New Day Jazz

Justin Desmangles

John

Coltrane

(September 23, 1926–July 17, 1967)

Dear John, Dear Coltrane

a love supreme, a love supreme
a love supreme, a love supreme

Sex fingers toes
in the marketplace
near your father's church
in Hamlet, North Carolina—
witness to this love
in this calm fallow
of these minds,
there is no substitute for pain:   
genitals gone or going,
seed burned out,
you tuck the roots in the earth,   
turn back, and move
by river through the swamps,
singing: a love supreme, a love supreme;
what does it all mean?
Loss, so great each black
woman expects your failure
in mute change, the seed gone.
You plod up into the electric city—
your song now crystal and   
the blues. You pick up the horn   
with some will and blow
into the freezing night:
a love supreme, a love supreme—

Dawn comes and you cook   
up the thick sin 'tween   
impotence and death, fuel
the tenor sax cannibal
heart, genitals, and sweat
that makes you clean—
a love supreme, a love supreme—

Why you so black?
cause I am
why you so funky?
cause I am
why you so black?
cause I am
why you so sweet?
cause I am
why you so black?
cause I am
a love supreme, a love supreme:
 
So sick
you couldn't play Naima,
so flat we ached
for song you'd concealed
with your own blood,
your diseased liver gave
out its purity,
the inflated heart
pumps out, the tenor kiss,
tenor love:
a love supreme, a love supreme—
a love supreme, a love supreme—
 
 
Michael S. Harper

 

Genre

Jazz

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Sunday 9/25/2011 @ 3:00PM - 6:00PM
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