Dexter Was Dale
ROUND MIDNIGHT (1986) Directed by Bertrand Tavernier
Amazing how a French director
and some black American jazz musicians
could make a French film
that comes closer to capturing
the tortured soul of a jazzman
than anything flickering before or after.
Dexter Gordon playing Dale Turner,
dedicated to Lester and Bud,
with Herbie composing, arranging
and acting in it.
Dexter dominated every frame,
giving a bravura performance
when he still had the chords for it,
part Charlie Parker, part Brando,
but never for an instant
were we ever aware that
he was acting; for
Dexter was Dale.
Dale : “Yeah, I sleep--
but not really.
There are always those dreams.
You know--the music.”
Eddie Wayne : “If you had seen
Hershell and Dale play together, Francis,
it's something that you could never forget.
They were so new and so different
and yet so close. Maybe it was all those memories
that made Dale leave for Paris that Friday morning.
Maybe what he saw in Hershell's eyes
was too frightening and too familiar.”
A big bear going bald
light-skinned black man
blowing cool round midnight
at the Blue Note
in the Paris of the 1950’s.
Dale: “You can’t get style
from off a tree somewhere.
It’s got to be inside you,
growing on its own tree,
naturally. I tell you
happiness is
a wet Rico reed.”
A toothy grin that disarms you,
makes you vulnerable
to his pitch for a glass of spirits;
and the next time,
and the next--
but definitely the look of a man
that the ladies laid down for
before he developed his paunch.
“You know, man,......the music,”
he’d growl in a deep voice sounding
like leather soles grinding on gravel,
with his strong thick fingers miming
the embrace of his tenor sax.
Dale: “Exploring, always searching
for the new places, expanding until
there isn’t anything else;
just the music.”
Black pork pie hat,
plain blackish sunglasses,
hunched up big shoulders,
moving in a strange gait,
part strut and part stagger;
always appearing
to be slightly off-balance,
lurching from room to room,
and out of the rain
into the shadows of a club.
Dale: “It's funny how the world is
inside of nothing. I mean you have
your heart and soul inside of you.
Babies are inside of their mothers.
Fish are out there... in the water.
But the world... is inside of nothing.
I don't know if I like this or not,
but you'd better write it down.”
Only time that his shoulders relaxed
and he straightened up
to his full height, was when
his axe was in his hands
and his hungry fingers
stroked its brass body.
Dale: “A cat came up to me one time
in Brooklyn and stared at me playing,
you know--the way a lot of dudes do,
and then he says: I’m a jazzman too
and I play you better
than you do!”
Then, on stage, between licks
his smile was genuine,
and the blue joy
of who he really was
married itself to the music,
shacked up and jelly-tight.
Dale: “I hope, Lady Francis,
that we live long enough to see
an avenue named after Charlie Parker,
a Lester Young Park,
a Duke Ellington Square.
And even, a street named Dale Turner.”
The seeds of his darkness settled deep
in his sad puffy eyes--
that had done too much dope
and seen the naked bottom
of too many whores
and brown whiskey bottles--
goddamn eyes that only shined,
only came to life when he played,
or talked about playing.
Dale: “Tired? Yeah, I’m tired
of everything but the music.”
So we leave him sweating
on a greasy club stage,
blowing hard and hot
riffs, swells, and solos
with the beat
pounding
in his own temples,
for he worshipped a trollop
called Music, letting it become
his everything, and even though
the bitch knew what he liked
he always understood
it could not be
his salvation.
Glenn Buttkus October 2010
Amazing how a French director
and some black American jazz musicians
could make a French film
that comes closer to capturing
the tortured soul of a jazzman
than anything flickering before or after.
Dexter Gordon playing Dale Turner,
dedicated to Lester and Bud,
with Herbie composing, arranging
and acting in it.
Dexter dominated every frame,
giving a bravura performance
when he still had the chords for it,
part Charlie Parker, part Brando,
but never for an instant
were we ever aware that
he was acting; for
Dexter was Dale.
Dale : “Yeah, I sleep--
but not really.
There are always those dreams.
You know--the music.”
Eddie Wayne : “If you had seen
Hershell and Dale play together, Francis,
it's something that you could never forget.
They were so new and so different
and yet so close. Maybe it was all those memories
that made Dale leave for Paris that Friday morning.
Maybe what he saw in Hershell's eyes
was too frightening and too familiar.”
A big bear going bald
light-skinned black man
blowing cool round midnight
at the Blue Note
in the Paris of the 1950’s.
Dale: “You can’t get style
from off a tree somewhere.
It’s got to be inside you,
growing on its own tree,
naturally. I tell you
happiness is
a wet Rico reed.”
A toothy grin that disarms you,
makes you vulnerable
to his pitch for a glass of spirits;
and the next time,
and the next--
but definitely the look of a man
that the ladies laid down for
before he developed his paunch.
“You know, man,......the music,”
he’d growl in a deep voice sounding
like leather soles grinding on gravel,
with his strong thick fingers miming
the embrace of his tenor sax.
Dale: “Exploring, always searching
for the new places, expanding until
there isn’t anything else;
just the music.”
Black pork pie hat,
plain blackish sunglasses,
hunched up big shoulders,
moving in a strange gait,
part strut and part stagger;
always appearing
to be slightly off-balance,
lurching from room to room,
and out of the rain
into the shadows of a club.
Dale: “It's funny how the world is
inside of nothing. I mean you have
your heart and soul inside of you.
Babies are inside of their mothers.
Fish are out there... in the water.
But the world... is inside of nothing.
I don't know if I like this or not,
but you'd better write it down.”
Only time that his shoulders relaxed
and he straightened up
to his full height, was when
his axe was in his hands
and his hungry fingers
stroked its brass body.
Dale: “A cat came up to me one time
in Brooklyn and stared at me playing,
you know--the way a lot of dudes do,
and then he says: I’m a jazzman too
and I play you better
than you do!”
Then, on stage, between licks
his smile was genuine,
and the blue joy
of who he really was
married itself to the music,
shacked up and jelly-tight.
Dale: “I hope, Lady Francis,
that we live long enough to see
an avenue named after Charlie Parker,
a Lester Young Park,
a Duke Ellington Square.
And even, a street named Dale Turner.”
The seeds of his darkness settled deep
in his sad puffy eyes--
that had done too much dope
and seen the naked bottom
of too many whores
and brown whiskey bottles--
goddamn eyes that only shined,
only came to life when he played,
or talked about playing.
Dale: “Tired? Yeah, I’m tired
of everything but the music.”
So we leave him sweating
on a greasy club stage,
blowing hard and hot
riffs, swells, and solos
with the beat
pounding
in his own temples,
for he worshipped a trollop
called Music, letting it become
his everything, and even though
the bitch knew what he liked
he always understood
it could not be
his salvation.
Glenn Buttkus October 2010
Would you like to hear the Author read this poem?
13 comments:
My God, Glen!
This work of yours is just beautiful! I enjoyed reading and will read it again. I will also share this with my jazz buddies around the country.
There were certain parts of your poem that really grabbed me. I almost felt as I was reading you did this poem especially for me.
I have been a jazz fan since age 13 hearing the music from KSL - AM radio from Salt-Lake City -Wes Bowen "Jazz Till Midnight" instead of Elvis growing up in Okanogan WA. I saw Dexter live on 3 wonderful, up close occasions at Port Townsend Jazz Festival, Parnell's in Pioneer Square or was it The Pioneer Bank in Pioneer Square, or was at The Penthouse at 1st and Cherry Street through the 1960's and 70's?
You could have taken me out and shot me after these once in a lifetime experiences.
I remember how Dexter would hold his horn horizontally and bow down, with the horn doing most of the up and down movement! Wow!
You have captured so much of what Jazz music is about for me. You have captured Dexter and his contributions to great art. Of course, the Round Midnight film was superb - also beyond words.
Thanks again Glen for your tribute to this great man!
Love,
Dick
Great poem Glenn.
"What the world needs is a little more kindness"
Cool Jazzy story... I felt I was pulled back in time to those Jazz clubs...
Love it - I have the album (of course)
Dale: “You can’t get style
from off a tree somewhere.
It’s got to be inside you,
growing on its own tree,
naturally. I tell you
happiness is
a wet Rico reed.”.... ha...how cool is that...i'm playing rico reeds as well by the way...doesn't make me come anywhere close to those heroes...ha...smiles.. it's got to be inside you..no matter what it is.. that can be said for any form of art me thinks...very cool glenn... by the way - i admire charlie parker cause he is one crazily talented player but i cannot listen to him for very long cause with all his chromatics, he unsettles me too much...smiles
That pulled me straight into Half Blood Blues territory - what a great sense of that jazz voice you have! A beauty of a poem, one I'll have to return to many times. And I need to see Round Midnight again...
I swear that I have yet to visit your work and not leave feeling like I became part of something much bigger. Wonderful work.
he worshipped a trollop called Music...ha....i def have an ear turned toward jazz...it does things to me other music can not...smiles.
Wow! I'm not familiar with Dexter Gordon or Round Midnight. Well, I wasn't before reading this gem.“You know, man,......the music,” about sums it up. Jazz on my friend.
you've done it, captured him in free flight!
Seriously awesome poem. I agree with Dick Mansfield's notes. The jazz in your words matched the quality of the film. So glad you shared it!!
Beautifully told. Music is such an easy trollop to love, but too often comes at a high price.
Wow...just wow.
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