“Let’s get lost, let them send out alarms
And though they’ll think us rather rude
Let’s tell the world we’re in that crazy mood.”
–Chet Baker
I put out the photograph—a Jewish Chet Baker,
hair slicked up in a pompadour;
stone gray eyes, a soul patch like Dizzy’s,
to protect your precious embouchure.
You lean on the fender of that Buick Invicta
with the overdrive and the dynaflow transmission.
My mother, said you had bedroom eyes
and a cat-that-ate-the-canary smile.
let’s go for a ride, Sheyna.
Let’s get lost.
Where do I put your perfect pitch,
the photo Tony Bennett autographed–
To the best horn player in Philly.
I’ll hang your hip fedora with the feather in the band
and your pork pie hat on this music stand.
I’ll skip the food; you never were much of an eater.
Where do I put the reds and whites
the uppers, downers and all arounders,
the theme-song of the man with the golden arm
your custom-made Benge that Aunt Katie Rose
the Fishtown beauty from Kensingtown
bent over your head, and where do I put
whatever else it was that took you out of the life?
Where do I put the punch-clock job you took
with the City Department of Weights and Measures;
your heart attack, those last years, greasing the skids
in No Man’s Land, you called it, watching daytime TV.
I wind up your old metronome and play
the thick seventy eight– your solo at nineteen,
on “The Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company C,”
The Andrews Sisters and the Glen Miller Band.
Then some bebop, Miles Davis, Clifford Brown.
The metronome ticks a hundred and twenty beats a minute,
sixteenth notes flying all over the room
at twice the normal rate of a human heart,
the sound of your fist beating on the door that night
when you staggered through the house
into the bathroom crying, Sheyna, Sheyna
and then the drop of dead weight.
My father cursed and put you on the couch.
My mother grabbed the pills from your trumpet case
while the sirens moaned to a stop outside.
The red and white lights flashed in the dark
and the neighbors came out to watch.
If the smoke from my yarzeit candle could curl back in time,
I’d find that Buick Invicta and drive it back to the sixties,
park it with the motor running outside your house.
Let’s go for a ride Uncle Joe.
We’d drive straight through, coast to coast,
scat singing to Bob Wills’ okey padokey Texas swing
and drink bad coffee from styrofoam cups.
We’d come into L.A. through palm tree corridors,
The sway of second winds and start-over dreams.
When the sun went down we’d head for Central Avenue
and I’d drop you at The Club Alabam with Charlie Mingus,
Buddy Collette, and their west coast sound.
Your embouchure will come back in no time.
But truth be told, you didn’t have it in you.
You would wish me well,
kiss me on the lips the way men in our family do.
I’d take you to the after- hours club across the river
where the hipster skeletons lean at the bar,
close their eyes, sitting in, laying out,
snapping their fingers, bone against bone.
Let’s Get Lost.
you flutter the keys of your trumpet,
blow in the mouthpiece to clear the valves,
close your eyes, count out the bars
jump into the circle of fifths,
and take your solo again.
_______________________
embouchure: the lip strength of a trumpet player
Yarzeit Candle: candle lit on the yearly anniversary of a Jewish death.