MUSICA ANTIQUA
I - Time Keeper
Prize of a difficult hunt
fresh meat seared in the fire pit:
The ****-clothed victor
severed pieces with his flint
to feed his mate and son
then idly stroked a hollow log
with his crimson tinted club.
He picked up the pace
when the child began
to laugh and whirl
about the flames -
his mother' contented smile
telling, that for a spell at least,
serenity ruled the glade.
II - Found Flutes
In a time too early for telling.
one of our kind unearthed
a dry hollow bone and blew.
Its tones were pleasing
but many more could be found
by scoring several holes in its side.
Though carbon dating may tell
to a millennium or so, when,
no one can ever say why.
III - To Build a Lyre
A Grecian soldier on a cyprus stump
cut holes in a bow too lax for arrows
and gently swept his weathered fingers
across the new strung cords
then composed a lyric to Pan's amors
and a second to brave Alexander.
The soldier, well pleased
resolved to fashion a nobler frame
for his dulcet strings
and raised worthy songs
to Apollo and Terpsichore.
MUSICA MODERNA
IV – The Music Press
In his modest shop in Venice
Ottaviano Petrucci turned the wheel
and pressed notes to paper
for music's first edition.
Squares and diamonds peppered the staves
and tunes of Obrecht and Josquin des Prez
soon graced the salons
of Europe‘s most elegant palaces.
V - Sonata Pian e Forte
From a desk at St. Mark’s in Venice
Gabrieli pondered a question,
“How can an echo’s diminishing sound
be shown in a music score
so that one group of brass
can reflect the other
across the cathedral's nave? '
With two simple words he shifted forever
the course of music’s stream.
For the leaders he marked down “forte, ”
and their its echo marked down, “pian.”
VI - The Master of Cremona
Stradivarius extracted a maple sheet
From his curing vat in Cremona
and hung it to dry with the others -
Then taking his carving knives
He sculpted a cello's scroll
while a golden sheened violin
awaited his finishing cloth.
His secrets expired
when his time was fulfilled
but his magic sings on forever.
VII - Theodore Boehm, designer - flutist*
A gifted precious metal smith
desiring a more supple flute
applied all his art and skill
to its maze of rods and keys.
Each trial was scored
by his ears and fingers
until the door was unlatched.
to euphonious efficiency.
Clarinetists then coaxed him
to fashion their keys as well.
So behind every dixie licorice stick
or Debussy’s pastel faun
stands a persistent man
with a silver flute and
a jeweler's patient hands.
December, 2007