
While the blog covers improvised music, I am keen to acknowledge poets, writers and artists that reference Jazz. I will add posts from time to time about, Jazz literature, Jazz photography, Jazz poetry and Jazz film.
On the Home page read a review of Komeda: a Private Life In Jazz and Tomasz Stanko: an autobiography
Jazz and spoken word poetry have been inextricably linked since the famous African-American poet Langston Hughes recorded ‘Weary Man Blues’ in 1926. The best known example is ‘On The Road’ by Jack Kerouac. Kerouac was so taken with the rhythms of Bebop that he adjusted his prose style and poems to capture the frenetic rhytms of mid twentieth century Jazz (the raw beat of the streets). You can hear it when Kerouac recites his own prose. He later recorded his poems and prose accompanied by Jazz musicians, including Zoot Sims, Al Cohn and Steve Allan.
Another Beat Poet Alan Ginsburg wrote this in his ‘Footnote to Howl’;
“Holy the groaning saxophone! Holy the bop apocalypse! Holy the jazzbands marijuana hipsters peace…..”
A favourite poet of mine is Bob Kaufman (another San Franciscan). He was the most Jazz focussed of all the Beat poets and like Kerouac wrote the idioms of Jazz into poems. He would frequently walk into bars and jazz clubs and perform his poems. Whether they were famous musicians like Charles Lloyd or little known back street players mattered little. He saw himself as an improvisor and often composed his poems just before reading them and then threw them in the trash afterwards. They only survive because his wife and friends would retrieve them. He was arrested over 90 times during his lifetime and 56 of the arrests were for reciting poetry in the street. He was even the cause a poetry riot outside City Lights Books when his fellow Beat poets held a poetry-reading street protest after his latest beating by the police, blocking the main thoroughfare until the riot squad turned up. After a while he ceased all idle chatter, only communicating through poetry. He has been belatedly recognised as a major mid twentieth century west coast poet.
A poem that uses Jazz as a theme can co-opt a tune or the merest hint of a tune. It can be blunt or as funny as hell. Modern American Poet, Laureate Billy Collins wrote ‘ I chop some parsley while listening to Art Blakey’s Version of Three Blind Mice’ – From ‘Taking Off Emily Dickens Clothes’. My good friend Iain Sharp wrote a terrific poem called ‘Chet Bakers teeth‘ – published in a collection titled – ‘The Singing Harp’. Both highly recommended for their humour and the insights which lurk beneath the words.
I have an anthology of my own jazz-referencing verse out.
Jazz can be co-opted by a poem, a painting, a piece of sculpture, a photograph or an essay. It is a mirror held up to the human condition. Behind the pretty or discordant tunes, there is humour, allusion and compassion. These are slippery notes, falling off the edge of reason and then mysteriously landing on their feet again, honest in-the-moment stories searching for a receptive audience with ears open.
John Fenton – JazzLocal32.com. and johnfentonpoetry.com
#You may quote freely from this blog, but please acknowledge the source and respect my intellectual property
Member of JJA (Jazz Journalists Association)
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Posted for all who love Bob Kaufman
Walking Parker Home
Sweet beats of Jazz impaled on slivers of wind / Kansas black morning/ First Horn Eyes/ Historical sound pictures on New Birdwings / People shouts/ Boy alto dreams/ Tomorrows / Gold bellied pipe of stops and future Blues Times / Lurking Hawkins/ shadows of Lester/realisation / Bronze fingers-brain extensions seeking trapped sounds / Ghetto thoughts/bandstand courage/solo flight / Nerve-wracked suspicions of newer songs and doubts / New York altar city/black tears/secret disciples Hammer horn pounding soul marks on unswerving gates / Culture gods/mob sounds/ visions of spikes /Panic excursions to tribal Jazz wombs and transfusions / Heroin nights of birth/and soaring/over boppy new ground / Smothered rage covering pyramids of notes spontaneously exploding /Cool revelations/shrill hopes/beauty speared on greedy ears Birdland /nights on bop mountains, windy saxophone revolutions /Daydreams of junk/and melting walls and circling vultures/ Money cancer/remembered pain/terror flights/ Death and indestructible existence / In that Jazz corner of life /wrapped in a mist of sound / His legacy, our Jazz tinted dawn / wailing his triumphs of oddly forgotten dreams / inviting the nerveless to feel once more / The fierce dying of humans consumed / In raging fires of love
Bob Kaufman (Beat poet) From ‘Solitudes Crowded with Loneliness’
Note: There is a new page of my own poetry in this blog titled ‘John Fenton poetry’








I enjoy your Jazz Poetry section. I would like to have a back link and would like you to guest blog. I feature Jazz Art and culture in everyday life. Have a look and let me know, http://jazzybeatchick.com
I have a lot more Jazz Poets to put up but doing that is hard with blogs due to the pre formatting. I might photograph the poems and then post up more pages. That is the easiest workaround. There are a few poetry referencing posts in the main page as well. The poem on Bennie Goodman, (kindly dedicated to me) by the poet Iain Sharp in particular. Thanks – John Fenton JazzLocal32.com
Amazing blog! Do you have any recommendations for aiiprsng writers? Im planning to start my own website soon but Im a little lost on everything. Would you advise starting with a free platform like WordPress or go for a paid option? There are so many choices out there that Im totally overwhelmed .. Any suggestions? Thanks a lot!
Happy to do the guest blog you suggest – my email is Jonjaz@ihug.co.nz – I could cover the influence of the beats and Jazz poetry on the New Zealand scene ? You could allow me a repost of one of yours or do likewise?
Could I have a link to your blog site Roger?
Here’s my blog link, John:
http://ausjazz.net/
Good to discover this blog, John. I’ll add it to my blogroll and make sure I drop in to catch your posts. Regards, Roger Mitchell
Hi John
I don’t have your email but want to invite you to the following
Rog
MICHEL BENEBIG WORKSHOP and house concert
MICHEL AND HIS New Caledonian organ TRIO WILL BE GIVING A FREE WORKSHOP AT
AUCKLAND UNIVERSITY
KENNITH MEYERS CENTRE
74 Shortland St, Auckland CBD
Thursday 17th Nov at 12-2 PM in Room 306 (the drum room)
Also
He will be giving an informal house concert/ BBQ at Roger and Caros place This Friday 18th (sadly though, Caro will be overseas)
20 Leonard road Mt wellington Auckland
3-6ish pm
This is open to cjc members and jazz students too ( and dedicated listeners)
Come along – bring your own food (BBQ will be running) and drink and a $5 or $10 donation for the band
Thanks
Roger
—
Roger Manins
Auckland
New Zealand
fentonline.com
Hi ! Get in contact. Stay tuned. Check out the site. John Fenton
NIce material here!
Now you’ve done it. You put me in mind to go dig up my overlong poetic experiment “Blues for Bird”, probably almost ten years old, and drag it over to my blog. I’m also working on a novel about a jazz trumpter in the late 50s who has a romance with one of the few female Beat Generation poets. Might want to trade more ideas & stories with you sometime, but for now, here’s a little blog entry on the novel project.
Use the search function for other jazz-related posts, or poetry… a handful of which owe a debt to the odd rhythms & themes of classic jazz.
This isn’t about you at all! ;-) – should be more ‘About You’?
Jazz and poetry have been used together extensively. In the 50’s San Francisco based pianists like Andre Previn (yes that one – Mia Farrow etc) worked with poets often. In Word Jazz both can improvise or not. Hear Mike Nock tracks with Jazz + Poetry (and Meehan).