Arts for the 21st Century

Mountain

He said to me, “You’re a poet. 
Make these days brighter. 
Turn the world into glass. Give us 
your seer’s eyes to see the red 
bougainvillea flower again, the green
of palm trees under grey, volcanic ash
that for all its birthing from fury and fire, 
reminds us of what we will become. 

Call out your Muse. Now. That ancient figure 
who claims to span the earth and sky 
all times and seasons, 
so she may counsel and inspire.”
 
And so, under the stained-glass windows 
of The St. Michael’s Cathedral, 
an Easter Sunday, 
while the pipe organ stands in awed silence,
The Nicholas Brancker Band
is a study in plasticity:
hands bodies in motion 
in fusion
steel-pan piano 
violin guitar 
trumpet trombone
drum
    saxophone

Beethoven’s Für Elise romps 
with Kitchener’s Pan in A Minor,
Beautiful, Beautiful Barbados glides 
through Bach’s Prelude in C, 

A grandmother hums
under Brancker’s bass guitar:
    The King of Love My Shepherd is, 
    Whose goodness faileth never. 

And our Mahalia sings us, reggae-style,
over another mountain:

        we’ll walk it out 
    a thousand times 
        if need be—
    we’ll walk it out.



Final stanza a reflection of the song Rise Up by Andra Day