From: Wanda Coleman/Los Angeles
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2008 15:21:40
-0800
From: splabman@yahoo.com
Subject: American Sonnets
To: wanda coleman
Wanda,
Good to get caught up with you yesterday. Hope the burn is healed quick. My
hoops career imperiled, but I'd be happy to run again, or ride my bike. Old age
ain't for sissies.
W:
Good talking to you Paul, as always.
On to American Sonnets. They were first published in 1994 by Light and
Dust Books in Milwaukee. These were sonnets 1-24. 26-86 were in 1998's Bath
Water Wine (Black Sparrow) and then 25 shows up, along with 87-100 in
2001's Mercurochrome (Black Sparrow.) You say there are a couple of
others scattered around. What was the initial inspiration for the American
Sonnets?
W: I'm not sure. The idea came to me when applying for an NEA grant in the early 70s. The application seemed to suggest that having a project, other than merely writing poems, was more likely to get a favorable response. Also, I had just received some negative criticism/rejection from a literary magazine in the midwest. The editor/publisher told me I was writing jazz poetry. At the time I had no idea what he meant. How was jazz poetry distinct from any other poetry. I didn't get the NEA on that go-round. I set the incidents aside; however, they apparently were at work in my deep consciousness, and a decade later the first sonnet appeared unbidden. I recognized it and they were off and running, coming at undetermined intervals. Sometime in the late 80s I reread all of Shakespeare's sonnets, sonnets by Melville and others and decided I was certainly capable of doing a series of them. All that was left was to work out my criteria.
Sonnet comes from an Italian word for little sound or song. In the era of Open
Form, the sonnet has come to be a 14 (or so) line poem which encompasses a
method of thought. Is this a sufficient definition for your sonnets? If not,
how do you define the American Sonnet?
W:
Since jazz is an open form with certain properties--progression, improvisation,
mimicry, etc., I decided that likewise the jazz sonnet would be as open as
possible, adhering only to the loosely followed dictate of number of lines. I
decided on 14 to 16 and to not exceed that, but to go absolutely bonkers within
that constraint. I also give the sonnets a jazzified rhythm structure, akin to
platter patter and/or scat and tones like certain Beat writers such as Kerouac,
Kaufman and Perkoff. I decided to have fun--to blow my soul.
I read #12 again and marvel at its ferocity. Two questions: One, you wrote that
after Robert Duncan. Do you remember how that came to happen?
W:
Thanks, Paul. I'm frequently a casual reader. That is, I'll pick up a book at
home or someplace else and casually begin reading through it in no particular
order, letting some word, poem or writer snatch my attention. If the impulse is
strong, sometimes it sets off a poem in me in response to what I've just read.
That's what happened with Duncan. It's not something I set myself to doing, it
simply happens.
Two, do you find that ferocity, when squeezed into 14 or so lines, is a key to
why these poems are so successful?
W:
Hahaha, Paul. I'm jes' fierce by nature.
Jack Kerouac likened his writing process to the spontaneous composition he
experienced watching bebop being performed. Not only are there multiple
references to Jazz artists like Billie Holiday and John Coltrane in your work,
but you are one of a handful of poets whose work IS Jazz. It has that
spontaneous freshness, though I know you have a revision process. The American
Sonnets seem to hold a ferocious kind of riff in them. Do you agree? Can you
elaborate?
W:
Well, I think I covered this above, but yeah. I often mimic the rhythms of my
subjects. I'll do a Miles Davis riff or a Holiday riff depending. Remember, I
have a background as a musician. I initially studied the piano and violin and
wanted to be a concert violinist when I grew up. (I can sight read, if not as
good as I once was. And I can still pick out a tune on the piano when it is
available.) That did not happen as a result of a brain fever (encephalitis)
around my llth birthday. I lost some motor acuity on my left. I also had voice
training and am quite a singer when in voice. I wanted to do that too, but
opted out when I felt I had nothing original to bring to that particular art.
So I have put all of my musical ambition into my writings--including the
sonnets.
Does it come spontaneously using the trope of repetition in a poem, or do you
go into the act of composing with the notion that a certain word is going to
provide a foundation (rhythmic and otherwise) such as the word Jailer
(#85) and Mayday (88)?
W:
Paul, I've haven't read these in awhile, so it is a trip checking them out. The
image of society as a prison runs throughout my work, fiction too, so it was on
my mind and came spontaneously in #85. When calling for help (I believe the
American expression mayday is after the French world for help), there is
usually a natural repetition related to urgency. I repeat it three times as I'm
won't to do--which, in my case, is adapted from listing to the ministers of my
childhood church-going days. They usually did it 3 times--like magicians
counting to three--as if there were some conjure value in the process.
What other sonnet writers resonate with you?
W:
Frankly, not many. Because strict formalists tend to allow the form to dictate
their language so that their series of sonnets become uninteresting after the
first few. It's difficult to sustain this kind of energy in the second
place. I've read some interesting contemporary collections in manuscript
form when sitting on grantsmanship panels in the past, but I don't remember who
those writers were, or whether or not their work was ever published. My title
American Sonnet seems to have inspired others, like Billy Collins, to
borrow my title for their own sonnets without giving me a nod. Gerald
Stern did a series of American Sonnets with 52 lines--too many
lines in my estimation, but a gutsy effort.
How would you give the assignment to write an American Sonnet?
W: First
I would explain my process. Then I would invite my students to try it,
overlaying their specific 1) issues (what the sonnet is about) 2) rhythms
(places and devices often have them) 3) tones (shadings of attitude)
4) musical taste/preference (rock, classical, blues, etc.)--how to develop the minimal language
to simultaneously encapsulate and signal each.
Take your time on this, Wanda. I am very grateful.
W:
Gotta run. The demons are stirring....hahaha.
Paul
Paul E. Nelson
Global Voices Radio
SPLAB!
American Sentences
Organic Poetry
Poetry Postcard Blog
Ilalqo, WA 253.735.6328
Read #12 and 17 from American Sonnets, 26, 51, and 85 from Bathwater Wine, 88 and 96 from Mercurochrome.