Tuesday 30 November 2010

Whiteout

To Karina

Behind the snow, more snow piling down
Me, in my kitchen, standing at the window
I'm waiting for something to be delivered
In a big lorry, on a day like this – ridiculous
And so the day has been gifted to me

Snow is something to share – smooth
Like felt, the Christmas lights, the crisp air
I walk to the shops thinking of you
There's only one kind of butter you will eat
‘It's the old people I feel sorry for’

You would love this. I miss you so much
Too much loss and behind, another loss
Drifting from the sky. Waiting to come down
There's only one kind of butter you will eat
And only one kind of bread. I love you

Tuesday 23 November 2010

Kidderminster to Euston

Expectant lights forlornly blinking
Here, winter colours are all year round
Hope is stacked, the pub is waiting
For the Christmas tree to be unfurled

Winter slides past the Virgin train
England in corduroy – grey and brown
Horse pastures and jumbled allotments
Retail sheds and football fields

Warnings of suspicious packages
Punctuate the train's smooth progress
Through the winter fields, green and maroon
Let's hope that Christmas is a peaceful one


Wagner or Wagner?

An examination of cultural signifiers

I don't like the taste of foccaccia
Or the poetry of Boccaccio
Italian poetry is merely rude
As is texture and taste in food

My kitchen cupboards are laid bare
Of all exotic foreign fare
Instead of basil you will see
Plain white bread, and penury

Don't like Cage nor Bartok neither
Schoenberg's not my lemon squeezer
Clark's provide my favourite shoes
Pam Ayres is my Parnassan muse

If interrogated I shall
Denounce the Bayreuth Festival
Let silence fill the Viking Halls
Pasquale is my Parcifal

Tuesday 9 November 2010

Charlotte Street blues





















It's a long queue for one who is barely famous
Soho. A weekday night. A crowd snakes through the rain
Folk, some in their fifties, wait patiently for you – us

Inside, the ambience, part concert hall, part pub
Is a fitting space for your soaring Les Paul
With its intimate tables – a New Orleans club

Sweat, fear and sorrow, in the dark, gave us these songs
Danger is part of the contract we all have
The crowd, restive and drunk, wills you to go on

Scowling, as if pride was not a mortal sin
You hack through a familiar repertoire
From the Bluesbreakers, a band you were never in

A camera flashes, a snarl crosses your face
Offended you lash out – like a wounded animal
To show generosity is to be truly great

Your last song is a cliche, painted on velvet
With its lurid colours and predictable lines
Are you a blues immortal? Not really – not yet

Your face distorts to the tortured howl of your guitar
The last riff in your book of tricks – not doing an encore
I turn away puzzled. The crowd calls for more

NB: Poor chap died shortly after this poem was written, in a hotel in Spain, leaving a tiny footnote in the history of popular music. Maybe he read it? He was not a happy bunny when I saw him.

Monday 8 November 2010

Playing tennis with Martin Amis














Martin's vicious forehand slams
a yellow missile onto the baseline.
It's a rocket. Whistles like a bullet.
Two games to one. Final set.

With a faintly superior smile
he looks almost apologetic.
‘I'm afraid I won that one, again’.
He shows barely a trace of sweat.

My people wrapped butter for his.
There is a certain look to their mouth.
We pressed their cricket whites
ran their baths, polished their brogues.

Their superiority is in-bred:
part of the order of things
like Martin's forehand lob.
We died for them in our droves.

Prep school, Oxford, the coxless fours
and now this. A minor victory
on the municipal courts.
He is about to take me apart.

He crouches at the quivering net.
He'll be modest in victory, of course
smile and offer a limp fist.
Shame I had such a bad start.

Thursday 4 November 2010

The King and Castle, Kidderminster

Old men slouch in the drab gentility
Of the nostalgic railway waiting room
With its Thirties posters and station clock
Rustling their pages, merely keeping warm.

A Midlands town on the edge of nowhere –
Bricks baked from the earth, in ochre roads
The skeletons of mills, an oily canal.
Clouds slide across the pewter sky like shrouds.

In a curious archaeology
Their memories are reflected in here –
A world of rock cakes and steaming tea urns
When cigarette smoke fogged the atmosphere.

There were no poncy trades. People made things.
The ghostly men drink their beer, patiently.
My eyes stray from the oxblood walls. Outside
Two white gulls drift over the rooftops.