Joel Lewis: Pick of the Week [ed. Terence Winch]

Joel Lewis web 2__________________________________________

The Origins of My Social Marginalization

12 minutes countdown

to the 8:15 St. George boat

so walk over to

                                              that enormous Starbucks

at Pearl & State.

Inside, I hear that sinuous flute break

from “California Dreaming”

dripping from the sound system

then think “that’s Bud Shank!

 

                                      —he a magus of West Coast jazz,

later a first call studio stalwart

                  who could read

“fly shit on staff paper.”

The ultimate kudo among his peers.

I then realize

how cursed I am with a particular

knowledge which sets me

apart from co-workers, neighbors

& August’s luckless latte-sippers

                                             who listen to the same canned goods

thinking: “that’s The Mamas & The Papas”

& see a brain kinescope

of Michelle Phillips in a miniskirt.

                                               I then realize myself

doubly cursed and estranged

                                                aware that the present

row of State Street’s

                                                 post-modern towers

were once rooming houses

             for my landsliet

cleared for entry

           & hot off the Ellis Island ferry

spending their first night

                  alone in this drab New World.

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Joel Lewis is the author of 7 volumes of poetry, the most recent being Well You Needn't, which collects poems about jazz. He edited Bluestones and Salt Hay, an anthology of New Jersey poets, as well as editing On the Level Everyday, the selected talks of Ted Berrigan, and Reality Prime, the selected poems of Walter Lowenfels. He has written hundreds of reviews, essays, articles, and program notes ranging from a profile of the legendary street musician/composer Moondog to visiting the Whiffle Ball factory in Shelton, CT. He has taught creative writing at Rutgers University, The Poetry Project, and The Writer's Voice. He writes as much poetry as humanly possible about his native New Jersey from a garrett he shares with his wife, film theorist Sandy Flitterman-Lewis, in Hoboken, the "Mile Square City."

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Bud Shank LP)  Nocturne  1954