She would never dream of arriving at a session Looking like a first take--not like the bass player With his shirt collar rising and rolling Like some unplanted meadow on an Upstate hillside, Or the trumpeter whose ancient corduroys Have not seen a pressing in months if ever, Or the sad young man at the mixing board With the hair sticking out like wire brushes Splayed for the softest swish possible. She would never dream of appearing in any manner Not fully together, the muted gold blouses (Accentuated with a bright red scarf) The tailored skirts of crimson or brown, Hair freshly salon-coiffed, lipstick and makeup just so. As she is not a performer as much as the stuff of legend, And those hunched over traps and cymbals Or bunched cheek-to-jowl with the acoustic tile Are utterly bewitched by the sounds, So familiar yet with all the life of twenty years earlier, Yet the tape playback seems to file a dissenting opinion: There is a certain frailty to the timbre, The odd hitch and hesitation in the phrasing (She does not betray much while listening, One headphone pressed to a single ear, Save for the odd fleeting furrow to the forehead) But it is something that is paid little mind, The quartet and singer plowing ahead Until such time she gathers coat and purse In a gesture which clearly states That is all for today And she leaves the studio to walk the few blocks home, Passing by some down-on-their-luck brownstones, Their facades recently whitewashed in the vain hope Of masking the irrevocable cracking in the walls, The buckling of the edifice's foundation