Sunday, January 04, 2009


The Book of Arrows by Mike Amado
Edited by Jack Scully and Nancy Brady Cunningham
Červená Barva Press, 2011

Accept life
In all its beginnings
Accept life
In all its blooming
Accept life
In all its endings

-Mike Amado, December 2008

This was penned by Mike less than a month from when he left us. In this book we try to show you a picture of Mike's early life in Plymouth and his family (Beginnings). How his poetry evolved from the dark to tell us about things which he believed were wrong and should be changed, especially the wrongs done against "Native Americans" and the warehousing of kidney patients into dialysis units (Blooming). In October of 2008 Mike knew that his time was coming to an end and this book includes seven poems written during the last months before his death (Endings). Mike had almost 500 unpublished poems. In his final months he put some of them in collections on his computer in what he called books. Most of the poems in this volume were under the heading of The Book of Arrows; thus, our title. This collection is fondly dedicated to Michael "Mike" "Spokenwarrior" Amado (April 23, 1975-January 2, 2009).
Jack and Nancy

And if I were to cut the thread,/it’ll be my best act of rebellion./I was brought up to be a fighter. Mike Amado was the bravest of poets. Not only for his writing, but also for the way he lived. He took on his doomed life with poetry of honesty and hope. The few times I was fortunate to meet him he was, outwardly, a happy man, not mutually exclusive from his suffering. Moreover he was a deep thinker and writer of great poetry. He truly was a fighter for those who needed a champion and against the illness to which he finally succumbed. His legacy is that bravery, his poetic career and this book of poems.
—Zvi A. Sesling, author King of the Jungle & Editor, Muddy River Poetry Review

The Book of Arrows. No kidding. Mike Amado filled his quiver, took aim, and let these poems fly like his life depended on it. It did. An arrow for a childhood of poverty where he slept in the living room so he dreamed on the pillow/just underneath a picture of cats on a fence. An arrow for school which he loathed, often sick, embarrassed in pants from the irregular store, so he learned to learn on my own. An arrow for the dad who left him with only his name so he took his Native name Spider Song because Native custom says that name/passes from mother to child. Arrows for an awkward adolescence of denim jackets, tight jeans, mohawks, and heavy metal all beaten on his teenage passion, the drums! An arrow for European invaders, protesting, dressing and dancing in used regalia at the pow wow. Arrow after arrow for the disease that chased him down from the age of seventeen, challenging death, Who says the story ends? Who says indeed and Mike Amado wasn’t giving in without having his say. I never understood when someone called a poet or poem brave. These poems are not acts of bravery, the living of the life of these poems is what’s brave, a life of dreaming, loving, protesting, drumming, writing, standing on stage as the Spoken Word Warrior.
—David R. Surette, poet, author of The Immaculate Conception Mothers’ Club

Mike Amado has left us an astounding body of work that is both insightful and unsettling. Each poem reads like a memoir tinged with an a keen awareness of the unspoken. Michael, from the Hebrew,/Who is like God,/an Archangel with a sword. To call his work compelling is an understatement. Mike’s poems live. Mike’s poems sing.
—January Gill O’Neil, author of Underlife

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Halloween




Coleen T. Houlihan and I went to Salem for Halloween last night, where over 100,000 gathered to storm the streets as bees, and witches, Plumber Joes, and Jokers. There were men in drag and divine 50's Satin dolls. Coleen and I braved one sure to make you sick ride and then ate a caramel apple and had a class glass of wine at Captain's restaurant on the wharf.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Sarasota VII soon to be released!



Cervena Barva Press announces the release of Lo Galluccio's Sarasota VII, a prose-poem of 65 pages

that was inspired by the works of Paul Auster, Margurite Duras and Elizabeth Smart. In two parts, this

experimental work of passionate memoir explores how death and place and desire intersect in a studio in

Florida overlooking the Atlantic ocean. Part 1 explores one lover's loss of his sister Teres, from "evil winning

in the motives of a handful of boys." The voracious pull of black holes and the pure ice water of Saturn intermittantly

tug at the book, as a deconstructed symphony. In the 2nd part, Galluccio writes of her own father's fade out and

her resolve to become whole.


ADVANCE PRAISE:


So this is what Anne Boleyn whispered to the men who took her head—both her husband and her executioner—so this is what the henchman replied; for nowhere has sinner and saint been so exquisitely linked than in Lo Galluccio's Sarasota VII. As the curtain parts, it is not polar opposites that are revealed but a single conjoined child. Traversing Sarasota VII (it has less in common with reading, more so the navigation to heaven or the surrender into hell) is like giving definition to the word 'passion.' This is how to say profoundly simple words with often incomprehensible meanings: Love. Desire. Hate. Birth. Destruction. And who hasn't attempted this— to grasp the single rose in the pit of thorns. And who hasn't, on occasion, failed and been banished? But Lo's beautiful, prophetic prose lulls us, even as we burn, and she tells us to "Fossilize the monster" and "Tend our rings like vain kings." She is right. We must. For something so terrifyingly beautiful should, forever, be.

Coleen T. Houlihan, novelist and poet, "the Human Heart."


Saturn in astrology is often called the planet of discipline, limitations, karma, and boundaries. Lo Galluccio explores these aspects of the human condition in Sarasota VII,, noting: "with every death we're given an opportunity to expand or to contract." Her finely drawn study contains great depth, revealing both simple and complex souls whose crashing hearts echo the breaking waves of the Atlantic; swelling and shrinking, drying and drowning, dying while they still go on living. Like Saturn, these people have had something crash through them, only to create a ring of debris they carry to balance their skewed axis. As in the heavens, there is much beauty and much destruction, where even light cannot escape black holes, and "nothing's pure and nothing's stable." Galluccio takes the reader on a journey from a hotel room in Florida into the expansive cosmos of the soul, revealing a woman caught up between passion and intellect, raging to be free while seeking to merge; loving, losing, dominating and submitting in her evolution to reconnect and be whole.

Karen Bowles, Luciole Press

The first public reading of "Sarasota VII" will take place September 29th at Stone Soup at the Out of the Blue Gallery on Prospect St. in Cambridge. Then on October 19th, Lo will perform with electric guitarist Ivan Korn, adding an improvised score to selections from the work and songs at the Witch City Cafe in Salem, MA.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Hot off the Presses, Stunted Inner Child Shot the TV by Mike Amado

Stunted Inner-child Shot the TV by Mike Amado
Červená Barva Press, 2008

"Crossing the intersections between media, militarization, and post-9/11 consciousness, Amado's Stunted Inner-child Shot the TV, gives us a view of the complicated relationship between society and self, consumerism and identity."
-Edward J. Carvalho (Doctoral Candidate, Indiana University of Pennsylvania and author of solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short)

"Take Mike Amado's red Morpheus pill and follow him down the rabbit hole of America's mad matrix of warped dreams, tabloid icons, chrome-eyed military men and infopreachers....His writing is elastic, vivid and wise. With a heart for an undetermined and undetermining God, Amado's revolution cannot be downloaded. It's amazing any of us make it out alive."
-Lo Galluccio

The Song


When I look out my window,
Many sights to see.
And when I look in my window,
So many different people to be
That it's strange, so strange.
You've got to pick up every stitch,
You've got to pick up every stitch,
You've got to pick up every stitch,
Mm, must be the season of the witch,
Must be the season of the witch, yeah,
Must be the season of the witch.

When I look over my shoulder,
What do you think I see ?
Some other cat looking over
His shoulder at me
And he's strange, sure he's strange.
You've got to pick up every stitch,
You've got to pick up every stitch,
Beatniks are out to make it rich,
Oh no, must be the season of the witch,
Must be the season of the witch, yeah,
Must be the season of the witch.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

New Review of Hot Rain by Ralph-Michael Chiaia


When I was a teenager, a friend of mine once said that people never talk as intimately as when they are cleaning out their ears with a q-tip. I have learned over the years that, although an adolescent made this comment, there is quite some truth in it. Hot Rain is a witty, fast-paced collection of poems that focuses on language, memories, and sound. The author is like a q-tip, and Galluccio’s going to get the wax out. Lo Galluccio, a lyricist and poet, flows between the spiritual path of abstractions into the concrete world of images that she drums up like a percussion soloist. You can hear the beat she establishes pumping through your veins. Then, when she has you in sync she craftily starts to augment and diminish, to run around in circles that examine the very act of speaking, thinking, and loving. In this way, these poems are able to make you anticipate a certain word based on the rhythm and then change course on you and surprise you with a new word, new sound, and new image—a new thought. This is the delightful gift of Lo Galluccio. She knows you’re there and she knows who she’s talking to, yet she’s decided to clean out your ears until you hear her unique, mystical incantations. She takes your hand and leaps into a transcendental world, but don’t think it’s all abstract and flimsy. The images are hard and real and the language is a code Gallucio has studied. Take a look at “1. The Come On” where Galluccio masterfully employs hard, crisp language:

Make me act.
Buy the red dress.
Wriggle—a slut
of gum—for your
hard pink.”

This is a great example of how she plays off a reader’s anticipation. I already hear “a stick of gum” in my head, but she twists the q-tip a bit and changes the words on me. The changes are refreshing and help clear your ears of all those stuffy clichés. In “Sarasota IV — Elegy for Anthony” she discusses missing her father with vivid images and cutthroat metaphors. Look at the first stanza:

I wept into granite to raise you
Did you drink? Has God
swallowed like gumdrops your oracle eyes?
Did morphine blind you like Oedipus?
When will we say our good-byes?

You see her actually dripping into the tombstone and wondering if her liquid was swallowed. These poems are real and physical. Yet they are metaphysical as well. With the sober precision of a brain surgeon, Galluccio talks about the abstract. Then, she jumps on her head, and riffs on about concrete images like a stoned jazz soloist.

She’s a studied musician who has done her homework, memorized those two thick songbooks, digested all the chord changes so her improvisations and songs are grounded and welcomed. That’s what we’ve paid for: a front row seat to see her concoct her magic. And Gallucio’s not trying to hide her tricks. In fact, she’s got her arm outstretched. In “The Witch’s Antidote to Sanity” she lets the reader in on her secret, “An artist must switch/ the landscape/ and preside over tunnels.”

Galluccio’s wonderful sense of sound and rhythm allows her to alter words and images while keeping structure and order. This means that every line is readable yet sizzles with energy. She says, “poets have thieving camera eyes/ the way seagulls are scavengers”. Galluccio is certainly a thieving camera, serving up a slideshow of unique images in a rhythmic incantation. As you read, the poems are as surprising as they are lovely—and relentlessly moving around. She’s riffing, she’s improvising, she’s hurtling across the universe.

Her style is bold and classic at the same time. She shows all the erudition of a scholar with the street smarts of a hustler. “The Witch Looks to Map” and “The Witches Antidote to Sanity” are particularly cutting edge in this regard. They force the reader to think hard about what is language, what is society, even what is to thought itself. She muses on what a YOU ARE HERE map is, an arbitrarily guide to a place someone wants you to go that exists in reality. The memorization of the map’s lines and schema is reality; this is sanity. In fact, Galluccio extrapolates, the map doesn’t really exist just like your sanity and insanity are not exactly as concrete as you may have thought. The map, the language you speak and read, the thoughts you have, Galluccio says, are all encoded. Language itself is a code, and the poet is playing with the code and showing you little glimpses of the spaces between codes, the code-cracker’s perspective. The same code in a mirror may not be what it appears to be when you look straight at it.

I allow myself to be shepherded by logistics
and don’t become the breeder of wild sheep.
The sheep of pirates, of dragons, of deep leap.

She praises codes and language. She feels all would be lost without it: “We’re non-readers tumbling through literacy/ snatching angry letters that snatch us back.” She suggests learning the codes, following them and then she adds a touch of rebellion and suggests breaking some of the rules. “The first thing an artist must do is escape.” Escape the YOU ARE HERE map. Be anywhere but HERE inside the engineer’s logistical map. Get inside and outside the code, be code-cracker, code-eater, become code-terrorist. “The way deformity is beautiful,” Gallucio says in the poem “Some things”, the broken code is gorgeous. The manipulated code is poetry. The manipulated code is here as poems in Hot Rain. It’s the words and beat drumming out this book. It’s Gallucio’s great big q-tip. Sit down. Open Hot Rain. Clean out your ears.
by Ralph-Michael Chiaia
poet & editor (http://formonksonly.blogspot.com

Friday, November 23, 2007

BACK by Hugh Fox


BACK

Going back, back back to the clouds and the
cypresses and smoke, trees, mouldering twigs
and edge-of-dusk bats, skunk-smells, wild turkeys,
everything wild, primal, before guns, torahs,
mosques, in the beginning was the sky and you
and I
evolving into the pre-buddistic-
buddhistic
everything
NOW.

Hugh Fox
from Defiance

Thursday, November 08, 2007

THE SANDBOX POEM



Prelude

In a color negative to the beginning
In a color bluer than the start
In a color reconfigured for the therapist:
a color scheme for art

THE THERAPIST REFUSES TO INTERPRET
but prefers her patients
to own the objects for themselves. Yes, it is for them to figure out.
So all I did was turn the color inside out.
All I did was turn the color inside out.

From the Dark Room:

Big-eyed dazed girl is sinking her star into the sand.
Snakes curl candy whips yin yang her.
The sheep inky black, licorice dark, a night-bred captive.
He is shrouded by the blue sand. She does not herd
Him: she too is like the black sheep.

BAA BAA BALOO.

Pie-eyed Japanese sex toy girl is dazed with snake poison.
Night falls and they surround her big dream-head.
Eyes hugely spiraled with pupils and black void.

She has buried the dreams – like particles or atoms – into the
sea-sand. SMASH. Will they explode into star-songs?

SUBMARINE. SUBCONSCIOUS LIKE THE STARFISH
With four arms SHE DREAMED HERSELF ONCE IN NEW YORK.

The lavender electric car will take her WEST to a new age OR
California road RAGE.

The cobalt blue nest is her mother’s heart and emptiness: both –
the dry straw, the perfect circle.

A battle for the past at the edges and the saddest is the fairy fallen,
her voice faded from her hostesses’ fear.
One sky blue boot hangs delicately in the air. Her wings
Maple-SYRUPY patterns
mangled. She flew on pancake saucers. She defied the grave.

A sorcerer outsees unanimities.
His cranked hand juts out of a black robe conjuring waves
of energy. Hoodoo energy. Zoom-impacted waves.
Whoosh, hoosh & sizzles, sinks, mushroom-like.

The horse, an echo of her beat, is now like chalk white, lightening
in front of the pine cone who stands for her father;

A LITTLE ICON OF SPEED NOW FROZEN IN SEA-SAND.
But best of all, and OUT OF TIME, are the turquoise stones – once the BORDER-LINE between past and present –

now pink-spotted eggs. As if to be eaten: sugary and plump.

Maybe there is a chance for the star-based big-eyed daze girl.
Maybe there is a chance of elevation for the big-eyeD Japanese sex-toy who sings.

Signs of life in the sand. Or is it just my imagination?
School teacher of non-object lesson, plant of well-being.
What’s the point but the picture?
What’s the point but to DIG IN.

Lo Galluccio

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

BLASPHEMY, A Poem from Hot Rain



BLASPHEMY

I think these diamonds are my very own teeth

spat out, admired. There isn’t enough war paint

or cake frosting to flush the twittering rages

that ballet the crossbow of my breasts.

It’s large. Large enough for a crux of rain,

for primroses and the coast of Africa. My womb’s

hot enough to cook Hansel and Gretel and the witch’s

cloak. It will house your wings.

Oh, sky. Shadows of these days cut

my looping hair against his wall. My profile’s

smoke. There’s a gleaming and the fall.

I’m a rumor and my breasts have swelled ¼ of an inch.


Tuesday, November 06, 2007

PATHS THAT CROSS by Patti Smith


Dedicated to John Allore who I left behind in Houston, TX

Speak to me
Speak to me heart
I feel a needing
to bridge the clouds
Softly go
A way I wish to know
A way I wish to know

Oh you'll ride
Surely dance
In a ring
Backwards and forwards
Those who seek
Feel the glow
A glow we all will know
A glow we all will know

On that day
Filled with grace
And the heart's communion
Steps we take
Steps we trace
Into the light of reunion

Paths that cross
will cross again
Paths that cross
will cross again

Speak to me
Speak to me shadow
I spin from the wheel
nothing at all
Save the need
the need to weave
A silk of souls
that whisper
A silk of souls
that whispers to me

Speak to me heart
all things renew
hearts will mend
round the bend
Paths that cross
cross again
will cross again

Rise up hold the reins
We'll meet I don't know when
Hold right bye bye
Paths that cross
will cross again
Paths that cross
will cross again





Monday, November 05, 2007



"A Sky So Black Where Screams Hide"
(for Sarah Hannah, 1967 - 2007)

Simply to face the daylight,
Screams need to hide
Shouldered into the furnace
Crammed in closet; plush toy with
One eye dark-adapted
Becoming that star-nosed mole
That ascertains not direction
or sky. Screams hide
Til the best of ability is disabled.
For her, they resurfaced
On paper, the ink forged by
Chaos decoding life¢s confusion,
Screams entered into words then
Slued into studious vestments
Simply to find daylight;
We find our own ways through.
Sylvia was her north star,
She navigated the night til
Her star seen, (unseen).
However bright the stars,
The sky is black

by Mike Amado

Sunday, November 04, 2007

STAND STILL


These are the blue sky days.
These are the blue sky postcard days.
These are the blue sky postcard construction site days.
These are the blue sky postcard construction site orange cone days.
These are the blue sky postcard construction site orange cone
Brooks Pharmacy SUVs I’m not driving days.
These are the Brooks Pharmacy SUVs I’m not driving Iraq war I’m not fighting
in days.
These are the American Idol days.
These are the American Idol pharmaceuticals we’re swallowing
to feel better days.
These are the pill swallowing Genome project sign days.
These are the zebra fish stem cell research days of better pills.
These are the better pill days for American Idols.
These are the zebra fish.

Monday, October 29, 2007

POETRY ON FILMS: An Essay




POETRY ON FILMS: the hours and la vie en rose
Published in the September Alewife, 2007

In my first poetry chapbook “Hot Rain” the opening poem is called Being Visited. And in it I wrote from the black vinyl couch of a NY Chelsea studio, “We film too much.” At that point, I had no TV set or VCR and little extra money to afford movies but there was something else at stake I thought, in writing that declaration. Life. I have always had a love/hate relationship with Hollywood films. Sometimes they are too manipulative for me, too gratuitously violent and I honestly think that people sell out their own emotional lives to the stars on the silver screen who’re getting paid millions of dollars to emote. And that bothers me. All our dramas should be big and deep and matter, in my ideal world anyway.

On the other hand, I’ve always also had a hard time distancing myself from films enough to just use them as distraction or pure entertainment, the way most Americans do. My boundaries get broken down and I identify too much or get too caught up in the story, forgetting that it is, in fact, an artifice. The wicked witch from the Wizard of Oz, with her hideously pea green face gave me nightmares for years, until I realized that poor Margaret Hamilton the actress had nearly died under the trapdoor she had to emerge out of in a cloud of orange sulfur smoke.

Another good example is when I took my Brooklyn Night High school students to see the film Glory, about the first black Union regiment to fight in the Civil War. They were essentially slaughtered but they died with the conviction that slavery had to be abolished and they wanted to do their part. So, there I was the Social Studies teacher in charge of the field trip weeping helplessly next to the Latino street kid who says to me, “But Miss G., it’s only a movie.” Well, it is, and then again, it isn’t. Because movies that try to depict actual historical events are meant to teach us lessons too and can be powerfully graphic tools, much more so than history books.

The point here is that poets can change their minds, like everybody else and now I’ve realized the value of great films and have a little spending money (and even a DVD player), so I’m writing poems about films as a new collaborative project. So far I’ve written two: both films about women artists-- very different in style and substance. I haven’t come near to refining this craft because it’s not so much a critique of the film I want, but a visceral account of it’s movement and issues-- something that gives some sense of how the movie impacted me.

The first piece is about the biopic just released on the life of French singer Edith Piaf, called, La Vie en Rose.” Piaf rose to fame in the 1950’s as a recording artist and concert hall singer after a nightmarish childhood and apprenticeship in rough Paris cabarets. Like many famous musicians, she became addicted to drugs and alcohol. One reason I chose this film is because I am also a singer myself. Many know her as “the sparrow” and though a petite woman, her voice could be thunderously and tremulously moving.

*************************************

Edith Piaf: La Vie en Rose

“Hold me close and hold me fastThe magic spell you cast.
This is la vie en rose.
When you kiss me heaven sighs.
And tho I close my eyesI see la vie en rose”
Louis Armstrong

Oh the dream her boxer man comes to her and sits at her
bed. She brings him coffee. She floats on love. Her voice is
low and cream. The sparrow has wings. But the boxer has crashed
over the Atlantic and the dream crumbles. The soul of the singer
is shaking her apart. Breaking her heart. The boxer man from Morocco
was her one joy. Both fighters and lovers.

She shoots dope. She dreams death. She is pale and withered--
the sparrow, named by the booking agent in the cabarets whose
father pimped her for La Marseillaise. She is France. She is the soul
of her country. Om Khartoum in Egypt. Billie Holliday in the US.
Raised by whores. Anesthetized by alcohol.

St. Teresa sees all this. St. Teresa knows Edith Piaf, the sparrow.
St. Teresa of the roses.

No matter how hard you hit me, I will sing back. I will sing
until I collapse on stage. My audience, knows Piaf, will hear my voice until
the end. Like Judy Garland -- with those arms gesturing, that body swaying,
conducting waves well beyond the lithe frame.
My voice is my teacher and she will save me in the end. I will not drown.

Then we see another sparrow -- sitting on the beach which is pale
and dry like sober champagne. Sand surrounds her and she heals as the rhythms of the waves come in. She is at peace even though it is only silence she commands. Her face is ravaged; at 40, she looks 80. Yet her eyes are the eyes of an astonished child.

She knows she too will be gone into an infinity sign, that treble
Clef of God.

Oh Teresa, where are you? In the end will the sparrow have your roses?

Gone, gone, real gone, gone beyond even the most gone.
And still her voice remains: the rose.
La vie en Rose.

*****************************
The second film for which I penned a poem is “The Hours” based on the acclaimed book by Michael Cunningham, who also wrote the novel “Specimen Days” which I highly recommend. The story follows three women living in three different eras whose lives are connected through time by Woolf’s novel, “Mrs. Dalloway.” The story of "Mrs. Dalloway," by Virginia Woolf, first appeared as a short story, "Mrs. Dalloway in Bond Street," published in 1923. The novel was published in 1925. Perhaps I chose this film because I’m a writer and suicide is an important theme for me.

As some of you may know Nicole Kidman won an Oscar for her amazing transformation (with the help of a prosthetic nose) from her bewitching blonde self to the dour moody and brilliant writer stuck in the English country-side. But it is a trio of female actresses who spin the story: Julianne Moore (“Laura”) living in LA in the 1950’with a doting but less than stimulating husband and their boy child who later becomes an award- winning poet dying of AIDS, and Meryl Streep who is for all intents and purposes, a reincarnation of Mrs. Dalloway herself, living in modern-day Manhattan. She is the one who is trying to hold everything together with social grace by throwing a party for the poet and who must come to terms with the fact that her flowers arrangements and catered food are not enough. That no, in fact, something is terribly wrong and a party won’t solve it. He will, in fact, throw himself off the window ledge and free himself from his pain. The party does not go on despite her nurturing ministrations and intense love for him.

I wrote a longer version of this poem that still needs revision and a shorter one that I will give you here, inspired partly by Irene Koronas’ work who I interviewed last month for this column:

*********************



THE HOURS, based on the book by Michael Cunningham

To live or die because of reading Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway.
Shy Laura takes her friend’s chin and passionately kisses her on the mouth. Two housewives. String of pearls. The boy looks on. He will become the tormented poet.

The meat is bloody in Richmond England. And what is this kiss? What does Virginia say to her sister?

I AM REAL I LOVE YOU. I AM CRAZY. I WILL TAKE YOU ON THE MOUTH LIKE A MAN WITH MY MOUTH. SEE WHO WE REALLY ARE? THE BREATH OF SOULS.

She walks into the river with a stone tied to her leg. The water swirls around her dress as she sinks deeper. She is leaving behind the kisses, and cigarettes, and words, and the breath.

Mrs. Dalloway must be reconciled to her own life. We give each other
flowers flowers flowers.

(Postscript: Virgina Woolf’s beloved husband Leonard made many sacrifices in order for his wife to write and be herself. Eventually, though, she committed suicide so as not to be a burden to him anymore. For me the kisses between the women are significant because it is they who are trying to find themselves, reach each other and who understand that passion is, in fact, necessary for life.)


Saturday, October 20, 2007

Horses


HORSES - published in Audience Review Vol 2, Issue 3, 2007, NYC



My friend Thomas says he doesn’t think that horses have a place in the American psyche Hmmm…. well, I don’t quite know what to say. “Dogs,” he says, “I like dogs.” “You go to Revere Beach and you see a bunch of men running around with their dogs.” “Women, girls,” I say, “I think we like horses.” And Thomas agrees. “Well, you’ve got a point there.” “My sister, my cousins… yup, they love horses….I always thought, well, they’ll grow out of it.” And I offer, “Maybe horses are a bit more, uh, majestic than dogs?” “ I mean they can be dangerous but there is that combination of beauty and speed, utility and pleasure….I mean, you know?” He still shakes his head. “Well, you can’t keep a horse at home.” “ I mean, they’re not domestic.” “Well, no I guess not,” I offer. “Unless you own a ranch.”

Secretly, I’m thinking, “Is he kidding me?” How can you even compare the sleekest greyhound to a wild Palomino? The most loyal black lab to a mustang colt? I don’t get it. Doesn’t he realize that the whole nation was in agony over Barbaro’s injured hind leg and his having to be euthanized after winning two rounds of the Derby? Is this really a gender issue? No, for God’s sake there are plenty of men who would die for their steeds…But this shouldn’t be a battle of horses vs. dogs…dogs are cool with me; it’s a matter of the horses. Horses as mythic, as thoroughbreds, as laborers, as something larger than that….

We’ve gotten together for a writing session and my bid was to write an essay on horses. My question was, really, what place do horses have in the American psyche and are they a sacred animal to us like say, cows or elephants in India? Well, Thomas likes inside things, and not outside things, I guess. But it’s interesting that a creature I consider so quintessentially American, he considers so superfluous to the landscape....


From Patti Smith’s CD Horses, “Land:”

“When suddenly Johnny gets the feeling he’s being surrounded by
horses, horses, horses, horses, horses
coming in in all directions
white shining silver studs with their nose in flames,
He saw horses, horses, horses, horses, horses, horses, horses, horses,
Do you know how to pony like bony maroney
Do you know how to twist, well it goes like this, it goes like this…”

The mesmerizing poet-saint of rock and roll. This album – and I hear the word Arabian roll through my mind like a wave – became etched in my aura before I made my first solo CD, Being Visited with multiple voices and poetry cutting in and out of band tracks. Johnny’s horses stayed with me for a long time after hearing this song. Later I would arrange the well-known spiritual “All the Pretty Horses” on my second CD, “Spell on You.” In the break I sang:

“will you have all the pretty little horses, the horses, the horses
all the Palominos, the mustang chargers, will you have all the seahorses at the bottom of the ocean?”

(It’s a song about a white child who’s mammy chides it for not sleeping, and sings that when he wakes he will have “all the pretty horses” whereas the black child lying in the field will not….a strange lullabye from slavery times. The horses symbolize the wealth of white people…I just took it out a bit farther to encompass how high and low, sky and ocean, the horses could take a child’s imagination, our imaginations….)

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Where did the first horses come from? In fact horses evolved on the North American continent for over 50 million years and the wild ones with the conquistadors….long before we were here (barring the tenure of the Native Americans) and eventually they became like our uneasy immigrants, sleek or shoddy, but some fit the backsides of Irish cops on their beats in cities, some leapt through fire in circuses, some of them were bought and bred as thoroughbreds for track racing, and then the 100’s of 1000’s served in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars, with soldiers upon them, whipped and gasping for air. They are surrounded like ourselves in dream, in ether, in heroics, and in sweat and motion, on any given day. They are, I think, our supreme objects and occasionally our mirrors, both.

Take the 1961 movie “The Misfits.” It’s the last movie Gable and Monroe ever made. The title fits both the humans and the horses of the story as they both are cast outside of society, wild misfits unable to settle into a satisfying pattern of existence, predatory and preyed upon. It’s Monroe –at the end of her marriage to Arthur Miller, drinking and hooked on pills, arriving late to the set frequently – who convinces the band of over-the-hill cowboys to free the mustangs they rustle up for the slaughterhouses for a living. One NY Times reviewer claimed that it was the only scene in the film that worked, the climax, the scuffle in the Nevada desert when Monroe hysterically “kicks up a ruckus” that pulls down their horse-trapping scheme. She is the woman in love with the wild horses; she’s the beautiful wounded tramp who’s fading fast, but who still knows a creature who should be protected from a cheap death.

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What really kicked off the idea of this essay was one day last week when two female friends of mine transmitted via internet media, episodes about horses which piqued my interest again. Both women loved horses, only one was publicizing a candle-light vigil in New York City for a carriage-horse named Smoothie who’d died after running himself into a tree. Rebecca is a fellow vocal artist and friend from New York. She’s also a political activist who loves animals and identifies with them.


“PROTESTERS DEMAND BAN ON CARRIGE HORSES” the myspace blog reads, Special to amNewYork, September 21st 2007.

“Many in the crowd stood holding candles and sheets of paper with numbers representing the identification codes of horses removed from the carriage business over the past two years, for reasons as diverse as age, injury or infirmity. Lower East Side musician Rebecca Moore stood holding a candle next to the number 3001.”

“They’re not machines,” she said as others began lighting candles, “and to expect the horses to be in such a stressful situation all day, with noise, traffic and heat, is insane.”

The piece ends with the quote:

“Horses don’t belong on the streets in the 21st Century. Smoothie didn’t have to die.”

Three or four comments in support of ending this exploitation of horses follow and Rebecca appends several petitions to the City government to end the horse and buggy industry. She doesn’t mess around. An empathic artist, I know Rebecca sees something special and beautiful in many creatures and must have bonded mystically with Smoothie, even Smoothie’s ghost. She’s just like that. And an artist knows how fast they can be seen as valuable entertainment commodities one minute and disposed of in the infirmary the next. It’s a hazardous life.

In contrast, the other e-mail came from my old grade-school friend Liz Homans’ husband who wrote that his wife’s riding horse Caspian “knocked her down, stepped on her back with full weight, flipped her, and stepped on her right arm and left leg with less than full weight.” What followed, was a detailed medical description and diagnosis of Liz’ condition. She’s a pediatrician who’s loved and ridden horses since she was a young girl. Jeff wrote at the end of the email that Liz faced a “protracted and painful recovery.” Later he would joke that of course Liz forgave Caspian but that he was on thin ice and joked that if anything else happened, he might be on his way to the glue factory. Never was there any speculation as to why Caspian might have behaved that way in his stall toward his owner that day. It should be noted that Liz and I had had no contact in more than five years but that in the 5th or 6th grade Liz developed a rare virus that put her in a coma for several months. Upon recovery through a tracheotomy maneuver and luck, she went on to medical school as a partial penance to the doctors who saved her life. She and her husband, both doctors, live in Arizona and she rides horses for pleasure.

In 2005, I was asked to review a book by the famous female poet Lyn Lifshin, a prolific poet on the independent poetry scene with over 100 titles to her credit who had penned a book about a horse named, Ruffian. It was called, “The Licorice Daughter: My Year with Ruffian” on Texas Review Press. An incredibly intense book, Lifshin bonds with this star filly and tracks her development almost from birth until she becomes a formidable racer. Lifshin writes that at a young age, she is, “a horse that seems to dance on water.” Or, a dream-like apparition as in, “Some nights I think of Her…lying quietly all night/as if she knew, for the moment,/her body was her friend/A star on her forehead/A star inside her blood/Herons in the distance/gulls. Her star/color of the floating lily/….By Saratoga, Lifshin writes, “She danced to the gate quivering with eagerness, huge and glistening/as if she’d do this as an old mare too/…”And too the hint she’d run herself to death, stagger/to the finish line on three legs”/ I wrote in my review that the fate of the super filly was prophesied before it ended, like Giselle’s possession by the willies, like ballet, almost phonetic in its precision. And Lifshin remembers that, “On Ruffian’s last day, like today, sparrows were flying through the eaves at Belmont.”

There was almost a mother-daughter bond between the two, or fan-celebrity, something that certainly transcended the ordinary.

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Like Monroe in the Misfits, or Patti Smith’s rock and roll chanting, Rebecca’s moon-lit vigil for Smoothie….Lifshin went out of her way to express a large and sustained love for horses and for this particular horse, Ruffian. Something in the blood; something riveting and deep. For all these women, horses seem to have an extremely important place in the psyche, whether as martyred beasts of burden or mythic avengers, or magic thoroughbreds that win and die tragic but brave deaths. However, just because all these horse-lovers are women, doesn’t mean that all horse lovers are women.

Take the recent case of Barbaro the race horse who fell in the Belmont Stakes when his jockey Prado was riding him. He’d won the Preakness and the Triple Crown three weeks before. The owners decided that they had to give this particular horse, a powerful colt, every chance to live, despite an injury that usually spelled death to a race horse. Most of America was caught up in the saga of whether Barbaro would actually overcome this huge obstacle, the splintering of his right rear leg. Eventually he was euthanized by his owners who spent huge amounts of money trying to keep the colt alive. A horse is usually in too much pain from losing one of its legs. We know this even from that movie title about marathon dancing made in the 1930’s, “They shoot horses, don’t they?”

So, what does this amount to? Was it a silly question to begin with? Have we come to terms with how we treat our horses when they race and get hurt, when they hurt us, when they become destructive, when we love them too much? Are they sacred to us? Or do we expect them, like most of us in America, to be part of that crazy game of survival of the fittest, of having to prove their prowess and smarts and worth? And isn’t that the societal question we all face right now about America as a competitive society? When we ask “Is racing animals cruelty?” aren’t we sort of asking the same question Michael Moore’s asking about the health insurance industry being profit driven in his latest film, Sicko? Because yes, horses like Barbaro and Ruffian might be born to run, but what about the others who are bred to race and lose anyway? Who are we to know? But maybe that’s just the way the wheel is turning and maybe it’s progress from horses being sold as dog food or used in wars.

So, yes, I think horses are to Americans something like what elephants are to Indians. We are proud to have them on our land and we are proud of their beauty and their speed and power. They symbolize something grand and deeply identifiable to us. To take ownership of a horse is a great responsibility, greater than that of a dog or cat. There is something wild and spectacular and gentle and generous about riding a horse and bonding with him/her. Sometimes they kick back. Our humanity is part of the responsibility we take on.

That’s really all I know.

Lo Galluccio
October 7, 2007


Sarah Hannah 1967-2001

STRANGE ANGELS

STRANGE ANGELS

Laurie Anderson The Dream Before (for Walter Benjamin) lyrics


"Hansel and Gretel are alive and well And they're living in Berlin She is a cocktail waitress He had a part in a Fassbinder film And they sit around at night now drinking schnapps and gin And she says: Hansel, you're really bringing me down And he says: Gretel, yu can really be a bitch He says: I've wated my life on our stupid legend When my one and only love was the wicked witch. She said: What is history? And he said: History is an angel being blown backwards into the future He said: History is a pile of debris And the angel wants to go back and fix things To repair the things that have been broken But there is a storm blowing from Paradise And the storm keeps blowing the angel backwards into the future And this storm, this storm is called Progress."

Laurie Anderson The Dream Before (for Walter Benjamin) lyrics




Tony on Sherman St.

Mary Louise Parker

Mary Louise Parker
Good Witch of "Weeds" TV

Goliath's Head

Goliath's Head
Caravaggio

MEMORIAL DAY by Lo Galluccio

I might have stood with my Mother

on Sparks Street cheering the veterans of America’s

just and unjust wars

march past,

weeping for my Dad who died

jaundiced in the infirmary of society

not on the opera bloodied battlefield.

Instead into the cold confines of

film spectacle to see young Scandinavians

wrestle with writing and go mad,

jumping into the cold cobalt sea

off Oslo piers--

Two days ago Caravaggio’s dead Madonna

in crimson cloak crossed my mind as a Reiki healer

pulled my ear lobes. The church rejected

her because she was so heavy and lifeless,

daring to lie there dead,

not asleep for ascension’s sake--

That day I left behind my watch and black wrist band.

Strange, he’d made me undress--

the badboy of the Renaissance who loved his sword

and put his head into Goliath’s -- eyes bulging

with crazed fury, held by David’s victorious angelic fist.

To be today, not to be seen, to swear allegiance

to something else.