Saturday, February 6, 2016


Lady Day
Feb 5 2016


It’s not the beauty of her voice
it’s the imperfection.

The rasp in her throat.
How she reaches
for that sweet round note,
so achingly close
your own silently tightens
urging her on.
The minor key
she toys with.

But most of all
her restraint.
Holding back, in spite of her strength,
scatting, jazz
a capella.

Like a fast car
idling, cruising, flirting with speed
you’re keen to hear it floored,
pushed
until its smooth powerful purr
betrays the strain.
Full throttle
open road.

So when she finally lets herself go
you feel exquisite release;
spent, like urgent sex,
emptied, cleansed
complete.

You never imagined
the human voice
could contain such power.
That less is more.
Or how grateful you’d be
she takes it slow;
sings
just as she pleases.




The great singers always show restraint, hold their power in reserve. They have the confidence of an effortless voice, and understand the power of anticipation – holding back, making you wait.

I tried to write this piece without using the word “catharsis”, a word that seemed too bloodless and analytical for poetry. But it’s exactly what I was getting at.

There is also a sexual subtext here (or maybe not so “sub”!):  of sexual release; of female empowerment (especially the last 2 lines).

The only contemporary singer that immediately comes to mind (and I hardly know anything about popular music!) might be Adele. Or maybe the jazz version of Amy Winehouse. Or K.D. Lang, at her best.

But what I really had in mind were the great torch singers and their iconic interpretations of The Great American Songbook – the kind of music I love most. People like Ella Fitzgerald, Billy Holiday, Sarah Vaughn.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

I really like this poem (especially first two stanza).
Like you said in your explanatory essay it makes me thing of a female singer who has a deep voice, funny as I was reading this adele was playing in the background.