College Musicians of Bremen – Four
Stages of Life
I. Preppies
“I Love You, AB Baby!” (anonymous
note in a high school yearbook) ~
The name that he gave her was not shared with nubes
who could blast out a march through a
maze of brass tubes
but was whispered (discreetly, at
each friend’s demand)
by a senior horn player whose shared
music stand
had a freshman, an angel, divine for
sight reading—
for hands-on performance, just what
he was needing—
and knead her he did; he’s not one of
the rubes.
Her nickname soon spread: “AB” (for
“Angel Boobs”)
II. Undergrads
The Grad Ass’s Magic Wand ~
Performer and player,
a never naysayer
in highest demand,
his baton near at hand
many hands freely waved
and the players all raved
at its length, clear direction,
and firm resurrection
(when one piece would end
it would quickly crescend-
“Oh, my goodness! It’s Baaack!”)
to help keep them on track
in duets or ensembles
in spite of the wambles
from tireless motions
of turbulent oceans
of bodies in sway
while their instruments play—
every tune in conjunction
with its unique function—
sweet musical magic
where nothing is tragic
except for the ending
when all have stopped lending
their parts to each other,
fulfilling each druther.
Some soloists, too
(mostly those who are new),
play duets sans regrets
sharing all their assets,
but from solo to group
many need to recoup
a fresh sense of belonging,
the comforts of thronging,
and so his baton
could come down quite hard on
those who need redirection
from slight imperfection.
This called for a mentor
(the best is a centaur—
a strong thoroughbred
with a powerful head)
and in private domains
where it longtime remains
in that warm practice room
it seems right to assume
that the lesson’s collected—
but not unexpected,
though often constrained
it’s not always contained,
hence some lessons might last
till gestation has passed.
III. As Time Goes By
A Fool’s Musical Follies ~
Though the gentleman played his finale,
believing the lady was jolly,
she shouted, “By golly,
to you, this is folly.
I’m still in the coda—
you owe me my quota!”
Meanwhile, his iota
approached South Dakota,
considering one final volley.
IV. Oxygenarians
The Ancient Musician - Stoned Sober ~
The neck of the bottle held tight
(I think I had too much that night
from a large Captain Morgan),
I turned to my gorgon
and let my muse pour out her spite:
She said, “He’s a jealous old fool,
but denying him just isn’t cool!
The girth of his grip
as he guzzles each sip
is the size of the guys
who once savored your prize,
whom you’d grab by the slab
imitating Queen Mab
when you’d tease ’em and seize ’em
and squeeze ’em to please ’em.
In spite of the flair
or your smooth savoir faire,
you’d play each hornpipe
like a French guttersnipe;
you’d lick ’em and stick ’em
or smoke ’em and poke ’em
or suck ’em and tuck ’em—
but then you would chuck ’em,
because they were only a tool
when you were musicians in school.”
Mydusa’s snakes glared in delight.
My muse and me? Stoned one more
night.
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