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Tag: Seamus Heaney

Sunday, September 15th

back to church

Heavenly Gospel Singers, “Jesus Traveled On This Road Before”
Live, St. James Missionary Baptist Church, Canton, Miss., 1978

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lagniappe

reading table: more of Seamus Heaney

Reading (New York), 2011


***

Funeral (Dublin), September 2, 2013

Tuesday, September 3rd

alone

Jürg Frey (1953-), A Memory of Perfection (2010)
Mira Benjamin (violin), live, London, 2013


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lagniappe

reading table

Two more words from Seamus Heaney, who died Friday in a Dublin hospital:

noli timere
[don’t be afraid]

—text message to his wife minutes before his death

Sunday, September 1st

If I were to compile a short list, numbering, say, six or seven, of folks I wish I could’ve heard live, this guy, whom I’ve been listening to for over forty years, would be on it.

Blind Willie Johnson (1897-1945), singer, guitarist

“God Don’t Never Change” (New Orleans, 1929)

*****

“It’s Nobody’s Fault But Mine” (Dallas, 1927)

*****

“Jesus Make Up My Dying Bed” (Dallas, 1927)

*****

“John The Revelator” (Atlanta, 1929; with Willie B. Harris, his wife)

*****

“The Rain Don’t Fall On Me” (Atlanta, 1929; with WBH)

*****

“Dark Was the Night, Cold Was the Ground” (Dallas, 1927)

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lagniappe

reading table

Seamus Heaney (April 13, 1939-August 30, 2013), “The Given Note,” Paris, 2013

***

On the most westerly Blasket
In a dry-stone hut
He got this air out of the night.

Strange noises were heard
By others who followed, bits of a tune
Coming in on loud weather

Though nothing like melody.
He blamed their fingers and ear
As unpractised, their fiddling easy

For he had gone alone into the island
And brought back the whole thing.
The house throbbed like his full violin.

So whether he calls it spirit music
Or not, I don’t care. He took it
Out of wind off mid-Atlantic.

Still he maintains, from nowhere.
It comes off the bow gravely,
Rephrases itself into the air.

*****

Last October, with my son Alex, I heard him read at the Art Institute of Chicago. Nobel Prize winner, Professor of Poetry at Oxford, Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard—none of that was on display. He seemed not the least self-impressed, nor even much interested in himself. What interested him, it was clear, was language. With each poem, he seemed to be saying: “Come in, sit down. Let’s listen, together.”

Saturday, August 31st

For over thirty years he’s been taking me places no one else does.

Henry Threadgill’s Zooid, live, New York, 2013

#1

#2

*****

It’s not just notes on a page. Threadgill really reaches out and grabs you by the lapels. Someone else described it to me as ‘every time Threadgill enters, it’s like the curtains just parted.’ He has this way of cutting right through the texture of the music.

—pianist Vijay Iyer

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lagniappe

reading table: passings

Between my fingers and my thumb
The squat pen rests; snug as a gun.

—Seamus Heaney (April 13, 1939-August 30, 2013), “Digging” (excerpt)

Friday, 10/19/12

only rock ’n’ roll

The Ex & Brass Unbound,* live, Dublin, 2010

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lagniappe

last night

He read at the Art Institute of Chicago, where I sat rapt and happy.

Seamus Heaney, “Postscript,” Dublin, 2011

*****

*Mats Gustafsson (baritone saxophone), Ken Vandermark (tenor saxophone), Wolter Wierbos (trombone), Roy Paci (trumpet).