Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Zakir's Gift

 


 










1

 Each of us is a hollow bone

That can fill with the sublime truth of music,

And carried on that wind

Our rascal selves dissolve,

Our will-o’-wisp trails

Shimmer insubstantial,

Like motes in a rolling wave,

And when enticed again into form,

We know the miraculousness

Of simple acts.

 

Each step has rhythm if we can find it,

The call and response of life.

Each of us no more and no less vital

Than the notes within a symphony.

It is the counterpoint between us

That makes the harmony.

And shall we call down that wind of sound?

It only works through us if we hollow ourselves.

 

To find the common thread

In the frenecy of the marketplace

Is the gift of a master.

One needs a different ear

To find that melody.

Perhaps an old sense must be deadened.

The sound of birds in flight,

The cacophony of monsoon rain

No less than crickets murmuring in the night,

Or growing grass

Reaching for the sun.

 

It is a kindness (music)

Some may feel as touch.

(Music) shows the common taste

Of happiness and sadness.

The bottomless joy that is beyond

That great ground from which we spring.

We keep returning to this place

Because the ending always makes us want for more.

 

2

 

Zakir says “the second half will be …

The second half.”

 

And how can we not dance

When every part of us vibrates,

And how would the bird fly

Without the wind?

Oh, let me be the flute

Through which your wind blows,

And let me be the drum

On which your hands thump.

 

 

Zakir Hussain, master percussionist, inspired me to write this poem when I attended a free concert at Skinner Hall, Vassar College on October 7, 2012.

This incomparable musician just died December 15, 2024 at age 73. I will never forget hearing him play.