Tuesday, December 8, 2015
MISHA'S DANCE OF DEATH ON HIS OWN RUSSIAN SOIL
My age now,
Misha is,
nearer than further,
astride the grave,
a Beckett waltz
on his breath
he dances
in Brodsky's shadow.
How the old dowagers flock
toward the memory
of his beautiful body
and find only
decrepitude instead.
Almost forty-five years ago
in a loft on Chambers Street
I sat like a schoolchild
watching the clash of egos.
Cecil and Misha
(and poor little Heather
in a corner) cornered
by their art
trying to birth a marriage.
Our beginnings are our ends.
We know this,
but don't really know this,
until we see the flesh
hanging from the bone.
Twenty years ago
I saw Cecil at The Vanguard.
A solo performance.
It sounded like a late Beethoven sonata,
a summing up. Now Misha.
And now the dowagers
who no longer smile
at their memories.
"Art" never was
supposed to be
entertainment.
Norman Savage
Greenwich Village, 2015
Labels:
a ballet of death,
art,
ballet,
Baryshnikov,
Cecil Taylor,
Misha,
summations
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