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Thomas Sayers Ellis
The love of sound
This past fall, poet and teacher Thomas Sayers Ellis offered
"Literary Arts and the New Black Aesthetic," a class he
designed "for black writers interested in destroying the false
boundaries between prose and poetic dictions to achieve total life
and freedom in their work." It's a bold promise, but Ellis
delivers. His first book of poems, The Maverick Room, dazzles with
its dance-beat-quick wordplay, its refusal to follow form, and the
risks it takes for the love of sound. Like many other first
collections, The Maverick Room (released last month by Graywolf
Press) covers several years of the writer's career: youthful
breakthroughs, early experiments, the emergence of a signature
voice. So sprinkled among Ellis's exciting, newer pieces are
quiet narrative poems: slow, autobiographical, polite, academic.
They aren't bad he's learning what he can from
convention, making some nice moves within the confines but
they remind me why I got bored with a lot of poetry. Ellis got bored
too. He writes in the book's climactic poem:
All their literary journals
All their car commercials
All their bribe-spiked blurbs
All their stanzas look alike
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He's matured by playing more games. Watch how fast his
double meanings move, how quickly they weave reality with music and
myth. "A Pack of Cigarettes" is a poem about
Parliament-Funkadelic leader George Clinton's early street-corner
singing group, who find their "Airplay limited / to the whole
notes / of smoke.
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.
.
/ All three lungs negro / as vinyl," who have "nowhere
to run, / after graduation, / except / the needle-patrolled, / bald
highways / between / pretty silky black / songs."
Ellis often writes about music, from doo-wop to funk to go-go
a party music born in Washington, D.C., in the 1980s that
mixes nonstop dance beats with bursts of soul, funk, jazz, and
hip-hop. He's not imitating music but writing in solidarity
with it, learning from its rhythms but also evoking its feeling,
its style, what it means to us. Consider his prose poem "Bright
Moments," his ultimate revel in words for words' sake,
beats for beats' sake. It's dedicated to the Globe Poster
Printing Corporation, whose posters for go-go shows light up
Washington, D.C., with the music's promise:
All night long all night long the Day-Glo day all night long.
Orange Blaze makes the poster glow makes the poster glow just like
the globe.
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.
.
A Day-Glo poster postering dawn. The light from the posters lasts
longer than the shows. A bridge to cross a percussive map home.
Ellis writes with such abandon that some of his wildest riffs
may be beautiful nonsense. That's okay. A mystery out of reach
is more thrilling than another plain, tame stanza so he's
reconvinced me. His poems sound so good in your head, they demand
to be read out loud. So hear Ellis read from The Maverick Room at
Shaman Drum Bookshop on Thursday, February 3.
Erick Trickey
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