美国国家公共电台 NPR 'Like A Jazz Musician': Past Poet Laureate Philip Levine's Posthumous LP(在线收听

 

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Since the age of Homer, poetry has been performed with music. Jazz and poetry have been paired up frequently ever since the beat poets and the beboppers got together in the 1950s. A new addition to that canon features Pulitzer Prize-winning poet laureate Philip Levine. The album was recorded shortly before his death three years ago. It was released last week. Tom Vitale has the story.

TOM VITALE, BYLINE: In 2004, Philip Levine told me he discovered jazz on the radio when he was a teenager.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)

PHILIP LEVINE: Like any young person, I wanted to find an art form that the older people in my family would reject, naturally. I had found T.S. Eliot in poetry. God, what kind of garbage is this, you know? And I heard jazz - rhythmic, driving. And it was very exciting.

(SOUNDBITE OF BENJAMIN BOONE AND PHILIP LEVINE SONG, "GIN")

VITALE: Levine remained a fan the rest of his life. In 2012, when he was teaching at California State University, Fresno, Levine read his poetry accompanied by a band led by a fellow faculty member, saxophonist Benjamin Boone.

BENJAMIN BOONE: And it was absolute magic. It was like he was a member of the band. It was like he knew exactly what to do like a jazz musician.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GIN")

LEVINE: (Reading) Gin.

VITALE: On and off over the next three years, Levine and Boone went into a studio to record.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GIN")

LEVINE: (Reading) The first time I drank gin, I thought it must be hair tonic. My brother swiped the bottle from a guy whose father owned a drug store that sold booze in those ancient honorable days when we acknowledged that stuff was a drug.

VITALE: The sessions have finally been released as "The Poetry Of Jazz." The first track is a poem about adolescence called "Gin." Boone just composed the head or opening melody and let the band freely improvise the rest as the poet read along with them in the studio.

BOONE: What I love about "Gin" is that in those free areas you'll hear the musicians commenting on the lines of Philip's poetry. And it gets at the inner core of what he's trying to express about awkwardness but with compassion and humor.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GIN")

LEVINE: (Reading) Maybe the bliss that came with drinking came only after a certain period of apprenticeship. Eddie likened it to the holy man's self-flagellation to experience the fullness of faith. He was very well-read for a kid of 14 in the public schools.

VITALE: Boone created unique settings for each of the 14 poems on the album. The 54-year-old composer is a Fulbright scholar now teaching at the University of Ghana. He grew up in small-town North Carolina. Poet Philip Levine came from industrial Detroit, whose culture and airwaves provided the rhythms for his poetry.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

LEVINE: And mainly I got them from preaching. Detroit at the time was probably half Southern. And every Sunday morning, you could turn on these guys, both white and black, and they would belt out language like I never heard. I loved it.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "THEY FEED THEY LION")

LEVINE: (Reading) Earth is eating trees, fence posts, gutted cars. Earth is calling in her little ones. Come home. Come home. From pig balls, from the ferocity of pig driven to holiness, from the furred ear and the full jowl come the repose of the hung belly. From the purpose they lion grow.

VITALE: One of Levine's best-known poems, "They Feed They Lion," was written in the aftermath of the Detroit riots of 1967. Benjamin Boone says Levine told him to compose the music as a call and response between the poet and the band.

BOONE: And it took me a while to digest all of the rage. The seething rage is trapped, and then it finally erupts at the end. And it's about race relations. And what can be more timely? He said he wanted to be more like a preacher when he did it. He wanted it to be angry.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "THEY FEED THEY LION")

LEVINE: (Reading) From my five arms and all my hands, from all my white sins forgiven, they feed. From my car passing under the stars, they lion. From my children inherit, from the oak turned to a wall, they lion. From they sack and they belly opened and all that was hidden burning on the oil-stained earth, they feed they lion. And he comes.

VITALE: Philip Levine was 84 years old when he started collaborating with Benjamin Boone. Boone says the sessions could be taxing.

BOONE: He would say, you know, the last session really wore me out. I'm sorry I was so tired. But man, you could not see it in the studio. When he got in the studio, it was almost like a kid in a candy shop. He was so energetic. And he loved every minute of it.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "A DOZEN DAWN SONGS, PLUS ONE")

LEVINE: (Reading) 8 a.m. and we punch out and leave the place to our betters, the day shift jokers who think they're in for fun. It's still Monday 2,000 miles and 50 years later. And at my back, I always hear Chevy gear and axle grinding the night shift workers into antiquity.

VITALE: In 2004, Philip Levine said what makes a poem a good poem is fresh language and authentic imagery along with something else.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)

LEVINE: If it has those two things and then musically it's interesting as a piece of rhythmic language, I'm going. I'm hooked. And I'm off to the races.

VITALE: Philip Levine finished recording "The Poetry Of Jazz" with Benjamin Boone one year before the poet died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 87. For NPR News, I'm Tom Vitale in New York.

(SOUNDBITE OF BENJAMIN BOONE SONG, "A DOZEN DAWN SONGS, PLUS ONE")

  原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2018/3/427274.html