lunes, 2 de mayo de 2011

Coffee/Chess




2 carajillos on a corner table

one baileys, one brandy

You play white, move first


the smoke extends, over the table

at our backs a girl bitches about her girlfriend

to a girlfiend, and a waiter drops a tray

with a clatter that seems to affect

the course of the smoke that courses

upwards from an ashtray.


You move first, attacking with talk of moving forward

your pawns arranged in a piercing v

a native american arrowhead


i move black to distract you

opening up your back line,

With a flick of the eyes down and to the side

you notice and swiftly counter

moving pieces to protect and the war starts

on two fronts.



"she's mixed up, ill in the head"

the girl behind explains and her friend

ashamed, plays confidant

unwilling to enrage


We play till late, the coffee drained

the lines blurred, fingers blood stained

From fallen knights and gallant acts of

strategic self-sacrifice.


Until the game stalemates,

without an end, our fingers locked

black and white across the table

A glance betrays the two glasses

empty save for flecks of coffee foam

Identical in all except the memory

of what they once contained.


Foto: Ari Marcopolous


martes, 5 de abril de 2011

Just We




I'm trying to write about our fucking relationship
without using "fucking" as an adjective.

It's harder than you'd think.
Harder than it should be i think
which makes it stay there. Fucking
in the middle of everything

fucking things up.

Fucking you and fucking me

Fucking who?

Nobody, seriously,
I swear.

Sometimes i think our fucking relationship
is a prism. An object that when hit by
a single point of light, splits it up into a spectrum.
too many colours. Like benneton.

(i realise i just compared
our fucking relationship
to a chain of clothes shops
And a chain of clothes shops
to a prism)


Fuck Ra, let's make out
under neon light.
It's diffusive not divisive,
and we can be effusive
Ignoring the missives
sent by errant particles
Lasers shot by bastards.

No fucking you and fucking me
our relationship:
just us.
And to hell with dichotomy.

Fotos: Harley Weir

martes, 29 de marzo de 2011

When i'm drifting off




It's not quite black
In the bedroom.
There's a glow from the streetlight
that sneaks in through the curtainless windows.

Stronger on overcast nights like tonight
When the streets are oil slicked with rain

And owners keep their dogs inside.

Beside -
An inaccurate preposition to describe
the tangle of arms and legs and flesh
Your head on my chest, or mine on yours,
the pampas movement of a strand of hair
lifted by a steady breath.

In the not quite darkness
a sour cherry smell
curls over from the bedside table

My last thought before sleep is of
An empty yoghurt pot, a scooped out shell
The spoon dipped in, a half moon of Fruits of the forest
clinging to it's leading edge
like a fingernail.

Foto: Sandy Kim

viernes, 25 de marzo de 2011

Sheets




The lamp is resting
After 5 hours

Shining on the remains
of cut folios,
Negative space of newspapers
and magazines

A raggedy pile of offcuts
and cutoffs
like winter leaves.

Or dirty clothes.

The pile grew as the zines took shape
Cut copy paste
but with sinister fingers
and a sense of haste

A process of undressing

Freeing black lines
from their white cages
Trimming and sticking
onto pages

I'm drifting off beside you
the lamp resting,

And in the darkness
of fresh pressed sheets
A perfect body
of work's heart beats.

Foto: Skye Parrott

miércoles, 23 de marzo de 2011

Lessons




In the two weeks since i saw you last
Your hair has grown two inches.

Where before the ends lay flat,
Cirro-stratus strands weave a swarthy crown
of feathers: Ducks down.

De espaldas, i didn't know it was you.
I need an eye-test, my head checked.
I make a mental checklist of things
never to forget:
Your lips. And the soft pink bridge
of the nape of your neck.

Foto: Adria Cañameras

martes, 1 de marzo de 2011

Song (Island Life)




I've never seen the Pacific
But it'd be terrific
To see that sea with you

And the rivers, carve
Fissures in the sand
Forming the land

Island life
Island life
I learned life
With you

The motion of the ocean
Isn't governed by the moon

When we swoon
I get the feeling
There's an animal breathing
In and out

Creating tides

Island life
Island life
I learned life
With you.

Foto: Petra Collins

lunes, 21 de febrero de 2011

Before the Weekend


Foto: Angela Stephenson


It was going to be your birthday the Saturday.
The Friday morning, i was by the window with a cigarette
Looking out at the low roofs under the gentle lace of the 8am sunlight,
Perched over the city, or our portion of the city.

A seagull floated by close to the ledge.
It had a large wingspan, and was going no place in particular,
Just soaring.
Then another, bigger or closer i couldn't tell. It all happened so fast

I thought of catching them somehow
And tying a banner between them
"Ainhoa I Love You" and setting them free again

It was going to be your birthday the Saturday
And the Friday morning, i wanted our love
to unfurl over the city, over our portion of the city
over the shoppers in El Gotico
Over the faithful in La Sagrada Familia,
Over the mopeds and commuters on Diagonal
And then out to sea
Under the gentle lace of the morning sun.

domingo, 13 de febrero de 2011

This is Just to say.




Our bodies sleeping
make the shape of a cartoon heart.
Knees touching, backs arched away
Noses touching.

Faces so close the focus fades
and flickers. Camera angles all wrong for porn
but for an indie film
A mumblecore magnus

it'll do.

"You made me think it didn't matter
until it mattered"

I wrote on hotel note paper.
And: "The other night,
When we were asleep in some Hotel bed, your breath
Moving through your voicebox
Made perfect harmonics."
I wrote a verse about "Your timpani breasts
and violin bow legs"

It is in the moments close to sleep
Where my chest swells. In the static of closed curtain night vision,
too dark for any camera
The touch of hotel sheets
and your body underneath
?

martes, 8 de febrero de 2011

Moon Pix

Photo by Ray Potes

"Have you ever seen a Cheshire Cat Moon?"
We're nowhere romantic. Leaning out of the window of her apartment block and smoking. It's not cold enough for our breath to condense yet. It's early in the death of the year.

"Isn't it like that tonight?"
"Not really. It's too yellow. I saw one once from the backseat of my parents car. We were driving through Florida, one of those 30 hour drives we would make in the summer."
"What did you think about on those drives?"
"Late at night when there was nothing to see but i wasn't tired enough to sleep i would sing to myself."
"Along with the radio?"
"No, just the songs i knew by heart. I was 10 or 11, and it was mostly Bon Jovi and Belinda Carlisle"
"I once got shouted at by a friend of my older brothers for getting the words to Heaven is a Place on Earth wrong."
"What are the lyrics to that? Do they even make sense? 'Baby do you know what's worth'"
"Baby, do i know what what's worth?"
"Do you know what's worse?"
"What's worse?"

She doesn't answer. We're both staring up into the too yellow moon, lost in our imperfect thoughts.

jueves, 27 de enero de 2011

My Heart Hangs In The Air



Ask a question and you'll get an answer yeah
but no-ones talking in here
and my heart hangs in the air
my heart hangs there

Take the dog out for a walk
along the winding frozen paths
The walls are cracked
and all the talk
is not of us it's of the past

So don't you say
you'll never leave
cause we were born of falling leaves
And all the lamps
that light the streets
are burnt out memories

Listen

miércoles, 26 de enero de 2011

The last time i saw Matthew




I remember him as this kid, white blond hair, scared of everything. He was born prematurely and once when we went camping with a friend of my dad who was in the US airforce, he pissed himself. Luis was telling a ghost story about a man who had a claw instead of a hand. Too much Tango said my dad, but Luis' stories were genuinely scary. Once when we were driving he talked about a friend of his whos head had been held to the tarmac out of a moving car. How the skin flaked off, his face ground down to the bone. Luis always had the latest films, things he'd pass to my dad, like 9 1/2 weeks or Basic instinct, often a full half year before they were out here. And others, that i could watch, like Arachnophobia. Although that was shit scary to a 9 year old kid.

I don't know what happened to luis. His marriage broke down after his wife maria discovered he had given her AIDS. He swore he never knew, blamed the 1980's, the army. whores, whatever, and was stationed in the gulf for a while. We got one postcard: Missing you from the biggest beach volleyball court in the world" and then nothing. Maybe the ilness progressed suddenly, and he's buried in puerto rico. Who knows? I know my dad stopped saying 'yo' when he picked up the phone.

For my dad Luis must have been a link to a past spent idolising americans, bell bottomed flares and 70's hairdo's. A life he gave up for my mum and me. For Matthew, Luis pointed the way to the future. The Army, coarse jokes, chain smoking and brutality. It always seemed such an unlikely course for such a sickly kid.

But then when he was 11, Matt looked 14. He was six foot two, and shaving the last time we went on holiday, to one of those woodland camps with an artificial rainforest in a big plastic dome, that spread accross europe like coldsores in the early 90's. I was just 15 and madly inlove with a girl who had taken to the bottom of the garden and taught me to kiss properly. It turns out she was a lesbian, and had been taught the same trick by a 19 year old windsurf instructor in Dorset the summer before. Interesting how even teenagers still repeat things to learn. Matt, was 6 months older but looked like a young man. His broad shoulders and wide aureoles, earned him the name Pizza Nipples in boarding school, but he was already smoking and fucking girls. He wasn't cold then, not yet, but bore the image that had been thrust upon him unasked for well - already then, playing up to the disparity between how others saw him and how he saw himself with a quietness that made him cool. I reacted, by smoking weed for the first time at 3 am on the crazy golf course with a sixteen year old in a dreamscape jacket who talked about pills and raves like they were an everyday thing. Before that on the same night someone had glassed me lightly on the dancefloor in the disco, leaving a bruise and a shallow cut on the bridge of my nose.

i digress.

The next year, after an abortive attempt at college, and 4 months spent working at his dad's electronics factory, Matt enrolled in the army as an NCO. Before when we talked about it, he'd go on about officers training at Sandhurst, but when he finally made the decision to go in, he did it at the lowest possible level. We stopped taking for years, when on a car ride i said that i wouldn't die for my queen, country or God, that all three of them were bullshit concepts designed to make people do things that normally they wouldn't. 6 months into his first tour of Northen Ireland he showed me his tatoo of a viking on his shoulder. 2 years later he was in Afghanistan, and then Iraq.

The last time i saw him was at my mums' 50th birthday. I had no idea that he was in the country, least of all towing a three year old kid behind him. She looked like the quintisential war child, with a bump on her forehead from where she'd fallen out of her bunk bed the night before. While she ran around, colouring on A0 sheets of paper i'd brought out, or mischeviously hovering around the kitchen, fingers full of raw cake dough or chocolate spread, Matt sat in a chair in the middle of the lawn, his back upright but his shouders bowed down as he sucked on constant cigarrettes held between his second finger and thumb. His eyes, when he inhaled looked past me over the smoke, the same blue eyes, harder, but every bit as big and wide.
He'd married a barmaid from Leicester, where his barracks were stationed and close enough to the town where he was from to believe that he was in love with her. He was 21 and she was 18 at the time. By the time i met his daughter they were divorced.

Elizabeth, was the only child i've ever met who've i've felt an instant kinship with. I loved how she'd react to her dads barked commands with faked obedience, and then go and do exactly the same thing 5 minutes later. Or how, when she looked at him and smiled innocently you could tell by the roll of his shoulders that his cold army heart was melting.

"You don't know what it's like there" was one of the only things he said, as we sat beside each other in the august sun, my stepdads godawful smooth jazz droning over us and into the sky. " There's no respect for life. It's not something i enjoy, but i'm going back. If i stay on then at least i get my pension, and in two more years i'll have a great salary"
He spoke his words without moving, only to light or drag from another cigarrette. Phrases he'd rehearsed to himself over and over, concepts that made sense through repetition. I admired his discipline and his daughter. And I miss him. My brother, Matthew.

martes, 25 de enero de 2011

2010



Pitufos



Mario Campos aka M-dog aka Busy-C drunk in his kitchen.