
a song about a love
that is pure and incorruptible,
a song that imitates a single tear
falling smoothly down a cheek,
its salty residue
landing on the edge
of a joyous smile.

…………….(originally published in Jerry Jazz Musician, Aug. 22, 2023)

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by Bryan Franco

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What!?!?

What is this thing,
called by many names
in different jazz dialects:
“Louise”
in wild exhilarating Cecil Taylor syntax,
“What Love”
haunting and volatile by Mingus,
yearning, caressing whispers,
always soft,
but underneath the surface full fire impact
like cold coffee on a blistering summer day
because it’s too
goddamn hot,
Cole Porter, Mister Broadway “Kiss Me Kate”
knew experience is not only words, it’s What?
Django’s answer a jaunty “Minor Swing”
jitterbug gypsy four step,
but who can describe the mystery
of being inside undulating
in liquid warmth
a seed in black earth soil
foolish and crazy at times,
like a rose in a “Hot House”
wanting to break
free to the sun
perhaps Konitz reverting “Subconscious-Lee”
to childhood, like a child craving attention,
“I’m the center, the universe,
I’m not! What is this?”
What makes us ourselves,
What design, energy, and chaos
What delicate failure,
falling, getting up again, and again,
learning to walk, moving into this thing,
this What, this love?

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by Daniel Brown

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Long Forgotten

When she smiled, her face
grew crooked, a delightful
quirk that hooked my heart,
and drew me ever closer

to her wild eccentricities:
brown eyes that were untamed
as a mountain forest; lips
that never needed lipstick,

or any other trick of makeup;
legs that ran with a greyhound’s
grace over terrain rough and smooth;
an embrace that turned sunset to sunrise;

and a voice with the depth of a baritone sax
that turned conversation into jazz.

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by Michael L. Newell

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Listen to the 1958 recording of Duke Ellington and His Orchestra play “Tenderly” [Columbia/Legacy]

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Geer Austin’s poetry has appeared in Poet Lore, Fjords Review, Main Street Rag, BlazeVOX, Neuro Logical Magazine and others, and his fiction has appeared in A/U Magazine, the podcast A Story Most Queer and elsewhere. He is the author of Cloverleaf, a poetry chapbook (Poets Wear Prada Press). He lives in New York City.

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Daniel Brown has loved jazz (and music in general) ever since he delved into his parents’ 78 collection as a child. He is a retired special education teacher who began writing as a senior. He always appreciates being published in a journal or anthology. His first poetry collection, Family Portraits in Verse and Other Illustrated Poems, was recently published by Epigraph Books.

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Russell duPont is an artist and an author whose artwork is included in a number of public and private collections. He has published three novels, King & Train , Waiting for the Turk and Movin’ On, the sequel to King & Train; two books of poetry; and two non-fiction chapbooks. His essay, “The Corner,” is included in the anthology Streets of Echoes. His work has been published in various newspapers and literary magazines. He was the founder & publisher of the literary magazine,.the albatross.

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Bryan Franco is a gay, Jewish poet from Brunswick, Maine who competed in the 2014 National Poetry Slam in Oakland, California. He has been published in the US, Australia, England, Germany, India, Ireland, and Scotland. He has facilitated poetry workshops for Brunswick High School, Tumblewords Project, and Phynnecabulary. He hosts Café Generalissimo Open Mic, is a member of the Beardo Bards Of The Bardo poetry troupe, painter, sculptor, gardener, and culinary genius. His book Everything I Think Is All in My Mind was published in 2021.

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Linda Freudenberger began writing in 2017 to heal after the sudden death of her husband after 42 years of marriage. She graduated from the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning Author Academy in 2019 and the Poetry Gauntlet in 2020. She resides in Lexington, Ky with Clancy, a certified therapy dog. Her first poetry book, The Other Side of the Bed and Beyond, is due to come out in January 2024 by Finishing Line Press.

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Marsha Hammel

A native of Miami, FL, Marsha Hammel grew up in Central America and Europe, returning to the states in 1961. A prolific artist, she enjoys a wide audience for original paintings and published works in the UK, having been represented by Felix Rosenstiel’s in London since the early 90’s. During a four-decade studio practice, at least 1500 paintings have become part of private, corporate and institutional collections throughout the US and Europe. Click here  to visit her website.

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Connie Johnson is an L.A.-based writer who turns to poets like Gwendolyn Brooks, Lucille Clifton, and Audre Lorde when she needs a little inspiration. And she agrees with Clifton who said: “Poetry is a matter of life, not just a matter of language.”  Johnson’s poems have appeared or will be forthcoming in Iconoclast, Haight-Ashbury Literary Journal, Jerry Jazz Musician, San Pedro River Review, Shot Glass Journal, Voicemail Poems, Misfit Magazine, Mudfish 23, Cholla Needles, Exit 13, Glint Literary Journal, Rye Whiskey Review and Door Is a Jar.

Click here to read In a Place of Dreams: Connie Johnson’s album of jazz poetry, music, and life stories

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Michael L. Newell lives in Florida. He has had seven books of poetry published in the last three years.

 

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Click here to read The Sunday Poem

Click here to read “A Collection of Jazz Poetry –  Summer, 2023 Edition”

Click here for information about how to submit your poetry or short fiction

Click here to subscribe to the (free) Jerry Jazz Musician quarterly newsletter

Click here to help support the ongoing publication of Jerry Jazz Musician, and to keep it commercial-free (thank you!)

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One comments on “A brief collection of poetry devoted to jazz…and love”

  1. Love + Jazz: the ultimate collaboration. Thanks, Joe! As always, your poetry collections contain much heart, inventiveness…and inspiration.

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Publisher’s Notes

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In This Issue

Announcing the book publication of Kinds of Cool: An Interactive Collection of Jazz Poetry...The first Jerry Jazz Musician poetry anthology published in book form includes 90 poems by 47 poets from all over the world, and features the brilliant artwork of Marsha Hammel and a foreword by Jack Kerouac’s musical collaborator David Amram. The collection is “interactive” (and quite unique) because it invites readers – through the use of QR codes printed on many of the book’s pages – to link to selected readings by the poets themselves, as well as to historic audio and video recordings (via YouTube) relevant to many of the poems, offering a holistic experience with the culture of jazz.

The Sunday Poem

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“Miles” by J. Stephen Whitney


The Sunday Poem is published weekly, and strives to include the poet reading their work....

J. Stephen Whitney reads his poem at its conclusion


Click here to read previous editions of The Sunday Poem

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