Showing posts with label popular culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label popular culture. Show all posts

Saturday, July 13, 2019

In Honor Of The 100th Anniversary Of The Founding of The Communist International-*Poet's Corner- The Work of Chile's Pablo Neruda

Click on the headline to link to a Wikipedia entry for Chilean poet and politician Pablo Neruda.

******
Chant to Bolivar

Our Father thou art in Heaven,
in water, in air
in all our silent and broad latitude
everything bears your name, Father in our dwelling:
your name raises sweetness in sugar cane
Bolivar tin has a Bolivar gleam
the Bolívar bird flies over the Bolivar volcano
the potato, the saltpeter, the special shadows,
the brooks, the phosphorous stone veins
everything comes from your extinguished life
your legacy was rivers, plains, bell towers
your legacy is our daily bread, oh Father.


From The Heights Of Maccho Picchu

Rise up to be born with me, brother.
Give me your hand from the deep
Zone seeded by your sorrow.
You won’t return from under the rocks.
You won’t return from your subterranean time.
Your hardened voice won’t return.
Your gouged-out eyes won’t return.

Look at me from the depth of the earth,
laborer, weaver, silent shepherd:
tamer of wild llamas like spirit images:
construction worker on a daring scaffold:
waterer of the tears of the Andes:
jeweler with broken fingers:
farmer trembling as you sow:
potter, poured out into your clay:
bring to the cup of this new life
your old buried sorrows.
Show me your blood and your furrow,
Tell me, “Here I was punished,
Because the jewel didn’t shine or the earth
Didn’t yield grain or stones on time.”
Show me the stone you fell over
And the wood on which they crucified you,
Make a spark from the old flints for me,
For the old lamps to show the whips still stuck
After centuries in the old wounds
And the axes shining with blood.
I come to speak for your dead mouth.
Across the earth come together all
The silent worn-out lips
And from the depth speak to me all this long night
Like I was pinned down there with you.
Tell me all, chain by chain,
Link by link and step by step,
Sharpen the knives which you hid,
Put them in my breast and in my hand,
Like a river of yellow lighting
Like a river of buried jaguars
And let me weep, hours, days, years,
For blind ages, cycles of stars.

Give me silence, water, hope.

Give me struggle, iron, volcanoes.

Stick bodies to me like magnets.

Draw near to my veins and my mouth.

Speak through my words and my blood.


La Muerta

Si de pronto no existes,
si de pronto no vives,
yo seguiré viviendo.

No me atrevo,
no me atrevo a escribirlo,
si te mueres.

Yo seguiré viviendo.

Porque donde no tiene voz un hombre
allí, mi voz.

Donde los negros sean apaleados,
yo no puedo estar muerto.
Cuando entren en la cárcel mis hermanos
entraré yo con ellos.

Cuando la victoria,
no mi victoria,
sino la gran Victoria llegue,
aunque esté mudo debo hablar:
yo la veré llegar aunque esté ciego.

No, perdóname.
Si tú no vives,
si tú, querida, amor mío, si tú
te has muerto,
todas las hojas caerán en mi pecho,
lloverá sobre mi alma noche y día,
la nieve quemará mi corazón,
andaré con frío y fuego
y muerte y nieve,
mis pies querrán marchar hacia donde tú duermes, pero seguiré vivo,
porque tú me quisiste sobre
todas las cosas indomable,
y, amor, porque tú sabes que soy no sólo un hombre
sino todos los hombres

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

*From The Archives Of "Workers Vanguard" -The "King Of Pop" Michael Jackson And Racism In America

Click on the headline to link to a "Workers Vanguard" article, dated July 31, 2009, concerning the death of pop superstar Michael Jackson in the context of the racial divide in America.

Markin comment:



I have linked this article here today to put in context the tremendous problem of racism for well-known, well-off blacks in America as well as the vast bulk of black people who suffer, anonymously, deep daily indignities under the capitalist system.

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

*Not Ready For Prime Time Class Struggle- Who Was That Man In The Orange Pants?-“Michael Jackson’s: This Is It”- A Film Review

Click on the headline to link to a "YouTube" film clip of the movie trailer for "Michael Jackson: This Is It".

DVD Review

Michael Jackson’s: This Is It, starring Michael Jackson, dancers, singers, and musicians, Columbia Pictures, 2009


I have done a fair number of musical reviews in this space from old country blues tunes to Cole Porter to Billy Holiday to Bob Dylan and so on. All either reflected my personal interests or represented a segment of, mainly, American cultural expression that I thought was important to take note of. Some groups and individuals like the Beatles, most, but not all, hip-hop, Joan Baez and others have gotten short shrift in this space not because they are not important components of the modern cultural scene but out of sheer personal preference. The late performer, Michael Jackson, with or without the Five, fit very comfortably in that niche for me. No longer though after viewing the film documentary, although performance is a better term, “”This Is It”, based on rehearsals for what was to be Michael Jackson’s last world tour.

I am not sure, and in any case it is not important to this review, whether the film footage here would have seen the light of day if Michael Jackson had not died in 2009. The core of the film is a series of rehearsals that Jackson and his cast of singers, dancers, and musicians went through in preparation for a “This Is It” last Jackson world tour that was planned to begin just after his untimely death. The concept, according to Jackson, was to give his fans one last extravagant chance to hear and see him perform his greatest hits.

Now these kinds of world tours, last ones or not, are all in a day’s work in the entertainment business. As are behind-the scenes “reality” looks at how certain cultural events are put to together. What make this film extraordinary are the fire, the imagination, and the sheer stage presence that Michael Jackson brought to the whole enterprise.

Did you read that right? This reviewer, who has spend the last forty or some years happily ignoring Michael Jackson, his music, his dancing, his off-stage antics, and his legal difficulties was totally transfixed, totally riveted by Jackson’s work here. In rehearsal, of all places. Christ, as the headline indicates, he is probably one of few men who have ever lived who did not turn into a cartoonish character while wearing orange pants during some of his numbers. Although this film also demonstrates the very deferential way in which those who worked with him treated him, which may be a key to some of his off-stage problems going back to his childhood days, and I am positive I would not want to work with him this man, as singer, dancer and stage personality comes through. This kind of personality does not pass through this earth all that often. Watch what you missed. Watch what I missed.

Sunday, February 28, 2016

*From The "HistoMat" Blog- The Latest On ......Lady Gaga

Click on the headline to link to an "HistoMat" blog entry concerning the emergence of a multi-pronged analysis on the doings, or non-doings of one Lady Gaga.


Markin comment:

Never let it be said that this blog does not entertain many seemingly contrary or even non-political scraps of information. This guest blog entry is prima facie evidence for that. I WANT to know what is up with Lady because... well because. Moreover, we communists are always interested in the popular culture scene where workers, especially young workers, and others might be found. And to finish up, the Lady may wear a little thin for my tastes but, in the final analysis, musical and other cultural tastes are very personal. And will be true in in our bright communist future as well. I'll put up my Lady Day (Billie Holiday) against Lady G. anytime though.


P.S. I find myself linking to this "HistoMat" site more and more for off-beat entries because it provides space for just these kind of sidebar cultural activities that my blog does not get a chance to address. Keep up the good work.