In Which It Always Returns To Us
guest editor: Jackie Clark
Part One (Matthew Henriksen)
Part Two (Clay Matthews)
Part Three (Amy King)
Part Four
Of Sound and Sensibility
by Morgan Lucas Schuldt
Recently, on a trip to Mexico, I was caught off-guard by a cover of Elliott Smith’s “Between the Bars.” The version sounded so much like Billie Holiday that I was instantly dumbfounded. How, I wondered, could Billie Holiday cover Elliott Smith? – it was impossible. Slightly less impossible was Smith’s song as a cover of Billie Holiday. But this didn’t sit right either, and so when I learned that the performer in question was Madeleine Peyroux, I was relieved, even pleased.
"Between the Bars" - Madeleine Peyroux (mp3)
I've always thought of Elliott Smith as a musician whose sound and sensibility are deliberately at odds. Peyroux’s version only confirmed this impression for me; hers is a languid, slinking, sonorous rendition, one that displays a wide range of expression and phrasing. Smith’s harmonies and melodies just aren’t as extravagant.
these photos are from autumn de wilde's collection
Charles Wright ends one of his poems on a line that goes something like “. . . and God knees our necks to the ground.” Not that God figures conspicuously – or even copiously – into Elliott Smith’s songs; the knees keeping Smith’s ear to the ground were always addiction and depression.
Still, there’s a ferocity churning just under the lilting surfaces of his music that’s both bodily and spiritual. Smith’s songs speak almost always through the urgency of nothing more than a whisper, as if had he raised his voice any higher the songs would tremble apart in their playing.
I’m no big fan of Ezra Pound, but how he said that artists with the least talent speak loudest – I think there’s some truth to that. And to the virtues of speaking softly.
What has continually struck me about Smith’s music is how the guy could slip a "fuck" (or a form of it) into a song and have it sound as fragile and fierce and justified as anyone’s best line of poetry. It shows up again and again in songs like “St. Ides Heaven,” “Strung Out Again,” and “I Didn’t Understand.”
For me that kind of sensibility has always conjured Berryman’s “memory of a lovely fuck." That’s a line from the Dream Songs, I think, and probably mouthed by a wistful Henry Pussycat, but it captures for me the paradox at the heart of Smith’s artistry – how so many uglinesses found their way into his music and how he – somehow, anyhow – gentled nearly all of them.
Smith’s best songs (“Between the Bars,” “Angeles,” “Miss Misery,” “New Disaster,” “The Biggest Lie,” “Pitseleh”) are spooky and resigned, wistful for the many kinds of oblivion written into them. They’re dream-songs of a sort. Hypnotizing but wrenching. Self-lacerating but delicate. Melancholy, shy, numb.
Even the details surrounding his death remain wincingly brutal – he stabbed himself in the heart. Twice. Suffice it to say that the guy had demons, and the violence was latent there and what Smith chose to make from it (what he made in spite of it) was beautiful. For some of us that’s more than enough to aspire to.
It's rare that a musician (or any kind of artist, for that matter) hangs with me as long as Smith has. I suspect I'm not alone in this regard. Most of us tend to outgrow influence. Or else convert it into the gloss of personal nostalgia. Or maybe it’s a mere matter of exhaustion – I don’t know.
For me the consequences of allowing for influence have always been that I assimilate what I need quickly and lustfully and hardly ever with the heart it takes to return to them with the same intensity and depth of feeling.
I hardly read Hopkins anymore, and I haven’t studied a Bacon painting in years. Somehow Elliott Smith has escaped this phenomenon. Well, so far at least. But perhaps this is his music’s – any music’s – lasting promise. Unlike poetry whose pages we must always actively return to, music returns to us. When it does we’re a little sad, a little pleased too, but almost always surprised, reminded why we loved that damn song in the first place.
The poems of Morgan Lucas Schuldt have appeared in Fence, Verse, and LIT; online at Shampoo, Coconut, Typo, Diagram and Free Verse; in the anthologies Prose Poetry / Flash Fiction: An Anthology, The Bedside Guide to No Tell Motel - Second Floor and Best New Poets 2007; and in the chapbook Otherhow (Kitchen Press 2007). A brief essay on the poet Larry Levis appears in A Condition of the Spirit: The Life and Work of Larry Levis (2004). A graduate of the University of Arizona’s MFA program, Morgan lives in Tucson where he edits the literary journal CUE.
"Everything Reminds Me of Her" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
"I Better Be Quiet Now" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
My More Merely
by Morgan Lucas Schuldt
In this surround, above the downs,
are my kind of live.
An mmhmm her
fever-few-&-far-between.
Cherry get, if gotten you be.
Otherhow unhindered by the things
of me. Things like: junk-hold lungs,
bouts with be, the umm-hush & long static of kinda can.
Are twenty-six flavors of -elicious
& what-if’s head-fuck nagging blood-back for more
cream & rush, heave & shush––
dirt-back glares having some pull over the percentages.
No tut-tut strut, no lapse in gush. Just holier than wow –
an old-fashioned dumb-lovely ahh yes! suitable for basking.
Sheer towardness, raredear, I’d sky-write
a surrender for.
Little red likelihooded
I lust so much.
mls
MORE MORGAN
Morgan's first collection, Verge, can be bought here.
Morgan's blog is here.
Morgan appears with fellow POP contributor Amy King as part of Sommer Browning's reading series in a few.
You can buy Morgan's chapbook, Otherhow, here.
MORE ELLIOTT
Chad on Elliott's passing.
"Say Yes" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
"Rose Parade" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
"I'm Only Sleeping" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
All the Elliott live shows you can handle
Elliott's NYTimes obit
"Punch and Judy" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
buy it here
"Angeles" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
"Ballad of Big Nothing" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
"Cupid's Trick" - Elliott Smith (mp3)
Elliott Smith b-sides
Elliott at Rolling Stone
PREVIOUSLY ON THIS RECORDING
Danish passed along the new Hot Chip.
Kurt Vonnegut died.
William Logan ragged on Adrienne Rich.