Showing posts with label Holder on Pines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holder on Pines. Show all posts

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Taxidancing by Paul Pines



Taxidancing Paul Pines ( Ikon 151 First Ave N.Y., N.Y 1003) $13 ikoninc@aol.com



What a background for a poet. Paul Pines grew up in Brooklyn, and spent time in the Lower East Side of NYC. He tended bar, drove a cab, shipped out as a merchant seaman, and opened his own jazz club in the Bowery: “The Tin Palace” in 1970. He is now a practicing psychotherapist in upstate New York. So this ain’t your usual MFA-trained bard, but certainly one who has been well-schooled. This poetry collection "Taxidancing,", admirably illustrated by Wayne Atherton, is divided into two parts: “After Hours” that deals with Pines life during his stint in the Lower East Side; his cabbie, and jazz club owner days. The other “Bits and Pieces” has a more spiritual context to it.


I was most interested in “:After Hours” having grown up in the New York City area, and passing some time in the environs that Pines did. In this compelling portrait of a jazz man as a cokehead , “Cocaine Cadenza,’ Pines “nosedives “ into the face of “Bradley” after he has finished a set:


“After Bradley
finishes his last set
I see his nose
has become
pitted
as a moon rock
a terrain on which
bulges grow from
other bulges
like Black Forest
mushrooms
a huge sponge
with a
starboard
list
a creature
that has started
to drift
leaving
a small
abyss
in the middle
of his face.”


And Pines ode to the mad genius Be-Bop pianist Thelonious Monk :“Monk’s Dream,” captures the between-the-notes brilliance of this enigmatic artist: “Twisting the symphony/ as Ives did/.… A single note implied/ between the keys/ a note we can’t hear/ no less/ look at/ call white/or black…”


Hughly Recommended
Doug Holder/Ibbetson Update/ May 2007/ Somerville, Mass.