I noticed this thread is closed, even though there is no end in sight for potential submissions.
Closed? I'ts taken all my postings today.
Peter
Sorry, I meant another thread I was going to post to
It was called "Lyrical Poems, Songs in Other Words" (or something like that)
"....And some kid comes
blasting 'round the corner
but some cop
puts him right away.
He lays on the street,
holding his legs,
screaming something in Spanish,
still breathing when I walked away.
And someone said
hey man! did ya see that?
His body hit the street with such a beautiful THUD!!!...."
Bruce Springsteen, The Flood
"I "Love Summer more than I hate Winter"
That thread is now called "Disc cuts/casual rhythms". It's over on the USP forum.
Les
Post Edited (07-21-04 03:54)
Thanks buddy
"I "Love Summer more than I hate Winter"
INDIGO TWILIGHT
Indigo, from the womb of the zenith in autumn,
Ablaze onto the silver clouds, above;
Its wings unfolds to welcome the silent evening.
Its hue, smeared upon the calm sea,
And the sea, from its grave, rises to sing lyrics,
Ever joyful...like a jolly poet.
While I enjoy discussing the poetry in/of song lyrics (and I often sumbit song lyrics when someone is looking for lots of poems on a particular theme), I also feel bound to point out (again):
The term LYRIC POETRY does not refer to song lyrics. It's a lit-crit term for a kind of poetry that recreates intense, usually transitory, emotions. There's a whole thread on that somewhere around here.
As opposed to dramatic or narrative poetry, that do not recreate intense, usually transitory, emotions I'm guessing. Muddy waters, fer sure. Perhaps there is a difference between lyric poetry and lyrical poetry?
. . .the nature of lyric poetry has changed greatly.
Ever since the rise of the printing press in the
fifteenth century, poets have written less often for
singers, more often for readers. In general, this
tendency has made lyric poems contain less
word-music and (since they can be pondered on a
page) more thought—and perhaps more complicated
feelings.
--X.J. Kennedy
I have never quite got reconciled to the word 'song' being used to refer just to the music, as distinct from the accompanying lyrics. To me it should always cover both. When you ask someone to "give us a song", you don't expect them just to hum the tune, unless they can't remember the words.
Another oddity is the use of the plural 'lyrics' to refer to the written text of a song. 'Lyric' doesn't mean 'word', so there's no need to say 'lyrics' when you mean 'words'. The plural seems to assume that the text was composed gradually, in bits and pieces.
peternz
Thanks
I never knew that
"I "Love Summer more than I hate Winter"