Sunday, September 20, 2009

Jim Carroll on Reading Raymond Chandler: Issa's Sunday Service, #21







Sadly, today's edition of Issa's Sunday Service caps off a week of tribute posts for Jim Carroll. Happily, we still have his work, as long as we're alive, to turn to for solace, instruction, and enjoyment. This week's LitRock song is by the Jim Carroll Band: "Three Sisters:"

But she just wants to lay in bed all night
Reading Raymond Chandler.


I've been thinking about another of the song's featured on the blog this week, "It's Too Late." I remember Jim and the band appearing live on one of the nationally syndicated late night television shows, possibly Saturday Night Live, and performing it. He performed an alternative version of these opening lines:


It's too late
To fall in love with Sharon Tate
But it's too soon
To ask me for the words I want carved on my tomb



It's probably hard to imagine today that the reference to Sharon Tate, one the victims slaughtered by the Manson family, was powerful and shocking, but, indeed, it was, particularly in a "pop" song, one being performed before millions of people on television. Here is the alternate opening as I remember it:



It's too late
To fall in love with Sharon Tate
But it's too soon
To trace the path of the bullet in the brain of Reverend Moon




I say "as I remember it" because I can't find any reference to it anywhere. There are some live performance videos of the song from a show called Fridays, but it doesn't have the alternate reading. I wonder if anybody out there remembers that performance because those alternate lines about Reverend Moon dealt in poetic prophecy, not realized, and were every bit as shocking, if not more so, in the context of the place and time than the Tate lines.

This week's featured poem is from Lilliput Review #29, February 1992. As elegy's go, it's a fit way to close:



last will and testament
make a wind chime
from my bones,

hang it
where the poets speak.

let me be a part
of the conversation,
life.
Charlie Mehrhoff







Sumiyoshi's lamps
die out again...
autumn wind
Issa
translated by David G. Lanoue





best,
Don

PS: out 21 weeks of LitRock songs @ LitRock From Issa's Sunday Service.

4 comments:

  1. I am here
    in D.C.

    I recall that sun young moon and his very consevative Moonies arrived here in about 1980
    with loads of money from some church he founded and
    bought a newspaper The Washington Times

    however...

    Charlie M sure can write down the bones

    (check-out Natalie Goldberg's Writing down the Bones)

    good posts, DW
    spurs much productionings here...

    full moon
    reducing me
    to mere imagination

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  2. suddenly you brought back memories. "It's too late, to fall in love with Sharon Tate." I remember that song but I'd forgotten it was by Carroll. A friend of mine taped it for me years ago.

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  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  4. Ah, Ed ... I knew it would connect - Mr. Mehrhoff is special, indeed - and the Goldberg recommendation, have read and enjoyed "Writing Down the Bones", via the library have passed it on to scores of others ...

    Charles, it's one of those degrees of separation things ... bingo.

    Don

    PS One of these days I'll learn how to spell ...

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