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Between the Night and Its Music

New and Selected Poems

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A. B. Spellman is an acclaimed American poet, music critic, and arts administrator. He is widely recognized as a leading figure in the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and 1970s, a cultural and literary movement that emphasized Black identity, pride, and artistic expression. Between the Night and Its Music brings together A. B. Spellman's early work with a collection of powerful new poems. Spellman's literary career took flight in 1965 with his debut poetry collection, The Beautiful Days, which introduced his distinctive voice blending elements of jazz, blues, and African oral traditions. In 1966, Four Lives in the Bebop Business established Spellman as a respected music critic and scholar. It was a groundbreaking work that chronicled the lives and struggles of four influential jazz musicians. Spellman held senior positions at the National Endowment for the Arts for thirty years with lasting impact on arts funding for inner cities and rural and tribal communities. In addition to poems from The Beautiful Days (1965) and Things I Must Have Known (2008), this book contains a trove of new and uncollected poems, confirming Spellman's continued centrality to contemporary American literature. This is an essential volume for readers already familiar with Spellman, and an excellent introduction for new readers. Lauri Scheyer's introduction situates Spellman's work within jazz writing, Black Arts, and American poetry broadly.

[sample text]

THE TWIST

a dancer's world
is walls, movement
confined: music

god's last breath.
rhythm: the last beating
of his heart. a dancer

follows that sound, blind
to its source, toward walls
with others. she cannot dance alone

she thinks of thought
as windows, as ice around the dance
can you break it? move

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    • Library Journal

      Starred review from September 20, 2024

      Indefatigably edited by scholar Scheyer, this eye-opening volume reintroduces Black American poet Spellman, author of 1965's The Beautiful Days and 2008's Things I Must Have Known; in between, he turned to arts advocacy for underserved communities, working with the National Endowments of the Arts. Selections from both books appear along with a fistful of uncollected poems: ambitious new work written since 2008 makes up nearly half the book. Throughout, Spellman meditates on being in the world ("you there spinning/ in the vortex between thinking & / feeling & living"), Black heritage and racism; and the arts; a formidable jazz critic, he revisits music (on John Coltrane, "may he have new life like the fall / fallen tree, wet moist rotten enough/ to see shoots") as well as writing and painting (a magisterial series on Van Gogh includes the wondrous line "that the beginning is the resolution every time"). Though sometimes syntactically fractured, these poems are never overloaded; word choice is so precise that readers live in the poet's mind as he writes. It's not scene but thought painting ("she thinks of thought / as windows, as ice around the dance"). VERDICT Highly recommended; readers unfamiliar with Spellman will wonder how they missed his work.--Barbara Hoffert

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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