Sunday, August 16, 2015



Slip-Note Seasoning

Late night, relaxed with Lucky-cat; Mtn. Dew and seasoned nori stips—nori for both. Luck’ loves it. Nothing on the television—can always count on PBS…A fund raiser featuring a montage of Glen Campbell’s music career; focusing primarily on the ’68-’72 Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour. Sit back, heavy eye-lids, and relive…

In one particular segment, a duo with Ray Charles: Charles playing a country piece, resorts to that old Floyd Cramer specialty, the country piano slip-note. (Off-key notes slipped in, building [bridging back] to the key line—hey, cannot read a note of music, that’s the best explanation I can scrape together.) Those occasional bright, slip-note embellishments “color points” enliven just about any, otherwise fairly white-bread score, with ease, and without overt frosting.

Mentally reviewing the “poetry,” this old fuzzy grey-matter will recall: I begin to connect a few poems that stand out with those country slip-note piano riffs. Those verse writings with the unexpected, yet appropriately applied “color points” seem to be the most recallable—to me the most enjoyable.

“Color points:” Not necessarily spectrum based, would be written embellishments, 
not slavishly added adverbs and adjectives! sparkles that allow the piece to pop, draw it from the ordinary flat-line construction and allow it to stand a bit more enchantingly proud.
Why: ”bang” instead of “crash, throb, thwack, wallop, thunder.”
Why: “red” instead of “vermillion, rubine, cinnamon; “green” instead of “tart-apple, new, spring, leaf-green…” Note: flowers of red, yellow and blue (not only a really—really boring description, do not exist as such—except in lazy writing.) “Red, yellow and blue” are actually (“primary”) color categories; citrine, mauve, turquoise…are the descriptive touches that make a piece jump up and say howdy!
   As long as the sound, texture, smell or color descriptive is an appropriate one or applied in a metaphorically sound manner, it will succeed. Example, a color: let’s say “xanthos,” can indeed screech into ones face or cause one’s teeth to grate. “Blush” allows one to relax, use imagination.

   For another time: proper grammar. But just a short dash, here:—proper word use, usage that exhibits (see: could’ve used “shows”) a modicum of intellectual application. “Pleaded”—WTF is this! The more appropriate usage would be “pled.” Pled” has been the mainstay for centuries. Just because some stacked blond bimbo news anchor is an idiot and thinks “pleaded” is ok…don’t get sucked in. Yes, “pleaded” is colloquially used by the post-literate masses drooling along Broadway—but the key is, post-literate.
Is it then correct to use ”bleeded, treaded, feeded”? A few others: who, whom, lie, lay, laid and lain. Just a bit of introspective forethought can elevate a commonly acceptable piece without jamming it up into the avoid-at-any-cost “academic drivel” category.

Enuff for today. Write well…and I does mean, well.  Max tdc

1 comment:

  1. Daryl, appreciate the good vibes...unfortunately, lost in the electronic nowhere-land. Know you mentioned Frosters...or was that "Fosters", so I had a tall one. Now, I wanna write Aussie bush verse. "'Twas Mulga Bill, from Eaglehawk, that caught the cycling craze; He turned away the good old horse that served him many days..." Can't beat that Banjo Paterson. Max tdc

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