The great Charlie Haden passed away Friday, July 11, and tributes of all kinds have been
appearing over the past two days. I hadn’t really realized how many records in
my collection Charlie Haden had appeared on; his bass playing, his sound, has
been a pivotal and essential part of much of my listening. I saw him a few
times in concert. Once, with his Quartet West on a double bill with John
Scofield’s quartet at the Orpheum in Vancouver; and once, very memorably, with
Geri Allen and Paul Motian in Montreal, as part of the 1989 invitational series. I wanted to write something in his memory; for some reason, I
found myself thinking of the Kurt Weill/Ogden Nash standard “Speak Low,” an
evocative version of which Charlie Haden performed with Sharon Freeman for Lost in the Stars, a Hal Willner tribute
to Kurt Weill. The song leads back to Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, but I have also recently been pretty heavily
under the sway of Nathaniel Mackey’s word music, so some echoes of that must
have found their way into this piece. It was composed very quickly, so I’m sure
there are a few rough edges and infelicities, but I’ll leave them in to honour
the improvisational drift of Charlie Haden’s music.
Partial
Elegy for Charlie Haden
Already gone too soon,
other than him
who in this fraught
hereafter could have named
the ruminant lumber
his instrument
had been assembled
from? Dark-toned boxwood,
hickory, lacquered
spruce. Coaxing a deep
murmur from heavy-gauge
strings, propounding
their full-bodied,
hefty resonances,
he re-curved chthonic
rumble into line
and cadence, his
trademark over-fingered
pizz and tectonic
double-stops marking
the thick eddies where
sound and purled silence
abutted, then let go:
a politics
of left-leaning,
strung-out torch-songs that tell
you, “Speak low if you
mean to speak at all.”
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