Now and Then

Home > Other > Now and Then > Page 5
Now and Then Page 5

by Gil Scott-Heron


  Ravi Shankar comes

  with strings attached/prepared to stabilize

  your seventh sense (Black Rhythm!)

  up and down a silly ladder run the notes without

  the words. words are important for the mind/the notes are for the soul.

  Miles Davis? SO WHAT?

  Cannonball, Fiddler, Mercy

  Dexter Gordon, ONE flight UP

  Donald Byrd, Cristo

  but what about words?

  would you like to survive on sadness/call on

  Ella and Jose Happiness

  drift with

  Smoky, Bill Medley, Bobby Taylor

  Otis/soul music where frustrations are

  washed by drums – come Nina and Miriam –

  congo/mongo beat me senseless

  bongo/tonto – flash through dream worlds of

  STP and LSD. SpEeD kilLs and

  sometimes

  music’s call to the Black is confused. our

  speed is our life pace/not safe/not good.

  i beg you to escape

  and live

  and hear all of the real. to survive in a

  sincere second of self-self

  until a call comes for you to cry elsewhere.

  we

  must all cry, but must the tears be white?

  WRITER'S NOTE

  It should be pointed out, I believe, that there are specific individuals or works of art from individual artists that are the source of creative ideas. As such the efforts that are inspired in that direction become extensions or complements. (At least the succeeding artist hopes that his work is a compliment.)

  ‘Spirits’:

  ‘Spirits’ was inspired by the John Coltrane composition ‘Equinox’. It signified September 23rd, the midway point in the yearly cycle, 180 days from March 20th, recognized in some places as New Year’s Day. September 23rd, the beginning of Libra, the beginning of Autumn, is the yearly point where the sun is directly over the equator and day and night are exactly twelve hours long. (Performed on Spirits.)

  ‘Inner City Blues’:

  Inspired by the Marvin Gaye song ‘Inner City Blues’ and is a compliment/supplement to what I consider to be a tune that still carries a great deal of relevance. (Performed on Reflections.)

  ‘Cane’:

  Inspired by the Jean Toomer book written during the Harlem Renaissance. The first two characters examined are ‘Karintha’ and ‘Becky’, two incredibly well-drawn women that I was touched by and wanted to expand people’s awareness of. (Performed on Secrets.)

  ‘We Almost Lost Detroit’:

  Comes from the book by John Fuller that examined an accident at the Enrico Fermi nuclear power plant outside of Detroit in 1967. (Performed on Bridges.)

  SPIRITS

  The world spins around us

  We search for a balance

  The secrets lie in darkness and light

  Our lives are like treasures

  Unveiled as perfection

  A gift to us from spirits on high

  Equator. Divider. Equate us. Combine us.

  To seek the answers beyond our sight …

  INNER CITY BLUES

  So you say you never heard of the ‘Inner City Blues’

  And what’s more you don’t understand it all

  What the ghetto folks mean about ‘living behind walls’?

  Then put on your best suit, white shirt and tie

  And come on downtown to stand in line

  For a job washing dishes but you may not qualify.

  Walking a great big hole in a new pair of shoes

  And you’ve had your first look at the ‘Inner City Blues’.

  Go looking for a place to live but all the while

  Beware of what’s lurking behind the devil’s smile.

  Are we stupid or just naive that we continue to believe

  Money can buy us anything

  Including a slice of ‘the American Dream’?

  Answer ads in the paper about ‘houses for sale’

  And get treated like Charles Manson out on bail

  When you start to get frustrated by the tactics they use

  You can recognize that, it’s the ‘Inner City Blues’.

  It makes you wanna holler and throw up both your hands.

  And haven’t you ever wondered about

  Why some brothers and sisters were down and out?

  Receiving their sympathy from a bottle of wine

  Or worse yet ‘old homicide’

  Living their lives in a glassine bag

  While praising the mysteries of terminal scag?

  Still other brothers are parading in drag?

  Another set of victims too whipped to choose

  You can recognize that its the ‘Inner City Blues’

  It makes you wanna holler and throw up both your hands!

  To see sweet sisters, the blossoms of our African tree

  Profiling on the corners talking about ‘ten and three’

  Because in spite of all the money we made and taxes we paid

  The woman was looking at hungry babes

  And some decisions had to be made

  Could you tell her it’s better to go to your grave

  As a slave to the minimum wage.

  Well I hardly think so but

  It makes you wanna holler sometimes and throw up both your hands.

  And what happens when people decide

  That they have nothing to lose?

  Did you ever hear about Mark Essex

  And the things that made him choose

  To fight the ‘Inner City Blues’?

  Yeah! Essex took to the rooftops guerrilla-style

  And watched as all the crackers went wild.

  Brought in 600 troops, I hear

  Brand new to see them crushed by fear

  Essex fought back with a thousand rounds

  And New Orleans was a changing town

  And rat-a-tat, tat-tat-tat, was the only sound.

  Bring on the stoner rifles to knock down walls!

  Bring on the god damn elephant guns!

  Bring on the helicopters to block out the sun!

  Made the devil wanna holler

  Because eight were dead and a dozen was down

  And cries for freedom were the only sounds

  New York, Chicago, ’Frisco, L.A.

  Justice was served and the unjust were afraid

  Because after all the years and all the fears

  Brothers were alive to courage found

  And spreading those god damn blues around!

  Yeah! makes you wanna holler black people

  And hold up both your hands and say ‘Liberation’

  This poem was recorded on ‘Reflections’ (1981, Arista).

  First performed as a part of a medley between the songs

  ‘Essex’ by Bilal Sunni-Ali (recorded on the 1975 Arista LP

  South Africa to South Carolina) and ‘Inner City Blues’ by

  Marvin Gaye (recorded on the 1971, Motown LP What’s Going On.

  CANE

  Take Karintha

  Take Karintha

  (As) perfect as dusk when the sun goes down

  Take Karintha

  (As) perfect as twilight as a child

  Able to drive both young and old wild

  (As) perfect as dusk when the sun goes down

  And remember, remember every sound

  ’Cause often as our flowers bloom

  Men will try and cut them down

  Take Karintha

  She’s as sweet as spring rain

  And run from the cane

  Run from the cane

  Pray for Becky

  Pray for Becky

  White woman gave

  Birth to two Black sons

  Pray for Becky

  Her one room shack fell to the ground

  The two boys killed a man

  And had to leave town

  White woman gave
/>
  Birth to two Black sons

  And remember, remember the days

  She looked to us for help

  And we all turned away

  Pray for Becky

  Buried down near the trains

  Deep in the cane

  Deep in the cane

  WE ALMOST LOST DETROIT

  It stands out on the highway

  Like a creature from another time

  It inspires the baby’s question (‘Mama, what’s that?’)

  They ask their mothers as they ride.

  But no one stops to think about the babies

  Or how they would survive

  And we almost lost Detroit this time

  How would we ever get over losing our minds?

  Just 30 miles from Detroit

  Stands a giant power station

  That ticks each night as the city sleeps

  Just seconds from annihilation

  But no one stops to think about the people

  On how they would survive

  And we almost lost Detroit this time

  How would we ever get over losing our minds?

  The Sheriff of Monroe County

  Had (sho’ ’nuff) disasters on his mind

  And what would Karen Silkwood say to you

  If she was still alive?

  That when it comes to people’s safety

  Money wins out every time

  And we almost lost Detroit this time

  How would we ever get over losing our minds?

  I THINK I'LL CALL IT MORNING

  I’m gonna take myself a piece of sunshine

  and paint it all over my sky.

  Be no rain. Be no rain.

  I’m gonna take the song from every bird

  and make them sing it just for me.

  Be no rain.

  And I think I’ll call it morning from now on.

  Why should I survive on sadness

  convince myself I’ve got to be alone?

  Why should I subscribe to this world’s

  madness

  knowing that I’ve got to live on?

  I think I’ll call it morning from now on.

  I’m gonna take myself a piece of sunshine

  and paint it all over my sky.

  Be no rain. Be no rain.

  I’m gonna take the song from every bird

  and make them sing it just for me.

  Why should I hang my head?

  Why should I let tears fall from my eyes

  when I’ve seen everything that there is to see

  and I know that there ain’t no sense in crying!

  I know that there ain’t no sense in crying!

  I think I’ll call it morning from now on.

  A LOVELY DAY

  On a bright spring morning

  Not a cloud in the sky;

  Got me out here walkin’, wavin’ to the ladies

  As they stroll by.

  And I ain’t forgot for a moment

  All the things I need to do,

  But when I see that old sun shinin’

  It makes me think that I can make it too.

  All I really want to say

  Is that problems come and go

  But the sunshine seems to stay.

  Just look around, I think we’ve found

  A lovely day.

  Flowers woke up bloomin’,

  Put on a color show just for me.

  Shadows dark and gloomy

  I tell them all to stay the hell away from me.

  Because I don’t feel like believin’

  Everything I do got to turn out wrong

  When vibrations I’m receivin’

  Say hold on brother! Just you be strong.

  All I really want to say

  Is that problems come and go

  But the sunshine remains.

  Just look around, I think we’ve found

  A lovely day.

  Sometimes it rains and I feel kind of strange.

  Because it seems that my problems begin

  Without the sunshine on which I depend.

  BEGINNINGS (The First Minute of a New Day)

  We’re sliding through completely new

  beginnings.

  We’re searching out our every doubt

  and winning.

  We want to be free

  and yet we have no idea

  why we are struggling here

  faced with our every fear

  just to survive.

  We’ve heard the sound and come around

  to listening.

  We’ve touched the vibes time after time

  insisting that we know what life means;

  still we can’t break away

  from dues we’ve got to pay

  we hope will somehow say

  that we’re alive.

  NO KNOCK (to be slipped into John Mitchell's Suggestion Box)

  You explained it to me John I must admit,

  but just for the record you was talkin’ shit!

  Long raps about No Knock being legislated

  for the people you’ve always hated

  in this hell-hole that you/we all call ‘home’.

  ‘No Knock!’ The Man will say, ‘to keep that man

  from beatin’ his wife!’

  ‘No Knock!’ The Man will say, ‘to keep people

  from hurtin’ themselves!’

  No-Knockin’, head rockin’, enter shockin’,

  shootin’, cussin’,

  killin’, cryin’, lyin’ and bein’ white!

  No Knocked on my brother, Fred Hampton,

  bullet holes all over the place!

  No knocked on my brother, Michael Harris

  and jammed a shotgun against his skull!

  For my protection?

  Who’s gonna protect me from you?

  The likes of you? The nerve of you!

  To talk that shit face-to-face

  your tomato face dead pan

  your dead pan deadening another freedom plan!

  No Knockin’, head rockin’, enter shockin’,

  shootin’, cussin’,

  killin’, cryin’, lyin’ and bein’ white!

  But if you’re wise, No Knocker,

  you’ll tell your No-Knockin’ lackies

  to No Knock on my brother’s heads

  and No Knock on my sister’s heads

  and double lock your door

  because soon someone may be No Knocking …

  for you!

  BILLY GREEN IS DEAD

  ‘The economy’s in an uproar,

  the whole damn country’s in the red,

  taxi fares is goin’ up … What?

  You say Billy Green is dead?’

  ‘The government can’t decide on busin’

  Or at least that’s what they said.

  Yeah, I heard when you tol’ me,

  You said Billy Green is dead.’

  ‘But let me tell you ’bout these hotpants

  that this big-legged sista wore

  when I partied with the frat boys.

  You say Billy took an overdose?’

  ‘Well now, junkies will be junkies,

  But did you see Gunsmoke las’ night?

  Man they had themselves a shootout

  an’ folks wuz dyin’ left and right!

  At the end when Matt was cornered

  I had damn near give up hope …

  Why you keep on interruptin’ me?

  You say my son is takin’ dope?

  Call a lawyer! Call a doctor!

  What you mean I shouldn’t scream?

  My only son is on narcotics,

  should I stand here like I’m pleased?’

  Is that familiar anybody?

  Check out what’s inside your head,

  because it never seems to matter

  when it’s Billy Green who’s dead.

  WINTER IN AMERICA

  From the Indians who welcomed the pilgrimsr />
  to the buffalo who once ruled the plains;

  like the vultures circling beneath the dark clouds

  looking for the rain, looking for the rain.

  From the cities that stagger on the coast lines

  in a nation that just can’t take much more

  like the forest buried beneath the highways

  never had a chance to grow, never had a chance

  to grow.

  It’s winter; winter in america

  and all of the healers have been killed or forced

  away.

  It’s winter; winter in america

  and ain’t nobody fighting ’cause nobody knows

  what to save.

  The con-stitution was a noble piece of paper;

  with Free Society they struggled but they died in

  vain

  and now Democracy is ragtime on the corner

  hoping that it rains, hoping that it rains.

  And I’ve seen the robins perched in barren

  treetops

  watching last ditch racists marching across the

  floor

  and like the peace signs that melted in our

  dreams

  never had a chance to grow, never had a

  chance to grow.

  It’s winter; winter in america

  and all of the healers done been killed or put in

  jail

  it’s winter, winter in america

  and ain’t nobody fighting ’cause nobody knows

  what to save.

  Winter is a metaphor – a term used not only to describe the season of ice, but this period of our lives through which we are traveling.

  In our hearts we feel that Spring is just around the corner; a Spring of brotherhood and united spirits among people of color. Everyone is moving, searching. There is a restlessness within our souls that keeps us questioning, discovering, struggling against a system that will not allow us space and time for fresh expression. Western Icemen have attempted to distort time.

  We approach Winter, the most depressing period in the history of his Western Empire, with threats of oil shortages and energy crises. But we, as Black people, have been a source of endless energy, endless beauty and endless determination. I have many things to tell you about tomorrow’s love and light. We will see you in the Spring.

 

‹ Prev