ISBN-13: 9780993456909 / Angielski / Miękka / 2015 / 116 str.
Described by one reader as 'sort of like Rumi meets Dylan', this collection of lyric verse brings a new voice to the long tradition of English poetry. Written from the unique perspective of a western convert to Islam in the 70's, Songs In Search of A Musician takes the reader on a journey across an inner landscape of emotion, reflection, insight and spiritual awakening. Accompanied by striking and original black and white photos, the poems are gathered into four themed sections. The first, Zam Zam, deals with the relationship between the self and the Divine, with pilgrimage, prayer, invocation and rememberance, with death and the afterlife. The second, Asabiyyah, is a reflection on family, kinship, community, love and loss, travel and homecoming. Margin Call is a shouted cry against the crimes of usury banking, speculation, paper money, war and injustice. Sufi Blues is a mixed bag of songs about the human condition, poised as we are between fear and hope. This first collection of poems, each with their own distinct rhythm and rhyme, is perhaps best described in the opening poem, Welcome Mat. And if you listen carefully, you may just hear the tune as you read. Some of these are serious
And some of them just ain't
Some are like trying to bottle mist
And some are like spraying paint Some might cut you to the quick
And some may cut you slow
Words like stones in a dry stone wall
Or drops in the river's flow I offer them, just like the sap
That flows within my wrist
In hope that you may catch the line
Or maybe get the gist If good there be, it's from my Lord
Or from the ones that taught me
Some just hit me where I stood
Or as I turned, they caught me Some dropped from my eyes as tears
And dried here, on the pages
Some with sorrow, some with joy
Some quick, and some for ages Some dropped like stone and rippled deep
Within my caged heart
And some burst like a water bomb
And blew me wide apart Come taste a little, taste a lot
Fill your belly, fill your pot
And take away the ones that stay and linger
One may take your hand
One may take your heart
Or may just touch the tip of your finger
Described by one reader as 'sort of like Rumi meets Dylan', this collection of lyric verse brings a new voice to the long tradition of English poetry. Written from the unique perspective of a western convert to Islam in the 70's, Songs In Search of A Musician takes the reader on a journey across an inner landscape of emotion, reflection, insight and spiritual awakening.Accompanied by striking and original black and white photos, the poems are gathered into four themed sections. The first, Zam Zam, deals with the relationship between the self and the Divine, with pilgrimage, prayer, invocation and rememberance, with death and the afterlife. The second, Asabiyyah, is a reflection on family, kinship, community, love and loss, travel and homecoming. Margin Call is a shouted cry against the crimes of usury banking, speculation, paper money, war and injustice. Sufi Blues is a mixed bag of songs about the human condition, poised as we are between fear and hope.This first collection of poems, each with their own distinct rhythm and rhyme, is perhaps best described in the opening poem, Welcome Mat. And if you listen carefully, you may just hear the tune as you read.Some of these are serious
And some of them just ain’t
Some are like trying to bottle mist
And some are like spraying paintSome might cut you to the quick
And some may cut you slow
Words like stones in a dry stone wall
Or drops in the river’s flowI offer them, just like the sap
That flows within my wrist
In hope that you may catch the line
Or maybe get the gistIf good there be, it’s from my Lord
Or from the ones that taught me
Some just hit me where I stood
Or as I turned, they caught meSome dropped from my eyes as tears
And dried here, on the pages
Some with sorrow, some with joy
Some quick, and some for agesSome dropped like stone and rippled deep
Within my caged heart
And some burst like a water bomb
And blew me wide apartCome taste a little, taste a lot
Fill your belly, fill your pot
And take away the ones that stay and linger
One may take your hand
One may take your heart
Or may just touch the tip of your finger