Duende Poems, 1966-now

Quincy Troupe

Book - 2022

"Quincy Troupe writes poetry in great waves. The words are just notes. It's the music you make with them that matters. He's not a wordsmith, he's a shaman conjuring long repetitive lines, cadences of looking across the sea towards Africa and haunted by the legacy of slavery and racism, or of remembering fellow conjurers, poets and musical artists, celebrating, always celebrating, but never only that. In the fifty-page, incantatory poem, "Ghost Voices," there is a longing to be reconnected to the past, and a longing too to be free of it. In the short title poem, "Duende: For García Lorca and Miles Davis," there lies, nakedly, Troupe's credo: "...secrets, mystery infused in black magic / that... enters bodies in forms of music, art/ poetry imbuing language with sovereignty / in blood spooling back through violent centuries..." The version of the great poem "Avalanche (number 3)" that appears here is different from the version of the same poem he published nearly 25 years ago--in exactly the same way that a jazz artist picks up his horn to play the same song a little differently every time. Troupe is a generous and gregarious poet in this giant offering that includes many new poems, as well as a selection chosen from across his eleven previously published volumes. What's remarkable is the constancy, the energy, and how he's always looking right at you in the here and now, and at the same time sees something over your shoulder that others don't see yet, maybe a distant storm gathering over the waters, something we're going to need to rise up and face soon enough"--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
New York, NY : Seven Stories Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Quincy Troupe (author)
Edition
Seven Stories Press first edition
Physical Description
656 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes index
ISBN
9781644210468
9781644210451
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

"Duende…/ we have one to another, each to each,/ these blessed gifts we share as in breathing." An award-winning poet, biographer of his friend Miles Davis, and spoken-word performer with jazz musicians, associated with the Black Arts Movement, Troupe here offers a behemoth of a book spanning nearly six decades while also including new work. With 11 volumes of poetry to his credit, he continues to "paint flames against the night/the changing music liberates itself,/ as in blood-felt rhythm/ as in heart-felt rhythm/ the genius of the singing." It is indeed the genius of his singing that places Troupe as a troubadour of his generation. His lines are often Whitmanesque in their expansiveness, their scope, and their depth, whether he's writing about the heritage of slavery and continued racism, the glories of jazz (particularly Miles Davies and John Coltrane), prominent figures like Tiger Woods and Michael Jackson, or fellow poets living and dead. To Troupe, poetry "become[s] a kind of reordering/ inside fury of a storm, is a form,/ perhaps…like the way a painter re-imagines a canvas,/ a musician re-invents a solo,/ a politician changing what they meant/ right before our disbelieving eyes." VERDICT A highly recommended work from a master poet.--Karla Huston

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