Sunday, May 18, 2025

News and Ideas Worth Sharing

HomeArts & EntertainmentPOEM: Days of...

POEM: Days of Awe

A poem for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, that begins today at sunset, initiating ten days of spiritual self-examination. L'Shanah Tovah.
Days of Awe

for LJF

The drapes hung heavy from the corner of the ceiling

fluting down onto the floor — a small tide suspended in time —

The pitchy velvet hazed with age keeps secrets, remembered

and forgotten, in its folds. Keeps chards of music, chatter,

longing days and passionate nights. Keeps cherished lies

and wordless prayers, keeps the downbeats of hearts,

keeps laughter, lost blessings, desires and defeat.

The book is open. This is my offering, what I can bring,

what I know and can’t remember. The all of the

irreconcilable me, not the ‘to be better/do better’ me.

Just the one and only ‘love better’ me.

The window is opened. I wait for the swell

of Your wind to meet my weave and webbing,

my essence and grain. I wait for the drapes to stir.

— B. Fox-Martin

spot_img

The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.

Continue reading

MAHLER FESTIVAL: First day, First Symphony

I came to Amsterdam to listen to all of Gustav Mahler’s 10 symphonies by some of the world’s greatest orchestras, one each day, consecutively, and his ‘Song of the Earth’, but especially the four movements that comprise his First Symphony.

CONCERT REVIEW: An airy spirit comes to Earth, with flutes, at Tanglewood

While audiences come to concerts expecting to hear a selected menu of scores played as written by (frequently) absent composers, here we were confronted with a totally integrated experience of instrumental and vocal sound, many spontaneously created, as well as lights, body movement, and theater.

THEATER REVIEW: ‘Ragtime’ plays at Goodspeed Musicals through June 15

This is one piece of theater no one should ever miss, and this production is about as good as it will ever get.

The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.