Saturday, May 17, 2025

Michelle Smith

Historically Hysterical 


Chuck Berry was the 

King of Johnny B Goode

Little Richard was the architect 

of Lucille and Tutti Frutti

Race records in the forties

Smashing creations and still hated 

Segregation and racism 

Was their conscience ever disturbed?

Whites dancing to what they understood 

Blacks invented unique beats and melodies 

Foot stomping, dancing, clapping sounds,

Tutti Frutti covered by Pat Boone is a joke

He was not Blue eyed soul like the

Righteous Brothers or 

1978 Bobby Caldwell 

Emulate. Appreciate. Dedicate

Elvis swiveled his pelvis to

Jailhouse Rock on the Ed Sullivan show 

TV watchers amazed or angered

He was considered the Rock & Roll King

Absolutely not, Chuck's and Richard's 

bravado best on the guitar and piano

had audiences prior to him 

Historically they did their thing

Elvis and B B King became friends,

he enjoyed and benefited from gospel roots

and Sun records, swooning girls and sing

Guitars, Bass, Drums, Saxophones, Horns,

Teen aged Frankie Lymon 

appeared on Dick Clark's American Band

A pin drop could be heard 

As those indelible blonde and brunette girls 

faces showed mixed true face value

Did prejudice strike a nerve?

Young, gifted, and Black

belting out one of three song hits.

Did prejudice strike a nerve?

Music is an international language 

Rock and Roll is a 70+ aged genre 

birthed and created by the 

Mississippi and Louisiana Delta

Southern African Americans

Royalties and rights still for 

pennies or unpaid

And that's the cruelest and coldest word.


Patricia Murphy

Rock n' Roll


Rock n' Roll is one of my 

Favorite art forms.

It defies all others.

It's one of a kind.


My Uncle Chuck

Was a musician.

He formed

The Chuck Barbata Band.


They performed 

At various venues

In Southern California

At different times


The music

Was a little bit

Rock n' Roll.

It was loved by everyone.




Roll


It's the roll

It's the times.

A time to 

Join a band.


Or start a band

Of your own

Where you can sing

To your heart's content.


You can write

Your own songs

And perform them

Like a songstress

In the wind.


Marvinlouis Dorsey


The

Ego said

to the Muse 


Ego said 


What hap-

pened 

to his damn

arms


one of

the voices

said


hide 

that damn

shovel


Radomir Vojtech Luza

Gargoyles in the Dark


Claws of copper

Skulls of concrete


This has been the worst week of my life

Vultures cutting like knives


Rock n' roll has hives

No high fives


Beelzebub's last fight

God's might


Licorice rain at soccer game

Slippery field of pain

Goals burning like shame


Grotesque human faces

Cement spouts of doubt


Assemblage of the devil

On a bevel


Knees shaking every hour

Creatures unlike flowers


Massaging a hellish plight

Asphalt animals in the fight

Beckoning spite




Wolf at the Door


Russia on fire

Ukraine in the mire


Maybe we still stand a chance

In this insane dance


Rock n' roll at the club

Sex in the tub


Love has left us cold

While our souls are to

The highest bidder sold


Our government is but

In its own interest concerned


As the white flag is waved

Surrender paved


Mosques attacked

Churches ransacked

Synagogues a bloody fact


This purgatory

Never scratching history

As our aristocracy creates its own geometry




American Original


I was born out of Hitler's bloody disease

Stalin's scarred and shredded knees


Raised in the Deep South

Where African Americans

Hang from trees

Like gray moss


Rock n' roll the root disease

Elvis Presley on his knees

Black music his sole decree

Tears streaming down furious Tupelo face


Schooled in the finest

Catholic institutions of

Higher learning where

Hypocrisy is the game

Not Jesus' muted name


In which future doctors, lawyers and politicians

Call black people niggers without knowing why

Through battered cries

Uneven skies looking for a place to die


"Roots," the groundbreaking, Emmy Award winning television mini-series

Was scoffed at and scorned because it concerned negroes not Narcissus

Black folks not the alabaster same.


Change coming as slowly as molasses

The brown Mississippi devouring Mark Twain's glasses

Sweltering humidity and caustic reality in the Gulf South


Where art is not a whole

Football a savage weekend stroll.

A culture massaging lace and race

Like place and a lack of pace


Slavery misunderstood by brutal souls

With hearts like holes

Chains and shackles enough to murder enormous moles


And love painted by a purple, green and gold jazz band

Sashaying into the French Quarter's soul of sand

Doubloons echoing from the ground.

Like black magic, gumbo and jambalaya falling from our sounds


Beignets and coffee

Devoured at once

Mardi Gras a wild, Southern brunch

Tits, ass and alcohol on a Bourbon Street hunch

Perhaps my heart requires a Brennan's munch

 

Gia Civerolo


rock
*pomo haiku


There was only one 


thing that could ever save her soul


It was rock & roll



*pomo:  post-modern





she always loves a blues man


She always loves a blues man

Someone who could sing

Rock softly her soul

Plucking it like a heart harp string


She always loves a blues man

Someone who could write rhymes 

Time rolls through her mind

Nothing else matters


Memories

Melting

Missing

Mesmerizing


She always loves a blues man

Someone who sculpts her pain into

Pink soft petals interlocking

Barbed wire bangle bracelets


Cut so deep she 

Rises

Wriths

Rejoices

Releases 

Pure guttural

Screams


She always loves a blues man

Someone who fixes 

Her broken wings 

Fluttering, flying high

Singing sky wind


Never looking back

Again and

Again Again Again

Again

Agaiin


She always loves a blues man

So much so the next time around

She’s gonna beg God and a

Choir of Angels


To gift her with a voice 

Singing the color blue

Melodic words dripping 

Hurt Hope Happiness


Harmonizing

Ocean Sounds

For an eternity

She always loves a blues man


Again and again

Again and Again

Again

Again





ode to a band t-shirt, ironically unaccompanied by music


I am not sure what to say about my style

My wardrobe is all band t-shirts I‘ve compiled

It is not shocking to say all these decades in

It is with pride I show off all the shows that I‘ve been

 

There are some rules:

Don’t wear a shirt you bought just that night

It makes you look like a tool-no backstage invite

Reciting lyrics to their songs rocks the crowd adverse

Being seen as a bandwagoner is simply the worst

 

There is no doubt you must set an aficionado tone

You need to own at least three shirts by the Ramones

It is important to show you have expertise and attitude

Nelson (Ricky and Willie) Billie Holiday, Tina Turner, one with U2


Tell people you met Joey Ramone in head-to-toe leather black

They’ll understand you were too starstruck to say anything back

He looked like a giraffe sipping tea from a white bone China cup

Later, on stage, impressed with your dress, he did hoist you up

 

Everyone needs one with Jim Morrison looking like Jesus

A statement many would find extremely egregious

Your Catholic mother no doubt gives a look of deplore

You can’t help it—it’s all a part of the rock folklore you adore

 

There are times you wear a shirt from a band you don’t know

It only works if you pretend like you been to a show

Especially if it’s comfortable and has great silkscreened art

Mumble, sing the words, like they’re deep in your heart


Not to be considered a poser, you must have punk rock creds

Don’t tell, too many tie - dyed shirt worn while shrooming, at the Dead

You must also be sure to support local bands, then show great disdain

when people ask who they are and don’t know the drummer’s name


You can wear one if you were left behind and didn’t get to go

Still mad at your husband even though it happened a long time ago

A gargoyle on your chest and gothic letters saying “Dead Can Dance”

He instead went with his old musician friend, “No Pants” Lance


Sometimes you might have a shirt you wear with pride

Even though, truthfully, you were only there for the ride

So excited you were but got too drunk to remember

Luckily your friend got you one as a gift in December

 

There are more stories with girls, guys, guitars, and booze

From rock-a-billy, pop, swing, classic country, to the blues

If I can impart one important lesson so clearly

Please love all your band T-shirts most dearly


Mary Langer Thompson

School of Hard Rocks


Tired of being called "Sissy," Sisyphus went to the school field each morning until he found the perfect stone.  His mother blamed the teacher for getting him excited about geology when he began to roll his pebble up the playground hill.  He really had nothing better to do, and no friends, except maybe Diogenes who yelled at him to stop, but Sisyphus couldn't make out what he was saying.  Soon he became obsessed and thought everyone expected him to push his rock, so never questioned his job.  As he pushed, the pebble grew bigger and bigger until it was the size of a boulder, having gathered old homework, low grades, and bully names.  At the summit, Sisyphus released the rock.  He hoped as it rolled down, before it was time to roll it back up again, that it would squash the school and everybody in it.



 

Rock Garden


You made it for me

out of birds-eye pine,

filled it with fine sand,

then cut glass

to fit on top,  

to keep the cat out.


I collected each stone,

one from Lake Michigan

when I revisited

from the west coast.

I remembered when I first stood

on its shores.


Others are reminders

with smooth words like

Truth.

Right now its gold letters

lie partially buried near

the Apache tear

in the vociferous sand.



 

Rolling the Stone Away


Five men, a jack, and a dolly

are all it takes to lift the

monumental block of

Thou Shalt Nots, to

wheel it away.

But the moving crew is impatient.


Joseph longs to meet his mistress

at their appointed hour.

Jim wants to finish moving his mother

so someone else can care for her.

Matt needs to confirm his Sunday 

flight to Vegas.

Paul fibs that it's too heavy for 

his weak back, while David

swears at the God-awful monstrosity.


Protesters shake Bibles, scream,

"Bring it back! 

Bring it back!"


But the men have other tasks in mind,

give one last push to the granite block,

send it to a back room.

Work complete, they leave together,

step out into the punishing heat.



Friday, May 16, 2025

R A Ruadh

No rock no roll


It was spring

streams flowing in the mountains

still some snow in places

ice holding the scree solid


or so we thought


I don’t remember clearly

if I tripped on a larger rock

or caught my foot under

a shelf of frozen fragments


I fell on hands and knees


nothing solid to grab

shards of scree taking me along

classical musician doesn’t do roll

so I continued scrabbling downhill


I slid backwards


until it levelled off

sounds of rockslide behind me

falling infinitely down from where

I stopped at the edge


somehow we got to a dirt trail

my knees were wrecked

not improved by hiking down

under the influence of medicinal booze


cognac still makes my knees hurt


Edward S Gault


SCALES


I saw our marriage as a union.

According to the priest, we were as one.

One body.

Somehow, over the years,

We became a business partnership,

A set of scales.

Everything was weighed.

For some reason, 

Anything loving,

Anything kind

Fell lightly into one dish.

Anything harsh

Anything critical

Fell into the other dish 

as a stone.

That dish weighed us down.

As time went on, even the thing I said 

To give you perspective,

To help you understand how I saw things,

To raise you up,

To give you hope,

Got tossed into the dish of stones.

Finally, the chain holding the stones broke.

All those stones rolled down the hill.

Our love rolled with them.


Mark A. Fisher

watching stones


all the seasons roll across the gray rocks in my garden

winter snows and cool spring rains, summer’s heat and autumn’s leaves

flowers bloom then fade away while I watch the stones remain




rain & echoes


rain in drumbeats falling

lightning orange with distance

radio plays a forgotten song

I tap the wheel playing along

memories in amber

worn on a chain

ghosts in the headlights

dance in the streets

wipers lash the rain away

while I remember some yesterday

some old story, I’ve never told

scenes rattle in staccato hail

tomorrows that never came

melt restlessly away

as I listen to the music play

through to the end

leaving a moment of silence

where I am alone once again

profoundly unfound


Trish Saunders

ONCE, IN MANHATTAN


Deep into 23rd Street in 67, she sees thin people half-maddened with cold 

pause in the middle of cursing the weather

to gaze upon a woman even thinner than they, lugging cheap plaid 

suitcases with skinny arms, tender skinny hairless arms,

under a snow-white shirt

and flakes falling on her black pony’s mane.  

And what city doesn’t love a young artist? 

Manhattan beneath a grey sky 

and sidewalks strewn with art

everything so cheap, so right there --  

no need to steal anything

just one painting, Patti,

will get you a room at the Chelsea, 

only think of it!

a room in the hotel for a year.


Tim Tipton

Late Hours of the Night


In the late hours of the night 

I am pushing everyone away

I have all week but tonight I am brutal about it

camped in front of my favorite window without any

distractions to tempt me  

All I want is the sad music of roads lined 

with larches and skewed moon to light it

I get weird in the late hours of the night

my organism gets tricked, the lure of the fading

light cuts me to the bone with the owls testing 

the field, the nocturnal bare sky, the crisp air, and the yellow pool of city lights

My mean streak slowly fades as the late hours

of the night rolls on.



We’re All Going To die


My grandmother,

my rock-of-Gibraltar,

tells me she has lung cancer.

I asked how long do you have?

She said,

Nothing lasts forever, dear, were all going 

to die.

That doesn't sound too good to me.



Rock Star 


Hey. you over there!

Wanna be a rock 'n' roller?

Study the moves, kid, study 

James Brown singin' in tight pants

sweat oozing from every pore

Elvis swinging' his pelvis

back 'n' forth, females swooning

Get in line, kid, now

feel the beat and that heat, Pete!

Hear the crowd roaring

You're a rock 'n' roller

Everything and everyone 

thinks you are a star

Consume it and take it all

You are a rock 'n' roll star!


Terry McCarty

I REMEMBER BRIAN WILLIAMS


Turn on that supposed liberal

Cable news channel

And hear the retired General say

We can take out

Most of North Korea’s nukes

While the anchorman who

Loves war so much

He embellished a story

About being in a chopper near combat

Nods solemnly

War is the testing ground,

Anchorman thinks

 

But isn’t it a truer testing ground

To give diplomats free rein

And stop wars before they start?

 

Here we are

At yet another precipice

Barely connected to land

As pebbles roll and fall

Into a bottomless canyon




PISMO BEACH OF THE PSYCHE


I keep my phone off at the downtown diner

on a quiet evening of an offseason day

as no longer radical 1960S rock and roll songs

by The Electric Flag and Moby Grape

play their analog melodies over satellite radio

occasionally overwhelmed by skateboarding kids

slamming their wheels onto the concrete sidewalk 




ROLL THOSE UNFILTERED MEMORIES


recall every good and bad moment

the exciting and the mundane 

the triumphant and regrettable 

the friends, lovers and acquaintances here and elsewhere 


roll with all the above as you read the oncologist’s report

to discover if your blood will let you keep living at home 


Thursday, May 15, 2025

Jeffry Jensen


THE SANDMAN VAPORS


I not only want my MTV

I want my Tower Records and my Licorice Pizza

My Music Plus and all the other independent used record stores

That have all gone up in smoke

As Cheech and Chong would tell us

No need for rolling paper when I have potent gummies

Maybe it is no more than a foxtrot to the funny papers

I have Jimi going in one ear and Joni going in the other

And Sunset Blvd is honking up a time warp

My God it is Rocky Horror going bonkers on skates

The hotel lobby is turning red with Tull fanatics

Pumping up some locomotive breath

It looks like a purple haze desire has more than a half-life

I have taken to sliding around the corner of Search and Seizure

No one is going to slick down the grace

That we all need as we negotiate for somebody to love

The party took hold on every inch of Elysian Park

The cops may have held the hill

But we put our stamp on everything down below

Someone else can decide if the cure was worse than the confusion

I rattled the cage with the best of them

And kissed the sky as all the days seemed to electric

I stand by the mighty stutter of my generation

And still dream big in a realm where sandmen take no prisoners


PJ Swift

Rolling around


What's wrong with her?

She's lost all her marbles.

All of them?

Yes.  See how much she is distraught.

But what about him?

He's never had any marble at all. 

Is that a problem?

Well. Nothing but blank stare is what you'll get out of him.

And what about that fellow? The one over there.

He believes he is a marble.  Rolling around.  He is the happiest one of them all.




Keeping on a roll


The rolling thumbs roll into town and return to work.  The rolling is to generate a story.  The story is not to put Swift to sleep. But to keep Swift awake.  Sometimes that’s the best a story can do, keep one awake.  So the thumbs keep rolling and rolling, perfecting their rhythm, keeping on a roll.




Such numbers roll


That weary soul that works without end and barely sleeps and carefully controls the sparse morsels that he eats, the one who has little time to interact except for a suspicious glance, and perhaps a word of self-congratulation, masked as humility. The one who barely notices the family he has there, and abandons friends for utility, and does so effectively. The one who sweats in predawn artificial environments and will not allow a moment not to have a billable component.  That man is rich?  Who said so? And who sold their own soul to make such numbers roll?


Wyatt Underwood

Odd Nights


Odd, this next -to-last night 

Before I return,

Skillet Nursing Facility to a

Senior Living facility.

I play electronic solitaire til after midnight 

Wake and reach for my phone 

And learn it is five-thirty.

I feel rested anyway.

During the night I dreamed a former friend 

Walked up to me and slugged me in the face.

Blood splattered and I wondered why 

A voice resounded "unprepared as usual"

And l still wondered why 




a sonnet for goodbye


you drove away, I stood outside the cabin and watched

a day earlier, you arrived and jumped into my arms

we hugged and kissed and giggled

almost as if our love were new again

but after supper, we fell into the same old arguments

almost as if we couldn't help it

we said nothing new, we didn't even have new energy

we sat together with nearly a foot between us

it could have been a mile

you stayed the night, and we made love or something like it

but when we slept, you moved a foot away again

I wondered what to say, gave up and slept

this morning, we broke fast almost like strangers

I watched your car til you drove out of sight


Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Peggy Castro


I question my path

to the left loneliness 

to the right

loneliness





to relax into life

forget about the almighty Ego 

have faith you can float 

let go let go …





Do bumblebees question 

how much is too much 

drunken stupor 

or ecstasy


Robert Fleming

 












Lazslo Aranyi

 

"Too Old to Rock and Roll, Too Young to Die"

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Dean Okamura


like a Singer in a 90s alternative rock band

 

my Life used to sound 

like a 90s rock band, 

loud, chaotic, falling apart. 


we Argued over lyrics, 

stage lights and hair dye, 

how to stay real, still shine. 


thirty Years later, 

we tour with replaced hips, 

and memories that click. 


I Wore a sweatsuit 

with a walker, zoomed 

past pride, into punchlines. 


mascara On good days, 

just a soft defense from the sun, 

can't fake crazy after all those years. 


we Miss high-fives 

on purpose before shows, 

too cool to connect. 


I Keep one dress 

from 2002, still fits 

if I don't inhale. 


they Hear me smile 

when I talk, camera off, 

you can't fake crazy after all those years. 


after Shirley Manson interviewed by Zoe Williams, The Guardian (2025) 

Interview: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2025/apr/14/ive-pulled-myself-out-of-a-very-dark-abyss-garbages-shirley-manson-on-depression-sexism-dodgy-hips-and-happiness





When the body speaks

 

Some mornings 

     I awake, the body 

     beat-up, stiff, sore 

     in all their places 

     like a Biblical stoning. 


I thought sleep, 

     many hours of sleep, 

     would refresh, rebuild 

     but I feel exhausted. 

     I did not run a marathon, 

     someone ran over me. 


This adult body 

     feels like an 

     ancient, crumbled ruin 

     with all signs of 

     prior glory eroded 

     into base elements. 


My eyes 

     see sunlight. Body 

     adjusts. Roll to the side. 

     After three turns, the clock 

     tells me two hours 

     have passed — embedded. 


I got up 

     and wrote this poem. 

     Incredulous, I grinned. 

     These words squeezed out 

     blots on paper 

     surprised me that 

     their misery — missing. 


Words, 

     my body tells me, words 

     can't express. They're 

     faint, faded signal flares. 

     The body knows its 

     pain, speaks its truth. 





The shift of weight and view

 

I wobble with weak knees 

like the nuts and bolts 

of my body fell apart. 


They abandon me 

by the side of the road 

like a broken-down car. 


Somehow my engine starts 

and I roll onward 

to my next destination. 


I wish I could 

buy new sports shoes 

to fix this. 


Or some sports brace 

makes these issues 

disappear. 


After exhausting 

all aids and advice 

monsters still roar. 


Meanwhile the slow parade 

sore limbs shot muscles 

and the pain sleeps. 


Perhaps it's balance 

or just the shift 

of weight and view. 


When I walk 

hunched with a cane 

I seem steadier. 


I'm walking 

on tiptoes 

like an old toad. 





jf giraffe 🦒

SUCH A JERK (Haiku) 


Asshole president 

Steamrolling all the people 

Doesn’t give a damn 




MUSIC OF CONTEMPT (Haiku) 


Songs of the Congress 

Rocky beats and hateful notes

Tunes filled with evil




GLOBAL ANXIETY (Haiku) 


Too much world anger

Hard to roll with the punches 

Each day so rocky


Ellyn Maybe

Boat Havoc (Haiku) 


Roll Roll Roll Your Yacht

Billionaires Leave Smoky Fires

The mood is tragic




The 60's Never Imagined the 2000's (Haiku) 


Painted rocks sing love

With a tie dye tambourine

The future awaits




The World is Drowning (Haiku) 


The boat rolled ashore

Like a collective bad dream

The water oozed through


Lynn White

Beat


He was a hermit living in a cave with his cats.

He had a long strong thread made of cat gut.

The vultures had eaten the meat.

He didn’t eat cat.

He sat all day each day

playing cat’s cradle and all that jazz

until one day they’d had enough.

So they ate him up and played rock and roll

clapping their wings in time

as good as any drummers could be.



First published in Coalition, Issue 1, September 2022




I Am A Child


I am a child of the revolution

created by the wake of

fascism and imperialism,

that sought to construct 

a more just society.


I am a child numbed by poverty, 

stultified by working class conformity,

of a mother who wanted better for me,

but also wanted to keep me the same.


I am a child of these contradictions

who became a rebel 

in the cultural revolution

of the rock and roll generation.

Who was liberated by student life,

by control of fertility,

by other places, 

by the music and art 

all parents hated.


I am still that child.

This is what made me.

This is what shaped me and

became part of my present, 

became part of my future.


Sometimes I have tried to escape it.

Sometimes I still do.



First published by Ealain, My Heritage, Issue 8, May 2015




Tomorrow Never Comes


The orcas decreed 

that the dolphin’s wedding

should be delayed by a day.

Delayed till tomorrow,

if tomorrow ever came.

This would give more time, they said,

to decorate the wedding gowns,

to weave more shells into the kelp,

the tiniest of muscle shells for him

in every shade of blue,

sweet pink cockle shells for her,

sometimes veering towards red

as if warning of danger.


The music was to be rock ‘n’ roll,

played by the Killers, of course

on improvised pianos.

The octopus was responsible for

the wedding breakfast.

He had enlisted the help of every friend

to enlarge and beautify his garden.

To transport rocks with anemones attached

and bring a multitude of coloured pebbles and shells

to enclose the fishy titbits collected specially for the feast.


But in spite of their reassurances,

still he worried about the guest list.

So many orcas and dolphins

who did not have a good reputation

so far as the octopuses were concerned.

But the garden was beautiful

and surely it was a fact

that tomorrow never came.

He had always believed it.

Now time would tell.



First published in Oddball Magazine, June 2017


Jack G Bowman

 


(Cover) Love me Two Times- Doors by The Hanley Page Band- guests Andy and Jack



Soundtrack of Silver Razors


Sweat pours, ears ring, throat aches

as he leaves the stage, who knows how many more times there will be, how more invites he will receive

the feeling not that different, the music,

lead ins, notes, words

screaming catharsis of rock and blues

the last moment, taking what could be his last breath

fucking worth it!


Joe Grieco

Classic Rock


It’s like the start of a three-day weekend every time you wake up,

except you’re out of gas, the RV has a flat;

the dog is sick and the vet’s closed till Monday;

your bum knee on the fritz again so there’s nobody going for coffee.


They said retire: it gives you time to do what you always wanted.

You already did what you always wanted.

You’re paying for it.


Friends moved on to Arizona, to Texas, to Vegas.

Sure, some stayed here, pushing up California poppies,

or gone to ashes scattered out by the pier.


All of us children of Rock ‘N Roll.

As/because the music woke up when you were born, sweet and dirty.

As/because you nursed under the blanket of a backbeat.

As/because you now play the same damn songs, over and over and over,

absent casual drugs, recreational sex denied.


And you wish you still had time to spend,

to talk to somebody in the band,

about how happy you’re supposed to be,

you know, retired.


Connie Johnson

 










David Fewster




SISYPHUS' LAMENT AFTER ANOTHER YEAR

OF BEING SNUBBED BY THE HALL OF FAME


"How come

no one ever

refers to me as

The Godfather of

Rock and Roll?..."


Alex S Johnson aka "Teach" (Lemmy Kilmister)

Rock and Roll 


In Memory Of Lemmy Kilmister 1945-2015


For Ellyn Maybe, Alea Celeste Williams, Exene Cervenka, Iris Berry and Don Kingfisher Campbell 


Submerged in the

swirling waters of the

rock and roll scene, a frequent 

attendant of the 

rock and roll

Valhalla that is 

the Rainbow Bar and Grille 

on the fabulous 

Sunset Strip

the House of Blues

the Troubadour nightclub

or as a guest of 

Tequila Mockingbird

or overnight at the 

safe house of a Beverly Hills

hit man (this really happened) 

accompanied by Lemmy and Marilyn 

Manson's publicist and

Trent Reznor's girlfriend, who'd just

done a show at the 

Whiskey A Go-Go and

Copious rails of speed were

ingested, I was vibrating like a 

live power cable 

could feel the electric

current in my

Teeth as "Mikael" demonstrated

the smooth

action on a 

Police .357 

A few years later there I was

Backstage at the Nokia Theater in Los Angeles, California, the year

was 2011, I had just finished reading

the memoir Neon Angels by

Cherie Currie and was 

Standing behind 

Lemmy's Murder One as

Cherie Currie comes out

to sing with 

Motorhead--the crowd, apeshit,

ecstatic, as Lemmy's buzz-bomb bass

drills down through the floorboards

fueled by amphetamine, bourbon,, cigarettes and Coke, his nimble fingers

Nevertheless brutalizing the fretboard of his

Iconic Rickenbacker bass

The amps cranked to 

Earbleed

Level 

As Phil Campbell, Lord Axesmith, rips through his coke-accelerated classic r and fn' r riffs 

As the greatest drummer in the world, Mikkey Dee, he of the massive sausage fingers

Creates a smol

Storm 

System 

Around his 

Drum Kit 

As the voice of "Cherry Bomb" 

explodes:

"Killed by Death," Lemmy and

Cherie sing in 

unholy, divine unison 

"By Death

By Death 

By Death" 

Well, ultimately, 

Lemmy was...

"I'll haunt you," he grinned cheekily to 

reporters in some of his last

Interviews 

as a lifetime of 

hardcore 

legendary

Partying finally

caught up with him...

My last 

Memory of Ian Frasier Kilmister being 

of him

Dressed in a 

Suit

The perfect English

Gentleman, about to leave the Nokia on a date with doubtless a 

goddess

He wasn't as tall as I 

Had always thought of him, it 

was quite striking for me that I was 

nearly at his 

Height, although I'd literally 

Sat on his hotel bed five years

Previous as he fed me

Marlboros...

A truly honorable

Man and stop, whatever it is

You are thinking, it wasn't like that...

If you knew him, you'd recognize he 

was like that with

Everybody...

No phony, just gold.

No pretense, only rock and roll. 


R Bremner

Nightwings


nightwings

we swooped

the avenue

slanting desire, vague

molten, pulsing swells

while city midnights drank

moonlight rock’n’roll 



(first published in Verse-Virtual) 




Jimi


Frontiers in the wind cry

steeping into the colors of the light

while crossing traffic to that place

of changes, voodoo chile and voodoo 

children who were stone free,

whilst you beamed down rainbows

and built bridges from on high to 

our third stone from the sun.

Foxy ladies and Mary dreamed with

you while you watched Joe escape

down Mexico way in yet another dream

through those gypsy eyes, eyes that 

burned through a haze of purple, 

that burned like a midnight lamp

in a nook in a watchtower, watching

and witching for a princess

and you were the prince,

the knight who slayed our

monster, manic depression.

 



White Mice 

 

Early 1980. 

I live in a house owned by the rent-a-car business next door, 

which they’re only keeping till they can tear it down for

their expansion.

The bathroom upstairs

 leaks into my kitchen, and

 roaches wander in droves

through the night.

At least there’s heat, though the landlord 

harangues me to push it down, while

the Puerto Rican family upstairs 

harangues me to push it up.

The sun pours through my

kitchen window on a Saturday morn,

while I write, as always with

my radio on.

College station. WMSC.

 

I hear it. Unreal.

 

First, the drums rat-tat-tating

into a tease of

that nasty, taunting

bass line.

Then a guitar clangs in,

But only to punctuate the bass.

The bass carries the day.

Then, with no warning, that

voice from another planet,

that voice that rings and rattles

like no other I’ve heard.

 

The Mo-dettes.

The song is “White Mice”.

And soon I am hearing it everywhere.

At the Dirt Club, at Eats-U-Want Café,

in little pop-up punk joints in

the East Village, and on all the college 

stations I listen to. 

 

 There’s something about that voice…

At once a shy little girl and a naughty woman.

I later learn that she is Swiss, not only with

a flighty accent, but also with a trace of a 

speech impediment which makes discerning  

the lyrics an impossible chore .

 

But we can imagine all sorts of poetry in them, 

from Beat to Surreal to Dada to anything.

 

My buddy, Lodi Poet Laureate Ed O’Connor, 

insists he hears a reworking of Rimbaud’s Season 

In Hell with more sophisticated sophistry.

 

I figure it’s something like Subterranean Homesick 

Blues, only updated with a New Wave sensibility.

 

Mickey Music on Main Ave tells me there is no album

yet. But they do have the single. I buy it.

 

On the flip side is “Masochistic Opposite”.

This side is excellent too, but 

the only words I can make out are the title.

 

I listen and listen to that record, but it is the

early eighties, life is full, and eventually

I am on to other things.

 

Fast forward to 2010.

It is now standard fare to look up

ancient song lyrics on the web.

I have not thought about White Mice in

years, but one day it creeps into focus.

 

So I look it up.

I am flabbergasted.

Stupider, more idiotic, more senseless

lyrics could not be written!

Jane Crockford, Kate Korris, were you

really such asinine bimbos?

Damn!  Was I listening to this claptrap

for so long, being such a stupid fool

as to admire it? 

Betrayal!

 

After a few days I am thinking. Actually,      

arguing with myself. Was not punk the ideal 

of stupidity, the revolt against intellectuals

and the elites?

 

Think of  Gang of Four with their ponderous anti-lyrics

in songs like “Ether” and “Natural’s Not in It”. Or the

Sex Pistols. When they told us they were “Pretty Vacant”,

who could deny that? And the Angry Samoans?. 

And the Cramps? The Revilos? And so forth.

 

But wait a  minute.

There was intellectual punk, too.

What about 

the brilliant Pete Shelley of the Buzzcocks? 

Something Goes Wrong, I Believe, Orgasm Addict?

Harmony in My Head?,

And Howard Devoto, I am on fire and it’s the

rainy season.

 

So I can listen to White Mice. And know that 

Crockford is no poet. And pretend that Ramona

is singing some foreign language. And such,

my friends, is post-post-post-post punk rationalized

life. 


Carl Stilwell AKA CaLokie

All Hail Rock and Roll!


We didn’t rock around the clock at Bob Jones University

or any hour of the day for that matter 

It was more than the beat...the beat...the beat...

It was the music of rebellion against God

Every time Teen Adam and Eve did all those suggestive dance moves, 

it was eating the apple again...and again...and again...


Thus I couldn’t believe when I heard, as I entered my dormitory,  

roommate, Bear, singing from our second floor, shower, another Elvis 

hit “Don’t be cruel to a heart that’s true...”


Bear was fearless

He also didn’t care much for BJU’s rigid piety

Pray because you want to, not because you have to

One night while I was kneeling during a prayer meeting 

each cluster of three dormitory rooms were required to have 

before light’s out, he grabbed hold of my right toe and twisted it 

like he was going to yank it off

It was all I could do to keep from both screaming and laughing

Bear was the best college and seminary roommate I ever had


Yeah, Bob Jones didn’t take to youth’s inclination to rebel very well

They let us know that while they welcomed constructive suggestions, no 

griping was tolerated 

We had this joke about two students who were expelled from BJU--

one for griping and the other for lying

The one for griping said he didn’t like the grits students 

had to stomach every morning 

The one for lying said he liked them


They also didn’t tolerate kissing and holding hands on campus

Next to questioning the infallibility of Bible Belt’s paper pope, the biggest 

no-no at this institute of higher learning was the usual sex stuff

So if you didn’t want to be expelled from this fundamentalist

paradise, you kept your hands to yourself


I was one of the waiters serving said grits for breakfasts 

in addition to other grub for lunch and dinner

It was one of my co-workers who introduced me to Carol who 

was from from Eureka, California and a junior at the university’s 

adjacent high school


Oh, man, did she ever in the words of Sam Cook’s classic

send me! 

She couldn’t wear “tight dresses” of Chuck Berry’s Sweet Little Sixteen 

at BJU but still looked good “sportin' high heel shoes”


We had a few things in common

Like Bear and me she rebelled against Bob Jones’s religious rigidity

and agreed that fundy’s weren’t much fun


But I was over my head as far as class differences go

Her father was a P.G.& E. executive who gave her an allowance

which was twice what I earned working 40 hours a week

at a department store in Midwest City, Oklahoma 


I was flattered that someone so wealthy and attractive had shown 

interest in me and enjoyed my company

One night we went to an opera at the university auditorium

As the lights went out while stage crew changed scenery, I reached

for her hand and she mine and our fingers intertwined


Later, Carol, was to dump me for another waiter and like

the Everly Brothers put it--”Bye Bye happiness

Hello emptiness”

But at that very instance when eternity intersects 

with the time-space continuum, a jolt surges through my body 

like the one Adam must have felt in Michelangelo’s painting as 

the creator with his finger touches his hand and I become 

a born again fornicator




Tutti Frutti 


A wop 

A wop BOP 

A wop BOP a loo 

A wop BOP a loo BOP 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP bam 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP bam bom 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP bam bom BOOM 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP bam bom 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP bam 

A wop BOP a loo BOP a LOP

A wop BOP a loo BOP 

A wop BOP a loo 

A wop BOP

A wop 

A


Rooty Tooty



Joan McNerney

Popularity


When LinkedIn wrote

“you are on a roll”.

I realized burgers

are often found

to be on a roll.

Hot dogs too!




Nostalgia


I grew up in the

stone age.

We threw rocks

at each other.


Luis Cuauhtemoc Berriozabal


Get On Your Knees


In hell the beer is

never cold enough,

the music is not

loud enough, and a

kiss gives you herpes.


What did you expect,

the royal treatment?

Get on your knees and

crawl through the sharpest

glass, the hottest coal,


and remember what

you did to get here.

Enjoy your beer on

earth, turn up the rock

n’ roll. It will not


get better than this.

Kiss the one you love

and mean it. The sharp

glass and hot coals are

being made for you.





The Starman Sings Aloud 


Bring the lights down low.

Lean back and enjoy the show.

Hear the cat go rock n’ roll.

Hear the back beat and the flow.

It’s a cosmic jive, you know.


And the starman sings aloud.

He meets us halfway in a cloud.

It’s a meeting of blown minds.

And the starman signs aloud.

He sings with all his soul.

It’s the only way he knows how.

He reaches highs and lows.

He lets it all out

as we dance and boogie.


Someone tried to copy him.

Someone else copied him too.

There was two and then two more.

They all tried to look like him.

There was a sparkle to their madness.

It is a fright and a  delight to see.


And the starman sings aloud.

He meets us half way in a cloud.

It’s a meeting of blown minds.

And the starman signs aloud.

He sings with all his soul.

It’s the only way he knows how.

He reaches highs and lows.

He lets it all out

as we dance and boogie.


And he sings la, la, la, la.

And we sing la, la, la, la.





Soulmate 


My soulmate is in the next room.   He does not want to be disturbed.  Once he finds out you are keeping me from him all hell is going to break loose.  You see my soulmate has been around for a long, long time.  The Rolling Stones wrote a song about him.  It was a smash back when rock n’ roll ruled the airwaves.  I should not keep my soulmate waiting.  I am in heat, and I am ready to have his baby.  Someone will need to rule the world when hell freezes over.  I have it on good authority that global warming is a sham.  My soulmate knows all about global warming.  He invented it.  But the global warming the scientists are talking about is an uneducated guess.  My soulmate is resting right now.  He is getting himself prepared for our union.  I am not kidding.  You better let me go before it is too late for you and the unbelievers.  I am not delusional.  I am not paranoid.  My soulmate loves me.  I gave him my soul.  I will give him a child.


Lorelei Kay


HALF NOTE JOSHUA


Warm gusts playfully swoosh around

the young Joshua tree, whispering musical

rhythms where she’s rooted in desert sand.


Steadied by her circular base, her erect

stem reaches skyward, straight and poised

as a conductor’s baton.


Sensing the imminent downbeat, flora

and fauna begin rustling in anticipation,

watching for their cue.

 

A chorus of chirping birds take wing,

inviting all desert residents to pitch in

with their unique symphonic sounds.


A solo woodpecker

      tap tap taps bongo-style

      on its dark bark drum.


A duet by soaring eagles adds

      high-pitched whistling tones

      to the windy score.


A trio of mourning doves

      detect the beat and begin

      cooing along in harmony.


Black-tailed jackrabbits race

      Lizards leap and scamper

      Squirrels scurry and skitter 


Roadrunners bob and bustle         

     Red-spotted toads croak out trills 

     Rattle snakes add percussion


A cacophony of melody washes over

the landscape, blending easy listening

rhythm through every rock and rill.


The air vibrates with musicality, owing

its inspiration to the half note Joshua—

standing tall on a cactus-studded hill.


S. A. Gerber

Taste


Classical

when it’s cold—

 

Jazz

when it’s hot—

 

Military

when bold—

 

Gospel

Not—

 

Rap

can be poetry—

 

Folk

is divine—

 

Bluegrass

a kick—

 

Reggae

sublime.

 

Blues

when I’m down—

 

Motown

is gold—

 

Country

at a distance—

 

Rock

‘till I’m old.

                                                                 

  

First Published in “The Freefallin’ S.A. Gerber-Rosewood Press-2023




Opinionated Digression

 

I was there—

 

Sad to say, with very few exceptions,

Rock & Roll let me down around 1975ish.

Bad Company…Journey…Kansas…

Arrowsmith…Boston…Foghat…BTO…REO…

Could all be the same band for all I

know or care. From the same orphanage.

 

Now, some early Bowie hit the mark—

Sir Elton was great.( not after Yellow Brick Road)—

Zeppelin’s first four albums were phenomenal.

But all the afore mentioned bands, however

commercially successful, will, in my opinion, be

relegated  to little more than footnotes in the annals of music.

 

I was there—

 

When some absolute renewal came in the late ‘70’s

with the advent of  Talking Heads, Warren Zevon

and Tom Waits.

True originals, but the decades that followed…

well…we’d seen it all before:

 

A guy from New Jersey trying to be Dylan—

Guns & Roses desperately trying to be the Stones—

Van Halen…Hagar…whatever, creating sound

without substance, and a doomed kid from

Seattle, in Neil Young’s old clothes.

Techno…Industrial…Grunge…

I’ll spell it out in three words…Cra-Pol- La!

 

I was there—

 

To be fair, I guess every generation has the idols

they tack up on the wall. Usually guys, specifically

catered to their taste, and tunes to serve their purpose.

 

I, myself, have digressed. I have more Jazz & Classical

in my collection, that I do Rock & Roll.

 

 

2

 

 

That is not to say that I still don’t harbor some classic ‘60’s

albums, or that my heart doesn’t leap as fast as my hand

to turn up an old Rock anthem on the radio. I’m not just the

‘leaper’ I used to be. (Who is?)

Some will read this and think that I’m just an old fart, out

of touch. Perhaps. Some buddies my age still keep abreast

of what’s new in Rock, and I guess that all right…for them.

 

I do find, that as the years drone on, I haven’t the time

or patience for Cra-Pol-La. That includes not only music,

but film, stage, literature, and G.d help us…television.

I’ve lit on what has stood the test of time. What’s good, is good.

But back in the day…once upon a time…

 

I was there—

I saw:

 

The Beatles—

Dylan—

The Moody Blues—

The Who—

The Dead—

Sly & The Family Stone,

Neil Young $ Crazy Horse,

Tull, Clapton, Santana,

Chuck Berry, Yes, Stevie Wonder,

but regrettably, never Frank Zappa,

The Doors, Hendrix, or Cream.

…and so, it went.

 

I was there…once.

 



Record Requiem

  

My fault completely.

I left the

box containing the

soundtrack of my

youth, on the

floor of a

garage, that floods

when it rains.

My original “Help”,

“Rubber Soul” and

“Sgt. Peppers L.H.C.B.”,

all bought for

two or so

dollars, from the

bin of “Sav-

On drug store…

(A record store

was too far

to get to

by bicycle back

in ‘ot’65.)

…all water destroyed!

Vinyl and covers!

Listened to obsessively,

in sober youth…

later, while immersed

in alcohol and drugs…

and much later,

in sober recovery.

Also lain to

rest were original…

Dylan, Zepplin, Traffic,

and the usual

lot anyone of

my age and ilk,

would have collected.

A true heartbreak.

History and youth,

on record, both

lost forever more.

My fault completely.


Jackie Chou

Pareidolia


A Minotaur 

dances the cha-cha  

with a bonnetted girl 


She clenches her fist

as he pushes her for a spin

with his thin arm


A dog peeks

from under her hem

in a heart-shaped sky 


The rocks and bricks

aren't just rocks and bricks–

they tell stories


Maria A Arana

 




Mary Mayer Shapiro

FRONTIER BOUNDARY 


New frontier 

Virgin land 

Pioneers approach 

With Conestoga wagons 

Section acres 

For all to have 

Build Houses 

Barns 

Plow the fields 

Remove the rock 

Border the land 

With rocks fences 

Years fly by 

Pioneers long 

Gone 

Replaced by villagers 

Rock fences are stationary 

Motionless in place  

As a reminder  

Of original 

Frontier boundary 

Fences make for 

Good Neighbors 




DREAMS GONE ASTRAY 


Little rock 

Looked up at 

The mountain 

Said to Daddy 

Bounder 

When I grow up 

That is what 

I want to be 

A great 

Mountain 

To challenge  

Mountaineers 

To climb me 

Daddy boulder replied 

You must have 

Patience 

As little rock 

Laid dreaming 

Along came 

Children 

Picking out 

Rocks to paint 

Little rock 

Fantasy, plans 

Gone astray 

Decorated, put  

On Display 




VOYAGE BY BIKE 


Roll along 

The countryside 

Peddle the bike 

Up and down hills 

Straight, curve 

Even, bumpy 

Potholes roads 

Wind blowing through 

Your hair 

Anemophily spreading 

fertilizing the land 

Seeing nature 

In full bloom 

Then changing  

From season  

To season 

Where did You travel 

Where did you go 

Perhaps 

Just around town 

Freedom of the  

Road 


Thursday, May 1, 2025

Don Kingfisher Campbell


Rock Dogs*


This stone pack don't go for walks

Happy to measure the distance

Between piles and free way


With two Joshua Trees beside

No danger of getting urinated upon

We've got all time to experience


The changing of days every day

From light sky to heavy air

We're content to let life happen


And feel the aging process slowly

Transform us into each other

Through eons of interchange



*inspired by a photo taken by Alexis Rhone Fancher




1975 – 2007

 

The teenager in me died

when I put on Pink Floyd

in my cobalt blue bedroom


I left the door open

so my mother could hear

grown men exercise my soul


A repeated jazzy growl

Shine On You Crazy Diamond

saxophone mellow poetry


Poured from a black vinyl

anti-sun on a 12” turntable

spinning fidelity high


She walked over, peered in

calmly inquired, “Don,

I like that music, who is it?”


Inside my angsty heart

I felt an uncomfortable cracking

of acceptance I’d never felt before


Thirty two years later

my daughter leaves

a song on my computer


It makes her laugh

“Take a look at my girlfriend,

she’s the only one I got”


Which she thinks is poppin’ fresh

as newfound as a teen kiss

but I inform her, “It’s from 1979”


As I break out a silver 5” CD

place it in the midnight plastic drawer

press betray, I mean, play


“It’s a Supertramp ditty,” I say

Kyla exhorts “Let me sync a copy

of that slow version for my cell,


It’ll shock my friends”

I may be an old baby boomer but

I feel like I’ve just made a friend




THE FREE WAY

 

we were in the '63 brown Buick

I bought from my uncle for 350 dollars

blazing down the 210 Freeway to Ontario

for Cal Jam 2, the rock'n'roll concert

where we teens would light up

freedom from our parents

in a crowd of 300,000 at the speedway

we walked through the tunnel

to the infield where sleeping bags dotted the grass

(we made tracks on the grass in just an hour

it was 4am, I had been doing '78

trying to drive the year)

everyone was sleeping below the stars

waiting to be awakened by hundred thousand watt speakers

and reborn into rocking festival lyrics

to hear our cultural leaders--Aerosmith, Santana, Foreigner, Mahogany Rush

and when it was over, after our fists pumped into the air

thick with smoke and spilled beer and trampled dust

we shuffled out, media fed cattle, mooing with happy tiredness

for the 2am drive home, I drove in the dark highway space

weaving with ears buzzing, we had to stop

to piss on the walls of a closed gas station

spraying yellow sparks of independence in the night

the liberation of being on our own--with friends

hours of deep high to always remember


Michelle Smith

Historically Hysterical  Chuck Berry was the  King of Johnny B Goode Little Richard was the architect  of Lucille and Tutti Frutti Race reco...