***Poet’s Corner- Langston Hughes- Juke Box Love Song
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
February is Black History Month
Juke Box Love Song
I could
take the Harlem night
and wrap around you,
Take the neon lights and make a crown,
Take the Lenox Avenue busses,
Taxis, subways,
And for your love song tone their rumble down.
Take Harlem's heartbeat,
Make a drumbeat,
Put it on a record, let it whirl,
And while we listen to it play,
Dance with you till day--
Dance with you, my sweet brown Harlem girl.
and wrap around you,
Take the neon lights and make a crown,
Take the Lenox Avenue busses,
Taxis, subways,
And for your love song tone their rumble down.
Take Harlem's heartbeat,
Make a drumbeat,
Put it on a record, let it whirl,
And while we listen to it play,
Dance with you till day--
Dance with you, my sweet brown Harlem girl.
Langston
Hughes
He, Jimmy
Sands, new in town, new in New Jack City although, not new to city life having
lived in Baltimore, Detroit, Chi Town, Frisco and Seattle along the way decided
to hit the uptown hot spots one night. Not the “hot" hot spots like the
Kit Kat Club which was strictly for the Mayfair swells, or the Banjo Club, the
same, but the lesser clubs, the what did he mock call them, yah, “the plebeian
clubs,” which translated to him as the place where hot chicks, mostly white,
Irish usually, from the old country, all red-headed, all slim and slinky, all,
all, pray, pray, ready to give up that goddam novena book they carried around
since birth, maybe before, and live, read give in to his siren song of love,
and ditto some sassy light-skinned (high yella his father, his father who never
got beyond Kentucky-born nigra to designate the black kindred, called them)
black girls, steamy Latinas with those luscious lips and far-away brown eyes,
and foxy (foxy if he could ever understand them, or rather their wants) Asian
girls, a whole mix, a mix joined together by one thing, no, two things, one
youth, young, young and hungry, young and ready, young and, well, you know,
young and horny, and two, a love of dancing, rock and roll dancing (and in a pinch,
maybe that last dance pinch, in order to seal the evening’s deal, a slow one
but that story, that slow last dance chance has been written to death, written
to death about guys, black and white guys in their respective neighborhoods,
who not sure for some reason about the social graces would hug walls, gym walls
usually until they got older, then dance hall walls eyeing, eyeing until their
eyeballs got sore, some young thing and hoping against hope for that last
dance. Like I say that story had been written unto the shades).
So one
James Sands, taxi-driven, indicating for once in his tender young life that he
was flush with dough (having just done a seaman’s three month tour of every
odd-ball oil tanker port of call in the eastern world it seemed, he was not
sure that he would ever get that oil tank smell out of his nostrils, all he
knew was that he would have to be shanghaied or something to get him back on
one of those dirty buggers) and ready to spend it on high- shelf liquor
(already having scored some precious high end jimson, you know, weed, reefer in
case he got lucky), some multi-colored women (choices listed see above), and
some music, alighted (nice) in front of Jim Sweeney’s Hi Hat Club up around 100thStreet
just around where things began to mix and match in the city. The only problem,
when he inquired, inquired of that beautiful ganga connection, was that while
Jim Sweeney’s had plenty of high- priced, high-shelf liquor and plenty of that
mix and match bevy of women that the place had no live band for dancing just a
jukebox. But a jukebox that had every kind of song, rock and blues song, you
could ask for and the speakers were to die for. So here he was.
As Jimmy
entered (nice, no cover) he remembered back to the days in the old neighborhood,
the old high school after school scene, in dockside Baltimore, at Ginny’s Pizza
Parlor where every cool guy and gal went to have their chilling out pizza and
soda, maybe a couple of cigarettes, a habit he wished he could break even now,
and to play about ten songs on Ginny’s jukebox. He remembered too that
afternoon when Shana, long, tall, high yella (sorry but that was what such
woman were called then, maybe now too) Shana, from the cheerleaders’ squad
showed up there alone, and Shana, if you had seen her would under no
circumstances ever need to be alone in any spot in this good green earth much
less at Ginny’s.
Seems she
and her boyfriend had had a falling out and she was on the prowl. Taking his
chances Jimmy, old smooth Jimmy, asked her to dance when somebody put Chuck
Berry’s Roll Over Beethoven on, and she said, yes, did you
hear that, yes. And that dance got him a couple more, and then a couple more
after that, until Shana said she had to leave to go home for some supper and
then somebody put on Ballad of Easy Rider, a slow one by The
Byrds, and that was their last chance dance. They saw each other a few times
after that, had shared some stuff, but, hell, there was no way in that damn
Baltimore city that a white-bread (term of art used in the neighborhoods so
take no offense, none taken here) and a high yella (take offense, if you like)
could breathe the air there together, although he was ready to jump the hoops
to do the thing. Maybe tonight, maybe in the crazy mix and match night if he
didn’t get distracted by some red-headed Irish girl ready to burn that damn
novena book for some whiskey and smoke, he might find his Shana, make something
of it, and make the East River smile.
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